ASTM A615 is the standard specification for deformed and plain carbon-steel bars used to reinforce concrete. It defines grades, mechanical properties, and deformations so specifiers and fabricators can speak the same language. For Woodbridge builders and engineers, it streamlines shop drawings, approvals, and deliveries when paired with local code requirements.
By Navjot Dass • Last updated: 2026-06-26
Quick Summary & Table of Contents
ASTM A615 sets performance rules for carbon-steel rebar—covering grades (e.g., 60 and 75), bar identification, and mechanical properties. This guide explains what it is, where it fits in Ontario projects, how it compares to CSA G30.18 and ASTM A706, and the practical steps to specify, submit, fabricate, and deliver on time.
Use this guide to quickly align specs, avoid rework, and cut approval cycles. We cover practical submittal checklists, grade crosswalks to CSA 400W/500W, and on-site considerations for GTA builds. Jump to a section:
- What Is ASTM A615?
- Why ASTM A615 Matters
- How ASTM A615 Works
- Types and Alternatives
- Best Practices
- Tools & Resources
- Case Studies & Examples
- FAQ
- Conclusion

What Is ASTM A615?
ASTM A615 is a widely used standard for deformed and plain carbon-steel reinforcing bars in concrete. It specifies grades (such as 40, 60, 75, 80, and 100), minimum yield and tensile strengths, and deformation patterns. These requirements ensure consistent performance and identification across mills, projects, and jurisdictions.
In practice, ASTM A615 gives structural engineers and fabricators a common reference for mechanical properties. Grade 60 (60 ksi yield) remains the most specified in North American building work, while Grade 75 (75 ksi) sees use in heavier columns and infrastructure. The standard also defines bar deformations so bond behavior remains predictable in design and field placement.
- Grades and strengths: Common grades include 40 (280 MPa), 60 (420 MPa), 75 (520 MPa), 80 (550 MPa), 100 (690 MPa) nominal yield. Tensile minima scale with grade (e.g., ≥ 90 ksi for Grade 60).
- Bar identification: Mill marks indicate size, grade, and producer for traceability; inspectors verify heat numbers against mill certs.
- Stock and fabrication: Bars often arrive in 20 ft and 60 ft lengths, then get cut and bent per shop drawings. Tolerances are controlled to keep bends accurate.
When Dass Rebar supports a project, our in-house estimating and detailing team converts plans into a clear bar list, bending schedule, and tagged bundle map. That package aligns the A615 grade callouts with practical placement so field crews install faster and inspectors sign off on the first pass.
Why ASTM A615 Matters for Ontario Projects
ASTM A615 matters because many private and commercial specs reference it directly or alongside CSA G30.18. With proper crosswalk, you can align A615 Grade 60 with CSA 400W and A615 Grade 75 with CSA 500W, keeping submittals clean while meeting local code and owner preferences.
Ontario infrastructure work commonly cites CSA G30.18; private and commercial projects sometimes list ASTM A615 outright or as an acceptable alternative. A practical crosswalk keeps subs, engineers, and inspectors aligned without delaying pours. In our experience supporting GTA builds, dual-language specs (A615 plus CSA) reduce resubmittals and site changes.
- Yield alignment: Grade 60 targets 60 ksi (~420 MPa) minimum yield; Grade 75 targets 75 ksi (~520 MPa). These sit close to CSA 400W and 500W respectively.
- Size mapping: Typical conversions: #4 ≈ 10M, #5 ≈ 15M, #6 ≈ 20M, #8 ≈ 25M. Always match required area (in² or mm²), not just diameters.
- Spec language: Clear notes like “ASTM A615 Grade 60, epoxy-coated where indicated, bar sizes per schedule” speed approvals and RFIs.
To keep schedules intact, our rebar supply approach pairs submittals with delivery windows matched to pour breaks, so bundles flow from truck to deck with minimal double-handling.
Local considerations for Woodbridge
- Schedule deliveries to avoid peak congestion around Queen St / Highway 50; we plan loads so rebar lands when crews can install it the same day.
- Winter pours need extra lead time for heated enclosures and safety checks; align your A615 submittal a week earlier to keep fabrication slots.
- For tight-access urban sites near Fogal Rd / Highway 50, request smaller, sequenced drops and tagged bundles matched to pour breaks.
How ASTM A615 Works: Grades, Deformations, and Identification
ASTM A615 defines minimum mechanical properties by grade (yield and tensile), surface deformation requirements for bond, and mill marks for traceability. You specify bar size and grade, confirm coating via separate standards, and document bending tolerances through detailing and shop drawings.
