
Crack injection for non-moving concrete cracks
A contractor should explain why this method fits the observed movement, soil conditions, drainage, and load path before asking for a signature.
Independent foundation quote review
Estimate foundation repair costs, compare contractor quotes, and spot suspicious line items before you sign.
Answer a few details and get a conservative planning range.
Drop in contractor language, prices, warranty terms, and line items.
See what is unclear, high risk, missing, or worth asking about.

Trusted by homeowners across the U.S.
Independent, educational estimates. No signup required.
Typical range
$6,000 - $28,000
Most projects land near $14,000.
Free calculator
Enter repair type, home size, severity, pier count, cracks, access, and market cost level.
AI quote checker
Get a structured review of price signals, missing details, red flags, and questions to ask before signing.
The checker looks for vague scopes, missing warranty terms, unclear pier counts, drainage gaps, permit ambiguity, and pricing that needs explanation.
Quote red flags to watch for
Vague descriptions like as needed or T&M.
No plan for water control or discharge.
No written warranty on labor or materials.
Much higher or lower than typical ranges.
Rush-to-sign or cash-only discounts.
| Repair type | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hairline crack sealing | $500 | $1,800 | $5,000 |
| Foundation leak repair | $1,200 | $4,500 | $12,000 |
| Slab foundation repair | $2,500 | $8,500 | $20,000 |
| Pier and beam repair | $3,000 | $9,500 | $25,000 |
| Settlement repair with piers | $5,000 | $14,000 | $35,000 |
| Bowing wall stabilization | $4,000 | $12,000 | $30,000 |
Warning signs

A contractor should explain why this method fits the observed movement, soil conditions, drainage, and load path before asking for a signature.

A contractor should explain why this method fits the observed movement, soil conditions, drainage, and load path before asking for a signature.

A contractor should explain why this method fits the observed movement, soil conditions, drainage, and load path before asking for a signature.

A contractor should explain why this method fits the observed movement, soil conditions, drainage, and load path before asking for a signature.

Hairline to structural cracks and what they cost.
Read guide
Pier types, support work, and crawl space variables.
Read guide
Scope, quantities, warranties, exclusions, and payment risk.
Read guide
How soil, climate, permits, and local scopes change pricing.
Read guide
Pier count, pier type, depth criteria, access, and warranty.
Read guide
Slab movement, expansive clay, drainage, and pier quotes.
Read guideIt can provide a planning range, but final pricing depends on soil conditions, access, structural movement, drainage, permits, and the contractor's diagnosis.
Yes. Compare the diagnosis, method, warranty, pier count or material quantities, and exclusions. The cheapest quote is not always the safest scope.
Call an engineer when there is active movement, large or horizontal cracking, bowing walls, major water intrusion, or conflicting contractor recommendations.
Often it does not cover settlement or long-term drainage issues, but sudden covered events may be different. Ask your insurer and review the policy language.
Second opinion
Send the basics and quote details. We will help review scope clarity, red flags, and whether a local second opinion may be useful before you sign.
This tool provides educational cost estimates only. It is not a structural engineering report, legal advice, or a substitute for an inspection by a licensed professional.