Load bearing capacity can be predicted by appropriate modeling of material properties, geometry variables, and uncertainties associated with an applied model for the failure mechanism under consideration. The submitted study investigates shear resistance model uncertainties for reinforced concrete beams with and without shear reinforcement, considering large test databases and various levels of approximation offered by fib Model Code 2010. Model uncertainty is treated as a random variable and its characteristics are obtained by comparing test and model outcomes. The sensitivity of model uncertainty with respect to basic variables is analyzed. For beams with stirrups, Level III is recommended for practical applications. Its predictions are shown to be independent of the amount of shear reinforcement and have reasonable bias and dispersion around test results. For beams without shear reinforcement, the use of Level II is advisable and a distinction between lightly reinforced and moderately to heavily reinforced beams should be made. K E Y W O R D S fib model code 2010, model uncertainty, partial factor, reinforced concrete, shear reinforcement, shear resistance 1 | INTRODUCTIONAdequate description of the uncertainties in resistance models was recognized as one of key issues in reliability investigations of new and existing reinforced concrete (RC) structures. 1 Particularly when description of load effects and structural responses is highly complex, and operational procedures are based on simplified approaches, model uncertainty may dominate structural reliability and its quantification and explicit inclusion in reliability analysis is required. 2 Such cases can be identified by the lack of consensus amongst experts; alternative models used in research studies and practical applications; and different levels of approximation (LoA) 3 introduced in design codes. This is the case with shear resistances of RC structures, recognizing that shear strengths predicted by different design codes for a particular beam or section can vary by factors of more than two. 4 Shear resistances of beams have stimulated an extensive debate over recent decades, as there is not yet an international consensus on which variables are important, 5 which mechanisms govern 6,7 and how to codify existing understanding. 8 Features of several models for shear resistances of beams with and without special shear reinforcement (hereafter referred to as "shear models" for brevity) were investigated and improvements proposed. [9][10][11][12][13][14][15] The complexity of shear transfer actions and modeling was recognized and described in detail in References 16,17.Model uncertainty as an indicator of the difference between model and real structural resistances was explicitly addressed by Russo et al 10 who analyzed the uncertainty associated with the models in EN 1992-1-1 18 and American Concrete Institute (ACI) 318M-08. 19 Bentz et al 4 were focused on the ACI procedure and two approaches belonging to the Modified Compression Field Theory. The recent