Home Flooding Guide
Grading & Drainage:
DIY or Call a Pro?
When water pools near your home, the solution often starts at ground level. Learn when you can fix grading yourself — and when the risk is too high to go it alone.
Poor yard grading is one of the leading causes of home flooding. When the ground slopes toward your foundation instead of away from it, rainwater has nowhere to go but inside. The good news: some grading problems are well within a homeowner’s reach. Others require professional intervention to avoid making things much worse.
DIY or Professional? Know Your Situation
✅ Good DIY Candidates
- Small low spots that collect standing water
- Redirecting downspouts away from the foundation
- Adding splash blocks or downspout extenders
- Building simple swales to guide runoff
- Filling and regrading small areas with topsoil
- Mulching garden beds to slow erosion
🚫 Call a Professional
- Water entering your basement or foundation
- Large areas needing regrading (500+ sq ft)
- Severe erosion on slopes or near walls
- Installing underground drainage systems
- Projects near property lines or retaining walls
- Any work that may require a permit
⚠️ The Cost of Getting It Wrong
Improperly graded soil can funnel water toward your foundation rather than away from it — turning a weekend project into a foundation repair bill of $10,000 or more. If water is already near your home’s structure, do not attempt regrading without professional guidance.
What You’ll Need for a DIY Regrading
Tools & Materials
- Shovel and wheelbarrow
- Topsoil or fill dirt (a 50/50 mix of topsoil and sand drains well)
- A long level or laser level to check slope
- Lawn roller (optional, for compacting)
- Garden hose for a water test once complete
Basic Steps
- Identify where water collects after heavy rain
- Add fill dirt in low areas, sloping away from the house
- Verify your slope: 6 inches of drop over 10 feet minimum
- Compact lightly and reseed or lay sod over bare soil
- Test with a hose — watch where water flows
When to Bring In a Professional
A licensed landscape contractor or civil engineer can assess your entire drainage system — not just the visible symptoms. They have access to equipment (mini excavators, laser grading tools, compactors) that makes large-scale regrading accurate and durable. They can also design and install systems beyond basic regrading:
- French drains — perforated pipes buried in gravel that redirect subsurface water
- Catch basins — underground collection points that pipe water to the street or a dry well
- Dry wells — underground chambers that allow slow infiltration into the soil
- Retaining walls — structural solutions for steep slopes prone to erosion
💡 Consider a Hybrid Approach
Many homeowners get the best results by starting with a professional consultation (typically $100–$300 for a landscape contractor visit) and then handling simpler parts themselves. You’ll walk away with a drainage plan you can execute in phases — saving money while making sure the strategy is sound.
Quick Decision Reference
| Situation | DIY Appropriate? |
|---|---|
| Minor low spots in yard, small area | ✅ Yes |
| Redirecting or extending downspouts | ✅ Yes |
| Simple swale or small berm | ⚡ With research |
| Regrading 500+ sq ft | ❌ Call a pro |
| Water pooling near foundation or entering basement | ❌ Call a pro |
| Installing French drains or catch basins | ❌ Call a pro |
| Work near retaining walls or steep slopes | ❌ Call a pro |
| Project near a property line | ❌ Call a pro |
Not Sure Where to Start?
We can help you assess your situation, understand your options, and connect you with the right resources — whether that’s a DIY walkthrough or a trusted local contractor.
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