No mystery, no pressure
The whole process, from first call to final paperwork.
Foundation repair has a reputation problem: high-pressure sales, vague scopes, mystery pricing. The fix is boring transparency — here's every step, including the parts where you can tell us no.
What working with us looks like
From first call to final paperwork.
Call or book online
Tell us what you're seeing. If it sounds like weather or cosmetics, we'll say so on the phone — no truck rolled.
Free on-site inspection
Floor elevation survey, crack documentation, drainage, trees, plumbing red flags. About 60–90 minutes.
Straight answer + written plan
Repair, monitor, or relax — with the measurements that justify it. If piers make sense, you get a marked plan and a firm price.
Repair day(s)
Most jobs finish in 1–3 days. You can live at home the whole time. We protect landscaping and re-check elevations during the lift.
Documentation + lifetime warranty
Before/after elevations, pier locations and depths, and a transferable warranty certificate — paperwork a future buyer's inspector will respect.
Repair day, hour by hour
What a repair day actually feels like.
Morning, day one
Crew arrives, walks the plan with you, protects landscaping, and opens the pits. Loud parts: some digging, occasional hammering. Water and power stay on.
Driving piers
Each pier goes down with hydraulic pressure readings logged. You're welcome to watch — most homeowners find it surprisingly tidy.
The lift
Rams lift the slab gently while we re-check elevations in real time. You'll likely hear the house creak as doors square up — that's the sound of frames un-racking.
Closing up
Brackets locked, pits backfilled, sod replaced, magnet sweep for debris. Final elevation survey, walkthrough, and your documentation packet.
See the underground part
Step through a pier installation.
Method details: steel piers · concrete with rebar · hybrid piers — every install documented and covered by the lifetime transferable warranty.
Straight answers
Process questions, answered straight.
Step one costs nothing.
Free inspection, elevation map, and a written plan — the rest of the process only happens if the measurements earn it.
