Purpose The carbon intensity that accompanies concrete manufacturing has been widely investigated. However, depending on the intended use, concrete's embedded materials' quantities can change significantly, affecting its environmental performance. Seldom investigated, sprayed concrete's impact differs from that of typical ready mixed concrete, which justifies a differentiated inspection. Our goals are (i) to prove that sprayed concrete's environmental impacts are under-investigated and (ii) to provide an overview on how concrete's components' production cycles are typically modelled in LCAs. Methods We performed a systematic literature review (SLR) to gather the widest possible sample of papers in a replicable and transparent manner, aiming to answer two research questions: 'What is the life cycle performance of sprayed concrete?' and 'What are the most frequent methodological choices made to perform an LCA of concrete's constituents?'. We used eight different keyword strings for each of concrete's most used components and searched for documents in databases Springer and ScienceDirect. After 3 conservative filtering rounds, 282 papers were thoroughly and collectively assessed to feed the outcome herein documented.Results and discussion The investigated literature not only showed a gap in sprayed concrete's environmental impacts documentation but also allowed us to build a literary dossier to ground researches aiming to calculate typical concrete mixes' impact through LCA, assuring comparability with the ecological status quo for that construction material. Practitioners' most frequent methodological choices were documented, along with common standard breaches and limitations in investigated studies. Conclusions By systematically structuring our research protocol, we covered enough papers to provide a sound overview and to make collective conclusions regarding available literature. We make two main recommendations for LCA practitioners: noncarbon correlated impact categories ought to be investigated-especially as we move towards more carbon-friendly technologies in concrete/cement manufacturing. Second, practitioners should always comply with the transparency requirements of an LCA. Our outcome pointed to an alarming number of published papers that failed to declare basic methodological choices such as data sources, assessment methods used and impact distribution strategies in multifunctional processes' modelling.