Grades and strength targets form the backbone. Common grades include 40 (280 MPa), 60 (420 MPa), 75 (520 MPa), 80 (550 MPa), and 100 (690 MPa) nominal yield strengths. Minimum tensile requirements scale with grade (for example, 90 ksi for Grade 60), ensuring ductile performance beyond yield.
- Deformations: Rib height and spacing maintain reliable bond to concrete; bars are tested to confirm deformation geometry within limits.
- Traceability: Heat numbers on mill certs match tags on bundles; inspectors can confirm size, grade, and producer at a glance.
- Coatings: Epoxy or other coatings are governed by separate standards; specify coating class and locations in the drawings.
| Property | ASTM A615 | CSA G30.18 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yield strength | Grade 60 = 60 ksi (~420 MPa) | 400W = 400 MPa | Used to align typical building specs |
| Yield strength | Grade 75 = 75 ksi (~520 MPa) | 500W = 500 MPa | Used in columns, heavy mats |
| Bar size mapping | #4, #5, #6, #8 | 10M, 15M, 20M, 25M | Match areas, not just diameters |
From submittal to pour, the simplest path is a defined workflow. We follow a five-to-seven-step loop on most GTA jobs to keep RFIs and handling low.
| Step | Action | Primary Output |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Confirm standard, grade, sizes, coatings | Spec note + marked-up plans |
| 2 | Run takeoff with CSA/A615 crosswalk | Bar list with #/M mapping |
| 3 | Detail bends and laps | Bending schedule + shop drawings |
| 4 | Attach mill certs (heats) | Submittal package |
| 5 | Pre-tag bundles to pour breaks | Bundle map + sequence |
| 6 | Fabricate cuts and bends | Staged, inspected bundles |
| 7 | Deliver to timed crane windows | Deck-ready placement |
For deeper background on placement and steel choices, see our steel bars guide and this Ontario fabrication overview that explains cutting, bending, and tolerances.

Types and Alternatives: A615 vs A706 vs CSA G30.18
Use ASTM A615 for general carbon-steel reinforcing where weldability is not the primary requirement. Choose ASTM A706 for specified weldability and tighter ductility control. For Ontario public infrastructure, CSA G30.18 is typically the governing standard; align grades and bar sizes accordingly.
Clear positioning prevents rework. A615 focuses on mechanical performance of carbon-steel bars; A706 caps carbon equivalency to support weldability. CSA G30.18 governs most Ontario public work and mirrors yield levels of 400W and 500W. In mixed-spec jobs, a written crosswalk and stamping by the EOR (engineer of record) keeps compliance airtight.
- When to pick A615: Buildings and general concrete where welding is rare; common use of Grades 60 and 75.
- When to shift to A706: Any connection calling for welding; see our A706 guide for weldability criteria.
- When CSA controls: Most public infrastructure in Ontario; use 400W/500W and map # to M sizes as required by the contract.
For full reinforcement system context—including mesh (6″x6″ at 6/6, 9/9, 10/10) and GFRB options—our steel reinforcement suppliers guide explains when alternatives make sense and how to combine them with A615 bars.
Best Practices for Specifying and Submitting A615 Rebar
Lock scope early: cite the standard (A615), grade, bar sizes, coating, and bend details in the drawings and notes. Then submit mill certs, bar lists, and shop drawings with clear tag maps. Align deliveries to pour breaks so bundles flow straight from truck to deck.
Spec and submittal checklist
- Confirm governing standard and grade (e.g., ASTM A615 Grade 60).
- List bar sizes, coatings (e.g., epoxy), splice method, and lap lengths.
- Provide bar lists, bending schedules, and tagged bundle maps.
- Attach mill test reports showing heat numbers, grade, and properties.
- Note any required welds; if yes, validate weldability or shift to A706.
- Define inspection points and concrete placement sequence.
Field coordination tips
- Match bundle tags to pour sequence to cut handling time by a full crew-hour per drop.
- Stage bars within 20–30 feet of placement to speed tying and reduce back strain.
- Use color-coded caps and separators to keep grades and sizes distinct on congested decks.
- Verify development lengths in inches or millimeters from the actual bar area, not diameter approximations.
- Confirm bend radii against shop drawings to prevent rework on hooks and stirrups.
In our experience, packaging bars by deck or pour break and sequencing trucks to the crane saves measurable time on site. Our supply playbook and coordinated trucking fleet keep ironworkers productive while inspectors see tidy, traceable bundles ready to place.
Need an A615 submittal fast? Our in-house estimating and detailing teams prepare bar lists, shop drawings, and bundle maps that pass review the first time. Ask about sequenced deliveries from our dedicated trucking fleet across the GTA.
