Red flags, right questions, scope requirements, city-specific risks across DFW, and the services framework every Texas homeowner needs before signing anything.
The foundation repair market in Texas is large, competitive, and unfortunately not well-regulated at the entry level. A homeowner who does not know what a complete repair scope looks like is at a significant disadvantage. I have spent 38 years cleaning up after incomplete repairs, and almost every one of them came from a homeowner who signed with the first or the cheapest contractor without asking the questions that would have revealed the problem before any money changed hands.
Bob Hargrove, Lead Specialist, UFE Foundation RepairHiring a foundation repair contractor in Texas is not like hiring a plumber or a painter. The work is significant, the costs are substantial, and the consequences of hiring poorly are structural. A contractor who installs piers without a floor elevation survey, skips the drainage evaluation, or offers a warranty that evaporates when you sell the house has given you something that looks like a repair but may not hold up through the next drought cycle.
This guide gives you everything you need to evaluate a contractor intelligently, understand what a complete repair scope looks like, recognise red flags before you sign, and find resources specific to your DFW city or community. UFE Foundation Repair has been doing this work in North Texas since 1987. What follows is the framework we use internally — shared with homeowners who deserve to go into this process informed.
1. Signs You Need a Foundation Contractor — and Cannot Wait
Many homeowners delay calling a contractor because they are not sure whether their symptoms are serious enough to warrant attention. Here is the framework: if you have one or two minor, stable symptoms with no progression over 12 months, monitoring may be appropriate. If you have multiple symptoms, any rapidly widening crack, visible floor slope, or a chimney that has moved, you need a professional assessment now — not at the end of the season, not after the holidays.
2. Red Flags and Green Flags — How to Read a Contractor Before You Sign
The Texas foundation repair market contains excellent contractors and problematic ones, and the gap between them is not always visible in a first conversation. Here is what separates contractors who deliver lasting results from those who leave homeowners with incomplete repairs and expired warranties.
⚠ Red Flags — Walk Away
- Quotes pier count without taking floor elevation measurements
- Cannot explain why piers go in specific locations
- No mention of drainage correction in the scope
- Warranty that is not transferable to future owners
- Refuses to provide written scope before asking you to sign
- No independent engineering review for larger projects
- Pressure to sign the same day; no time to compare bids
- Unusually low bid with vague scope description
- No licence or proof of insurance provided on request
- Cannot give references from work in your specific area
✅ Green Flags — Good Signs
- Floor elevation survey included in the assessment process
- Can explain exactly why each pier location was chosen
- Drainage correction explicitly included or clearly scoped separately
- Transferable, written warranty with specific exclusion list
- Written scope provided before any contract discussion
- Engineering review available or already incorporated
- Encourages you to get a second opinion — no pressure
- Detailed, itemised scope — pier count, depth, method, drainage
- Licensed, insured, willing to show documentation
- Local reputation with verifiable customer references
3. The Questions That Separate Good Contractors from the Rest
You do not need to be a structural engineer to evaluate a contractor effectively. You need to ask a short list of specific questions and know what a credible answer sounds like. Here is the complete question set.
| Question | What a Good Answer Includes | Red Flag Answer |
|---|---|---|
| How did you determine pier locations and count? | References a floor elevation survey with specific measurements; explains which zones showed movement and by how much | “Based on the size of the house” or “standard for this type of home” |
| What drainage correction is included? | Specific description of drainage scope — grade correction, downspout extensions, French drain if warranted; or clear explanation of why drainage is not the issue | No mention of drainage; or “that’s a separate contractor” |
| Is the warranty transferable? | Yes, with written terms; explains what voids the warranty and how transfer works at point of sale | “We’ll work something out” or warranty that expires on sale |
| Will the scope include a plumbing check? | Explains whether a hydrostatic plumbing test is included or recommended; notes that undetected leaks can undermine any pier program | Plumbing never mentioned; no protocol described |
| What happens if movement continues after repair? | Describes warranty coverage for additional movement; explains follow-up survey protocol | Vague; “we’ll come back and look at it” |
| Do you recommend independent engineering review? | Yes for larger or complex projects; explains the value of third-party verification | Discourages it; “we have everything you need” |
| Can I see examples of similar projects in this area? | Specific examples with approximate scope; offers references; familiar with local soil profile | Generic portfolio with no local specifics |
Source: UFE Foundation Repair contractor evaluation framework. Use this table when reviewing bids from any Texas foundation repair contractor.
A floor elevation survey is not optional on a proper foundation assessment. It is the foundational document — literally. A contractor who cannot produce one or who skips it to save time is giving you an estimate, not a diagnosis. No elevation data means no ability to verify where the movement is, how severe it is, or whether the proposed pier locations address the actual problem zones.
4. What a Complete Foundation Repair Scope Looks Like
Most homeowners evaluating bids focus on pier count and price. Those are important, but they are not the full picture of a complete repair. A scope that addresses structural movement without addressing its cause, drainage without addressing the foundation, or piers without confirming plumbing integrity is an incomplete scope — regardless of how competitive the price is.
| Scope Component | Why It Matters | Included in Complete Repair? |
|---|---|---|
| Floor elevation survey (pre-repair) | Documents baseline; determines pier locations; enables comparison post-repair | Always required |
| Pier installation — type and depth specified | Type must match soil profile; depth must reach bearing strata | Core scope |
| Drainage correction | Addresses the cause of moisture imbalance; prevents recurrence | Required or explicitly excluded with reason |
| Plumbing check / hydrostatic test recommendation | Undetected sub-slab leaks undermine any pier program | Recommended; required if heave is suspected |
| Post-repair elevation survey | Verifies system performance; documents final elevation against pre-repair baseline | Should be standard; ask if not mentioned |
| Written transferable warranty | Protects future repair need and adds value at resale | Required — get it in writing before signing |
| Root barrier or irrigation recommendation | Addresses tree-related or drought moisture risk to prevent future movement | Situational; should be raised where relevant |
| Permit if required by municipality | Code compliance; required for resale disclosure and inspection in many cities | Contractor responsibility to advise and obtain |
A complete repair scope addresses the structural problem, its cause, and its prevention. Any scope missing the first three items should prompt immediate questions.
