Foundation Repair in George West, TX
Inland South Texas climate, hot and dry by Coastal Bend standards.
For foundation repair, the service area covers roughly 55 miles from central George West.
Common reasons to call
- Interior cracks over doors, windows, or corners
- Doors sticking or gaps opening around frames
- Uneven floors or visible slab movement
- Brick stair-step cracking on exterior walls
- Separation at fascia, trim, or garage openings
- Post-drought movement on expansive clay soil
- Drainage problems pushing water toward the slab
- Pre-sale repair plan after an inspection report
Typical work
- Foundation elevation survey and repair recommendation
- Pressed concrete or steel pier installation
- Pier-and-beam leveling and shim work
- Crawlspace beam, joist, or block support repair
- Drainage correction tied to foundation movement
- Crack monitoring and engineer review
- Post-repair plumbing test coordination where needed
Typical turnaround
Initial inspections are commonly scheduled within a few business days. Repair timing depends on engineering needs, permits, crew availability, and weather.
Materials and equipment
- Pressed concrete piers
- Steel piers or helical piers where specified
- Pier-and-beam shims and support blocks
- Drainage pipe, catch basins, and surface grading material
- Mortar and concrete patch materials
- Elevation measurement equipment
Job sizes
Minor
Evaluation, monitoring, small pier-and-beam adjustment, or drainage tune-up
Standard
Limited pier installation or crawlspace leveling
Major
Multi-side slab stabilization with engineer review
Replacement
Whole-house repair plan, structural remediation, drainage correction, and plumbing coordination
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓Elevation readings documented before repair recommendations
- ✓Texas licensed professional engineer involvement where scope requires it
- ✓Written warranty terms provided before work starts
- ✓Drainage and plumbing risk discussed as part of the repair plan
Texas licensed professional engineer report where required, transferable repair warranty, general liability insurance, documented elevation readings, plumbing test coordination after slab movement.
Common questions
How do I know if it is foundation movement?
Look for patterns. One small drywall crack may be normal. Doors sticking, stair-step brick cracks, sloped floors, and gaps opening together point more strongly at movement. The inspection should include elevation readings, not just a quick look.
Does every foundation repair need an engineer?
Not every minor adjustment does, but larger slab repairs and disputed repair plans should have a Texas licensed professional engineer involved. That gives you a repair design and documentation a buyer or lender can understand.
Is Corpus Christi soil hard on foundations?
Yes. Expansive clay in Calallen, Annaville, and other inland neighborhoods moves with wet and dry cycles. Near the bay and island, drainage, sand, and salt-air exposure bring a different set of problems.
Will piers fix my drainage problem?
No. Piers support the structure, but water still has to move away from the slab. If drainage caused the movement, fix the drainage too or the house keeps fighting the same issue.
Do I need a plumbing test after slab repair?
Often, yes. Slab movement and lift work can expose or aggravate plumbing leaks. A static test or plumber check is common when there are sewer lines under the slab.
Can I sell a house after foundation repair?
Yes, but keep the engineer letter, warranty, repair map, elevation readings, permits where applicable, and plumbing test records. Buyers get nervous when the paperwork is missing.
Is foundation repair licensed in Texas?
Texas does not license foundation repair contractors at the state level. The engineering side is regulated. For the contractor, look for insurance, references, written scope, and clear warranty terms.
Coastal Bend seasons
Spring (March - May)
Heavy rain shows drainage problems and can swell expansive clay soils.
Summer (June - August)
Dry heat opens cracks and can make doors stick as clay soil shrinks.
Fall (September - November)
Good season for drainage correction before winter rain and before listing a home.
Winter (December - February)
Scheduling is usually easier, but wet weather can slow excavation and pier work.