Tools & Resources (Standards, Charts, and Templates)
Keep three references handy: the ASTM A615 standard for properties and ID, your building code for development and splice rules, and a current bar-size chart for Imperial-to-metric mapping. Combine them with a submittal template so RFIs don’t stall fabrication.
- ASTM A615 properties and identification basics, paired with your local code notes.
- Bar size and area charts that map #4–#11 to 10M–35M; check areas and weights.
- A submittal checklist template covering certs, heats, and tagged bundle maps.
- Fabrication tolerances reference for bends, hooks, and permissible deviation.
For context on how standards function in practice, this reference vs working standard overview explains why clear, shared definitions reduce rework across trades. And because rebar interfaces with framing and formwork, coordination improves when teams also understand adjacent systems like cold-formed steel framing and this practical steel stud sizing guide.
Inside Dass Rebar, we maintain current standards, detailing libraries, and digital takeoff tools so your submittal package lands complete. Our project managers sync delivery windows with your pour calendar, keeping ironworkers productive and decks on schedule.
Case Studies & Examples (GTA and Ontario)
Dual-standard clarity saves time. On mixed CSA/ASTM specs, we align Grade 60 with 400W and Grade 75 with 500W, map # bars to M sizes, and pre-tag bundles by pour. That approach reduces RFIs, accelerates approval, and keeps deliveries synchronized to crane time.
Residential high-rise, Toronto
For a downtown residential project, structural notes listed CSA 500W with A615 Grade 75 as acceptable. Our detailing team produced a side-by-side schedule mapping 25M mats to #8 equivalents for specific embeds. The EOR stamped the crosswalk, and fabrication began the same day the submittal cleared.
Commercial podium, Waterloo
Podium columns specified CSA 400W but allowed dual entry for A615 Grade 60 in secondary elements. We coordinated #5/15M transitions across shop drawings so the site team could stage one bundle per pour. Result: fewer change tickets and smoother deck cycles.
Transit-adjacent build, Pickering
Near a constrained site, we sequenced trucks to arrive within 30-minute slots, each carrying tagged bundles matched to the day’s pour. Ironworkers tied cages directly off the drop, shaving hours of handling on a crowded deck.
GFRB with steel rebar, GTA
For corrosion-sensitive elements, GFRB was specified for select members while A615 steel handled the bulk of reinforcement. Our team separated delivery streams and labeling to keep inspectors satisfied that each member met the correct material requirement.
Slab-on-grade with welded mesh
On a large slab, welded wire mesh (6″x6″ at 6/6) handled temperature and shrinkage control while A615 #5 bars reinforced column strips. Staging mesh rolls separately from bar bundles improved placement speed and kept finishing crews on schedule.
ASTM A615: Frequently Asked Questions
These quick answers address the most common submittal, sizing, and compliance questions about ASTM A615 rebar. Each response is concise so PMs and estimators can move projects forward without digging through spec books.
What grades does ASTM A615 cover?
ASTM A615 commonly covers Grades 40, 60, 75, 80, and 100. Grade 60 remains the workhorse for buildings, while Grade 75 appears in heavier members. Always verify your project’s structural notes and match grade to the design intent.
Is ASTM A615 weldable?
A615 does not guarantee weldability. If welding is required, ASTM A706 is typically specified because it controls chemistry (carbon equivalency) for better weld performance. If your notes allow only A615, get the EOR’s written approval before welding.
How do A615 bar sizes map to metric sizes?
As a rule of thumb: #4 ≈ 10M, #5 ≈ 15M, #6 ≈ 20M, #8 ≈ 25M. Always check a current area/weight chart, since development lengths and spacing decisions depend on the actual bar area, not just the nominal diameter.
Where is ASTM A615 typically used in Ontario?
It shows up most in private and commercial projects, sometimes alongside CSA G30.18. Ontario public infrastructure usually requires CSA; for mixed specs, align grades and sizes in the submittal and get the EOR’s sign-off.
Does epoxy coating fall under A615?
No. A615 sets base steel properties. Epoxy coating is covered by a separate standard. If your bars are coated, reference the correct coating standard in addition to A615 so inspectors can verify both requirements.
Conclusion
Treat ASTM A615 like a shared language for carbon-steel rebar. When you pair it with local code, a grade crosswalk, and complete submittals, you speed approvals, reduce RFIs, and keep rebar flowing to the deck on schedule.
Key takeaways
- State the standard, grade, sizes, and coating on drawings and submittals.
- Use a CSA/A615 crosswalk to simplify Ontario reviews.
- Bundle-tag to match pour breaks and crane time.
- Shift to A706 where welding is specified.
Ready to move faster on A615 projects in Woodbridge and across the GTA? Our estimating, detailing, fabrication, delivery, and on-site assembly teams coordinate end-to-end so you can pour on time—every time.
