ABSTRACT The adhesive bonding technique is extensively employed in large-scale component manufacturing to efficiently join the fibre-reinforced composite laminates. The following adhesive bonding techniques, such as secondary bonding, co-bonding and co-curing techniques, were modified by novel interleaved and covered lamination techniques. The shear and vibration behaviour of carbon fibre reinforced polymeric (CFRP) composite single lap joint were investigated per ASTM D5868 standards with innovative lamination techniques. The findings demonstrated that the Co-Curing with the Covered Lamination Technique (CL-CCT) showed an excellent shear strength of 88% higher than the secondary bonding technique. The Co-Curing with Interleaved Lamination Technique (IL-CCT) demonstrated a significant enhancement in shear strength, surpassing the secondary bonding technique by 74%. Furthermore, the Co-Bonding with the Covered Lamination Technique (CL-CBT) exhibited a 44% increase in natural frequency. The Co-Curing with Covered Lamination Technique (CL-CCT) also outperformed the conventional secondary bonding technique, demonstrating a remarkable 32% improvement in natural frequency. Eventually, the adhesive and cohesive failure modes are observed in the overlap zone of CFRP composite single-lap joints.