This study focuses on less-studied mode I/III fracture cracking behaviour. Seven specimens (ENDC, DNDC, SCB, ENDB, ATPB, TPB-IC, and SENB) were analyzed numerically and experimentally. Results show in pure mode-I, the specimens show identical K Ic values (1.22 to 1.54 MPa/m). Especially if the K Ic was measured by compressive specimens (ENDC and DNDC with K Ic of 1.22 and 1.30 MPa/m, respectively) and was neglected. In these cases, the difference in measured K Ic values directly relates to the T-stress value in pure mode-I. So, higher T-stress values increase the K Ic and vice versa. In pure mode-III, which can only simulated by ENDB, ENDC, and DNDC specimens, the difference in measured K IIIc values was enormous, as 0.99 MPa/m for ENDB, 2.0 MPa/m for ENDC and 2.53 MPa/m for DNDC. Comparing the trend of K IIIc for specimens shows the same as K Ic , K IIIc also has a direct relation with the T-stress. The affectability of fracture toughness from T-stress shows the importance of accounting for it in calculations. The trends show that the ENDB, ENDC, and DNDC specimens have considerably negative T-stress values, with different trends. Moving from pure mode-I to pure mode-III, the ENDB has a low-negative T-stress that becomes high-negative (about-0.32 to-2.5 MPa). Meanwhile, of DNDC, it is the opposite; the T-stress is high-negative for pure mode-I and becomes low-negative for pure mode-III (about-2.54 to-0.77 MPa). For ENDC, the T-stress is almost constant moderate-negative in all the mixed mode I/III conditions (about-2.1 MPa).