Passive Purple — Liquid Airtight Membrane Paint

BBA Certified • Passivhaus Institute Certified • UK-Made

Passive Purple — Liquid Airtight Membrane Paint

The UK's only BBA and Passivhaus-certified liquid airtight membrane. Spray or roller-applied vapour control layer (VCL) paint that achieves 0.03 ACH — 20× tighter than the Passivhaus standard. Seamless, flexible, and certified for new builds and retrofits.

0.03
ACH achieved in
testing @ 50 Pa
20×
Tighter than
Passivhaus standard
300m²
Per day with
airless spray
15+
Certifications
& test documents

Tin of Passive Purple liquid airtight membrane for high-performance vapour control building envelopes

What Is Passive Purple?

Passive Purple is the world's first Passivhaus-certified liquid airtight membrane paint — a water-based, VOC-free coating that creates a seamless vapour control layer (VCL), airtight layer, and smoke-tight barrier in a single application. It replaces traditional polythene sheet membranes, foil VCLs, and airtight tapes with a flexible, spray or roller-applied coating that bonds permanently to the building fabric.

Applied to the warm side of insulation across walls, floors, and ceilings, Passive Purple fills micro-cracks, seals penetrations, and creates a continuous airtight building envelope. Unlike rigid sheet membranes, the liquid formulation adapts to irregular surfaces and building movement — delivering a certified performance result that sheet-based systems simply cannot match at junctions and transitions.

Backed by BBA Certificate 22/6002, Passivhaus Institut 2026 certification, ICC testing, M1 indoor air quality classification (the strictest in Europe), Fire Class C (two classes better than standard foil membranes), and an Environmental Product Declaration, Passive Purple is the most comprehensively certified airtight membrane paint available in the UK.

liquid airtight membrane UK VCL paint UK airtight membrane paint passivhaus airtight membrane BBA airtight membrane vapour control layer paint airtight coating building liquid VCL UK airtight paint UK

Why Liquid Airtight Paint?

The micro-crack problem that renders sheet membranes inadequate

The Physics of Building Movement

Every building contains multiple materials — brick, blockwork, timber, steel frame, concrete slab, plasterboard — each with a different thermal expansion coefficient. As the building heats and cools through daily and seasonal cycles, these materials expand and contract at different rates.

At the interfaces between materials — floor-to-wall junctions, wall-to-ceiling connections, around window frames and service penetrations — this differential movement creates micro-cracks in the plaster and substrate. These cracks are invisible to the eye but large enough to allow significant air infiltration.

Polythene sheet membranes and foil VCLs are rigid over joints and tear at fixings; the taped joints are the first point of failure. Airtight tape applied directly to substrates debonds as the substrate flexes. The result: every traditional airtightness system has inherent weak points at the exact locations where movement is greatest.

The Liquid Solution

A liquid airtight coating penetrates and seals the substrate surface before any plaster is applied, bonding at the molecular level across every material boundary. When cured, the flexible polymer film moves with the building rather than against it — cracks that would rupture a rigid membrane are accommodated by the elastic layer beneath.

The result is a seamless, continuous airtight building envelope with no overlaps, no taped joints, and no weak points — confirmed by independent air pressure testing to achieve just 0.03 ACH at 50 Pa.

Traditional sheet membrane failures

✗ Polythene Sheet DPM
Cannot seal penetrations. Tears at fixings. Taped joints fail with movement. Fire Class E. Not airtight at junctions.
✗ Foil Membrane VCL
Class E fire rating. Difficult to detail at junctions. Adhesion tape fails over time. Cannot be applied to irregular substrates.
✗ Self-Adhesive Membranes
Fire Class E. Long-term adhesion failure. Labour-intensive on complex geometry. Joints remain vulnerable.
✗ Airtight Tapes Alone
Can only seal limited linear metre junctions. No large-area coverage. Fail around curves and penetrations.
✓ Passive Purple Liquid VCL
Seamless coverage of all substrates. Class C fire. Flexible and permanent. Passivhaus and BBA certified. Works on concrete, brick, timber, steel, OSB, and plasterboard.