If you have specific questions about any aspect of residential foundation repair in Dallas, our dedicated Dallas Foundation Repair FAQ Hub covers 100 of the most common questions across 10 categories — from warning signs and costs to repair methods and warranties. It is the most thorough free resource we publish.
5. Roof Drainage — The Often-Overlooked Scope Item
One of the most underappreciated contributors to foundation moisture imbalance in Texas is roof drainage. The volume of water that a roof sheds during a heavy DFW storm is substantial. Where that water goes after it leaves the gutter — and how the drainage system handles extreme weather — directly affects the soil moisture conditions adjacent to the foundation.
The connection between roof drainage and foundation health is direct: a drainage system that discharges close to the foundation, that overflows during heavy storms, or that directs water toward the building perimeter is creating the soil moisture imbalance conditions that drive the exact settlement patterns piers are installed to address. Any contractor who scopes piers without reviewing roof and surface drainage is addressing a symptom without diagnosing the environment that produced it.
6. City-Specific Foundation Guides — Know Your Local Risk
Foundation risk is not uniform across the DFW Metroplex. Soil depth to bearing layer, the mix of housing ages, drainage infrastructure quality, and typical drought exposure all vary by location. Here is what matters in the communities where we work most frequently, plus city-specific guides for homeowners who want to understand their local risk profile before calling a contractor.
For homeowners in communities where UFE operates commercial foundation services, the commercial division serves a separate set of building types — offices, warehouses, retail centres — with the same assessment rigour applied to residential work.
7. The Full UFE Service Range — Beyond Foundation Piers
UFE Foundation Repair is not exclusively a pier-installation company. We provide a full range of services that address the causes and consequences of foundation movement, as well as home improvement services that support structural performance and long-term property value. Understanding the full range helps homeowners see repair not as an isolated event but as part of a broader programme of property care.
Structural repairs create an opportunity to improve. UFE provides home remodeling services that integrate with foundation repair projects for seamless results.
Kitchen updates after foundation repair — leveling a sloping kitchen floor, correcting cabinet alignment caused by settlement, and full kitchen renovation services.
Residential piers, commercial foundation repair, drainage, French drains, root barriers, tunneling, irrigation, new slab construction, and site services.
8. UFE Foundation Repair — Extended Service Area Network
UFE serves communities throughout North Texas, Central Texas, and the greater DFW extended Metroplex. The cities below represent areas where we provide free inspections, foundation repair, drainage services, and site work. Click any city card to view local information and confirm service availability.
9. Comparing Foundation Repair Bids — A Scoring Framework
When you have two or three bids in front of you, price alone should not decide the outcome. Use this scoring framework to evaluate each bid on the factors that actually determine whether a repair will hold up.
| Evaluation Factor | Weight | Contractor A Self-Assessment | Why This Factor Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Floor elevation survey included | High | □ Yes □ No | Non-negotiable — no survey means no basis for pier placement |
| Drainage correction in scope | High | □ Yes □ No | Repairs without drainage correction have higher recurrence rates |
| Transferable written warranty | High | □ Yes □ No | Protects resale value and covers future movement |
| Plumbing check or recommendation | Moderate | □ Yes □ No | Sub-slab leaks can undermine piers within 12 months |
| Post-repair elevation survey | Moderate | □ Yes □ No | Confirms the repair achieved the specified result |
| Pier type and depth specified in writing | High | □ Yes □ No | Vague scope = no accountability for bearing depth or method |
| No-pressure timeline for decision | Moderate | □ Yes □ No | High-pressure close is a signal of sales culture over service culture |
| Local DFW experience and references | Moderate | □ Yes □ No | Soil varies by sub-area — local experience matters for spec accuracy |
Score each bid: 1 point per Yes. Any bid with fewer than 5 out of 8 should be disqualified or significantly questioned before proceeding.
Ready to Talk to a Contractor You Can Trust?
Free inspections across the full DFW Metroplex — residential and commercial. We bring the elevation survey, we explain every pier location, and we tell you honestly what you need and what you do not. Phones answered until 11pm every night.
The Bottom Line — Hire Informed, Protect Long-Term
The foundation repair market in Texas is large enough that homeowners who know what to look for can find excellent contractors with strong track records and complete scopes. The ones who end up with incomplete repairs are almost always the ones who did not know what questions to ask, or who were too focused on price to notice that the scope was missing critical components.
Take the framework in this guide into every contractor conversation. Ask for the elevation survey data before agreeing to any pier count. Read the warranty before you sign. Ask specifically about drainage. And do not let time pressure from any contractor override your right to make a considered decision about a major structural investment.
At UFE Foundation Repair, we have been doing this work in Texas since 1987 and we welcome every one of those questions. Give us a call when you are ready.
Bob Hargrove, UFE Foundation Repair, Dallas-Fort Worth
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