Relatively recently a steel fabric/laminate has been proposed for externally strengthening concrete structures, using a polymeric resin. The steel fiber-polymer composite system is termed Steel Reinforced Polymer (SRP). To determine the ultimate load capacity of an SRP retrofitted concrete structure, one must accurately predict the SRP-concrete interface debonding load, which requires a robust local bond-slip model. Many design guidelines recommend mode II interfacial fracture energy limit as the failure criterion for FRP-concrete interface. For SRP strengthened members, a suitable constitutive law and failure criterion have not been established yet. Consequently, in this study the applicability of five existing bond-slip interface models f...