Contractor spray-applying Passive Purple airtight vapour control membrane with an airless sprayer

Six Reasons Specifiers Choose Passive Purple

🏆
BBA & Passivhaus Institute Certified
The only liquid VCL in the UK holding both BBA Certificate 22/6002 and Passivhaus Institut 2026 certification. Essential for planning compliance, warranty approval, and specification on social housing, commercial, and certified Passivhaus projects.
👁
0.03 ACH Performance
Independent testing achieved 0.03 air changes per hour at 50 Pa — against a Passivhaus requirement of 0.6 ACH and UK building regs of ≤10 m³/h·m². Twenty times tighter than Passivhaus standard, giving specifiers and self-builders substantial margin.
🛣
Radon & Methane Barrier
Passive Purple carries independent certification as both a radon barrier and a methane ground gas barrier — a rare combination. Eliminates the need for a separate DPM for ground gas protection in many situations, simplifying specification and reducing cost.
🔥
Fire Class C — vs Class E for Foil
Tested to EN 13501-1:2018 cl.11 and classified Fire Class C. Standard polythene sheet membranes and foil VCLs are Class E — two full fire-reaction classes lower. Combined with FRED flame-retardant primer, achieves Class B. Critical for Part B compliance.
🌿
M1 Indoor Air Quality
Certified to M1 Class — the Finnish indoor air quality standard and the strictest emissions classification in Europe. Water-based, VOC-free formulation. Safe for occupied buildings during installation and leaves no residual emissions when cured.
300m²/Day with Airless Spray
One installer with an airless spray rig covers 300m² per day. Coverage rate is 1kg/m² meaning a single 11.4kg tin covers ~11.4m². For large-area projects this dramatically reduces labour costs versus sheet membrane installation.

Certifications & Third-Party Approvals

The most comprehensively certified airtight membrane paint available in the UK. Every claim is independently verified.

🏆
BBA Certified
🏠
Passivhaus Institut 2026
🔥
Fire Class C
🌿
M1 Indoor Air
🛣
Radon Barrier
🌀
Methane Barrier
🌎
ICC Tested
📌
WUFI Database
🌍
EPD Certificate
📔
RIBA Listed
📖
NBS Listed
🪘
Mould Growth Tested

All certificates available to download in the Documents section below. BBA Certificate 22/6002 covers the Spray/Roller formulation; separate BBA cert covers the Brush formulation.

Seamless coverage of Passive Purple providing vapour control and airtightness across walls

The Complete Passive Purple System

Two complementary products working together to create a fully sealed building envelope. As a guide: 1 tin of brush-applied is needed for every 5 tins of spray for a complete system.

Step 1 — Large Areas

Passive Purple Spray / Roller

11.4kg tin • £99.99 • Coverage: 1kg/m² (~11.4m²)

The primary liquid airtight membrane for all wall, ceiling, and floor large-area applications. Spray-applied with an airless rig at up to 300m²/day per installer, or applied with a short-pile roller for smaller areas. Creates the seamless VCL/airtight layer across all solid substrates.

  • Spray or roller application — no specialist equipment required for roller
  • 300m²/day with airless spray (one operator)
  • Covers concrete, brick, blockwork, timber, OSB, steel
  • BBA certified spray/roller formulation
  • Apply to warm side of insulation before first coat of plaster
  • Can be plastered, rendered, or painted over when cured
Step 2 — Detailing

Passive Purple Brush (Fibre-Reinforced)

3.7kg or 6.9kg • from £39.99 • Fibre-reinforced formula

The fibre-reinforced brush formulation is used to seal junctions, penetrations, cracks, and transitions that the spray/roller cannot fully cover. Applied first to all detail areas before the spray coat, ensuring continuity of the airtight layer at every weak point in the building envelope.

  • Seals cracks and voids 2–5mm wide
  • Window and door frame perimeters
  • Floor-to-wall junctions
  • Wall-to-ceiling connections
  • Service pipe and cable penetrations
  • Separate BBA certification for brush variant
  • Works with IM Fleece Tapes for additional reinforcement

Dot-and-Dab / Plasterboard: When plasterboard is to be applied over Passive Purple using a dot-and-dab technique, apply Supergrip primer over the cured Passive Purple layer before applying the adhesive dabs. This ensures adhesion bond strength is maintained through the airtight layer.

Substrate Compatibility

Substrate Spray/Roller Brush Detail Primer Required Notes
Concrete (in-situ & precast) ✓ Yes ✓ Yes No (clean substrate) Ensure surface is free of laitance and loose material. Apply to sound, clean face.
Brick & Blockwork ✓ Yes ✓ Yes No Suitable for dense aggregate blocks, aerated (Aircrete) blocks, and clay brick. Fill major voids first with brush grade.
Timber & OSB Boards ✓ Yes ✓ Yes No Suitable for timber frame studs and OSB sheathing panels. Seal all board joints with brush grade first.
Steel Frame (LGS) ✓ Yes ✓ Yes No Light gauge steel frame system. Apply across cladding panels and at all frame junctions. Brush detail around every penetration.
Plasterboard (dot-and-dab) ✓ Yes ✓ Yes Supergrip primer required For dot-and-dab plasterboard: apply Supergrip over cured Passive Purple to maintain adhesion bond strength. Direct fix requires no primer.
Floor-to-Wall Junctions Roller ✓ Primary No Brush grade applied first to all junctions; spray/roller coat over. Critical airtightness weak point in all build types.
Wall-to-Ceiling Connections Roller ✓ Primary No Apply brush grade into the corner and up each face before overall spray coat.
Window & Door Frames Not recommended ✓ Primary No Use brush grade to seal frame-to-wall perimeters. Combined with Passivhaus Sealant for movement joints.
Service Penetrations Not applicable ✓ Primary No Brush grade applied around all penetrations to create a smoke-tight, airtight seal. Can be used with IM Fleece Tapes for reinforcement on larger penetrations.

Technical Specification

Property Spray / Roller Brush (Fibre-Reinforced)
Fire Classification Class C (EN 13501-1:2018 cl.11) Class C (EN 13501-1:2018 cl.11)
Airtightness Achieved 0.03 ACH @ 50 Pa As system (used with spray grade)
UK Building Regs Standard ≤10 m³/h·m² @ 50 Pa (Part L)
Passivhaus Standard ≤0.6 ACH @ 50 Pa (PHI)
Coverage Rate 1 kg/m² (11.4kg = ~11.4m²) Check TDS for application rate
Application Speed 300m²/day (airless spray, 1 operator) Detail/junction work rate
Base Water-based polymer
VOC Content VOC-free
Indoor Air Quality M1 Class (strictest in Europe)
Colour Purple / White (Airtight White variant)
Radon Barrier ✓ Certified ✓ Certified
Methane / Ground Gas Barrier ✓ Certified ✓ Certified
Smoke Tight ✓ Yes ✓ Yes
Vapour Control Layer (VCL) ✓ Yes ✓ Yes
WUFI Hygrothermal Data Listed — EN 15026, ASHRAE 160, DIN 4108
BBA Certificate 22/6002 (Spray/Roller) Separate BBA cert (Brush)
Available Size 11.4kg 3.7kg / 6.9kg
Price £99.99 per 11.4kg From £39.99

Understanding Airtightness Standards

How UK Building Regulations and Passivhaus compare — and what Passive Purple achieves.

≤10
UK Part L
m³/h·m² at 50 Pa. UK new build minimum under Part L / Approved Document L. Many projects struggle to achieve even this level with traditional sheet membranes.
≤0.6
Passivhaus
ACH (air changes per hour) at 50 Pa. The Passivhaus Institut standard — significantly more stringent than UK Part L. Requires meticulous airtight detailing throughout the building envelope.
0.03
Passive Purple Achieved
ACH at 50 Pa in independent testing. 20× tighter than Passivhaus, giving enormous margin for real-world variability and site conditions. The highest published airtightness result for any liquid membrane in the UK.

What this means for your project

Achieving a test result of 0.03 ACH with Passive Purple liquid VCL on a completed building means that even with construction tolerances, service penetrations installed after membrane application, and the inevitable minor imperfections of any building site, the final measured result is highly likely to satisfy both Passivhaus and Part L requirements comfortably.

For Passivhaus designers: WUFI Database listing means Passive Purple can be included directly in hygrothermal models run to EN 15026, ASHRAE 160, and DIN 4108 — simplifying the certification pathway.

Estimate the heat loss savings from improved airtightness for your project using our free heat savings calculator.

Passive Purple vs Traditional Airtightness Solutions

A like-for-like comparison of every major airtightness system available in the UK market.

Attribute Passive Purple
(Liquid VCL)
Polythene
Sheet DPM
Foil
Membrane
Self-Adhesive
Membrane
Airtight
Tape Only
Fire Classification Class C
EN 13501-1
Class E Class E Class E Varies
BBA Certified ✓ Yes (22/6002) Some products Some products Some products Some products
Passivhaus Certified ✓ Yes (2026) ✗ No ✗ No ✗ No ✗ No
Seamless Coverage ✓ Yes ✗ No — overlaps & joints ✗ No — overlaps & joints Partial — joints remain ✗ Linear only
Application Speed 300m²/day ~80–120m²/day ~60–100m²/day ~50–80m²/day Linear metre only
Radon Barrier ✓ Certified Some grades ✗ No Some products ✗ No
Methane Barrier ✓ Certified Some grades ✗ No ✗ No ✗ No
All Substrates ✓ Concrete, brick, timber, OSB, steel ✗ Flat surfaces only ✗ Flat surfaces only Smooth surfaces Linear junctions
Flexibility ✓ Elastic polymer film ✗ Rigid at junctions ✗ Rigid, tears Limited Adhesion failure risk
VOC / Indoor Air VOC-free • M1 Class Low concern Low concern Adhesive VOCs possible Adhesive VOCs possible
Smoke Tight ✓ Yes ✗ No ✗ No ✗ No ✗ No
EPD Available ✓ Yes ✗ Rarely ✗ Rarely ✗ Rarely ✗ Rarely

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a liquid airtight membrane?
A liquid airtight membrane is a paint or coating applied to the internal face of a building's structure to create a seamless, continuous air and vapour control layer (VCL). Unlike traditional polythene sheet or foil membranes, which are fixed mechanically and taped at joints, a liquid airtight membrane is brushed, rolled, or spray-applied directly onto the substrate — concrete, brick, blockwork, timber, OSB, or steel — where it cures to form a flexible, durable airtight film. Passive Purple is the UK's leading liquid airtight membrane, holding BBA Certificate 22/6002 and Passivhaus Institut 2026 certification.
Is Passive Purple BBA approved?
Yes. Passive Purple holds BBA Certificate 22/6002 — one of the most important third-party certifications for specifiers in the UK construction industry. BBA approval is required by most structural warranty providers, housing associations, and local authority housing departments, and is widely referenced by building control in approving airtightness specifications. Both the Spray/Roller formulation and the Brush (fibre-reinforced) formulation have separate BBA certificates. All certificates are available to download free of charge from the Documents section above.
What is the difference between Passive Purple spray and brush?
Passive Purple Spray/Roller (11.4kg, £99.99) is the primary large-area formulation applied with an airless spray rig at up to 300m²/day, or with a short-pile roller. It creates the main airtight VCL layer across walls, ceilings, and floors. Passive Purple Brush (3.7kg or 6.9kg, from £39.99) is a fibre-reinforced version applied by brush to all junctions, penetrations, cracks (2–5mm wide), window and door frame perimeters, floor-to-wall junctions, and wall-to-ceiling connections before the spray coat goes on. As a guide, one tin of brush applied is needed for every five tins of spray. Both have separate BBA certificates and are used together as a complete system.
Can Passive Purple be used on retrofit projects?
Yes. Passive Purple is used extensively on retrofit and refurbishment projects as well as new builds. On a retrofit, the liquid application is particularly valuable because existing walls and substrates are often irregular, cracked, or constructed from multiple materials — exactly the conditions where sheet membranes fail. Passive Purple can be applied directly over sound masonry, concrete, and existing plasterwork before re-plastering. It bridges micro-cracks and differential movement joints, delivering measurable airtightness improvement on buildings that would otherwise be impossible to seal with sheet membranes. See our case studies for retrofit examples.
Does Passive Purple act as a vapour control layer (VCL)?
Yes. Passive Purple functions as a vapour control layer (VCL) paint, an airtight membrane, and a smoke-tight barrier in a single application. The SD value (water vapour diffusion resistance) data is published in the SD Card technical document and the product is listed on the WUFI Database for hygrothermal modelling to EN 15026, ASHRAE 160, and DIN 4108. Moisture designers and Passivhaus certifiers can include Passive Purple directly in hygrothermal risk assessments. Applied to the warm side of insulation as recommended, it prevents interstitial condensation whilst maintaining the airtight envelope.
What fire rating does Passive Purple have?
Passive Purple is independently tested and classified as Fire Class C under EN 13501-1:2018 cl.11 — two full classes better than polythene sheet membranes and foil VCLs, which are rated Class E. When applied over a first coat of FRED (Flame Retardant Ethylene-Dispersant) primer, the combined system achieves Fire Class B. This is a critical differentiator for Part B / Approved Document B compliance on multi-occupancy, high-rise, and commercial projects where combustible materials behind finishes are a concern.
Does Passive Purple protect against radon?
Yes. Passive Purple holds independent radon barrier certification as well as certification as a methane ground gas barrier — a rare combination in a single product. This means that on sites in radon-affected zones (as mapped by the UK Health Security Agency), Passive Purple can serve as the radon barrier in addition to the airtight VCL, potentially eliminating the need for a separate membrane system. The Radon Certificate and Methane Certificate are both available to download from the Documents section above.
How do I achieve Passivhaus airtightness with Passive Purple?
Use the complete Passive Purple system: apply the fibre-reinforced Brush grade first to all junctions, penetrations, cracks, window and door frames, floor-to-wall junctions, and wall-to-ceiling connections, then follow with the Spray/Roller grade across all large areas. Independent testing of this system achieved 0.03 ACH — twenty times tighter than the Passivhaus requirement of 0.6 ACH. Passive Purple holds the 2026 Passivhaus Institut certification. For detailed guidance on Passivhaus applications, visit the Passivhaus page or contact our technical team.

Complete the System

Complementary products for a fully certified airtight building envelope.

Ready to specify or order?

The UK's only BBA and Passivhaus-certified liquid airtight membrane paint. Delivered direct. Full technical support available.