Structural Technology Custom Homes LLC
10757 E. Hillview Street , Mesa, AZ 85207-9604
Building Contractors, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Foundation Repair Specialists Near Me specialists near you in Phoenix — dedicated experts, not generalists. Browse 54 pros who focus exclusively on this trade every single day.
Typical cost in Phoenix
$5,000–$25,000 / project
54 contractors in Phoenix
10757 E. Hillview Street , Mesa, AZ 85207-9604
Building Contractors, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
630 W. McLellan Road , Mesa, AZ 85201-2112
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Pumping, Concrete Contractors, Foundation Repair
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
5151 E Broadway Blvd Ste 1600 , Tucson, AZ 85711-3777
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Repair, Foundation Contractors, Concrete Leveling ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85042
BBB Accredited A- rated. Concrete, Concrete Contractors, Foundation Repair ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
219 W. Lone Cactus Drive , Phoenix, AZ 85027-2904
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Mason Contractors, Foundation Repair ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
3184 N Pinewood Dr , Pine, AZ 85544-5578
Residential General Contractor, General Contractor, Bathroom Remodel. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
12211 W Bell Rd Ste 206 , Surprise, AZ 85378-9522
Commercial Contractors, Remodel Contractors, Building Contractors. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
3125 S 52nd St , Tempe, AZ 85282-1215
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Foundation Repair, Foundation Contractors, Concrete Leveling ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Chandler, AZ 85224-2150
BBB Accredited B- rated. Remodel Contractors, General Contractor, Construction Services ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Gilbert, AZ 85296-4134
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Excavating Contractors, Foundation Repair ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
5200 E Main St Lot F09 , Mesa, AZ 85205-8027
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Foundation Repair, Foundation Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Gilbert, AZ 85296
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Pumping, Concrete Contractors, Excavating Contractors ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix foundation repair differs from markets like Dallas and Atlanta in a critical way: Phoenix slab failures are primarily driven by soil subsidence and settlement — not expansive clay heaving. Understanding this distinction is essential to selecting the right repair method and evaluating contractor proposals.
| Repair Method | Scope | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Slab crack injection | Per crack, polyurethane or epoxy | $500 – $1,500 per crack |
| Mudjacking (slabjacking) | Portland cement slurry under sunken slab | $3 – $6/sq ft ($800 – $2,500 per area) |
| Polyurethane foam lifting | Expanding foam, per area | $4 – $8/sq ft ($1,000 – $3,000 per area) |
| Steel push pier installation | Per pier | $1,200 – $2,500 per pier |
| Helical pier installation | Per pier | $1,500 – $3,000 per pier |
| Slab underpinning (full perimeter) | 10–15 piers for typical home | $15,000 – $40,000 |
| Interior slab releveling (grinding + patching) | Per 100 sq ft | $500 – $1,500 |
| Drainage correction (French drain, re-grade) | Per project | $2,000 – $8,000 |
| Structural engineering assessment | Independent PE | $400 – $900 |
Greater Phoenix is built on alluvial fans deposited by desert washes over millions of years. This sandy, loosely consolidated alluvial soil was not always properly compacted during Phoenix's rapid 1970s–2000s construction boom. When organic matter in the soil decomposes, moisture migrates, or original compaction was inadequate, sections of the slab subside (sink) rather than heave. This creates:
Many Phoenix homes sit over caliche layers (calcium carbonate hardpan) that occur at inconsistent depths — one corner of the slab rests on solid caliche at 18" depth; another section has 48" of less-consolidated alluvial soil above caliche. When the softer soil compresses, it creates differential settlement — one section of the foundation sinks while adjacent sections remain stable. This caliche differential is a significant Phoenix-specific foundation failure driver in older homes (1950s–1970s) in Scottsdale, Tempe, and Mesa where caliche occurrence varies significantly across short distances.
Phoenix's desert irrigation culture creates a foundation risk: over-irrigation near foundations oversaturates alluvial soil, causing consolidation and settlement. Additionally, leaking irrigation lines or pool plumbing beneath slabs create void formation as soil erodes along the water path. Ground penetrating radar (GPR) surveys ($500–$1,200) can identify voids beneath Phoenix slabs before they cause dramatic settlement.
Per BLS Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler MSA data, construction trade workers earn $22–$32/hour in Phoenix. Foundation repair specialist billing runs $100–$175/hour for highly specialized pier installation work.
The single most important step before hiring any Phoenix foundation repair company: Obtain an independent assessment from a licensed Arizona Structural Engineer (PE). The Arizona State Board of Technical Registration (AZBTR) verifies licensed PEs in Arizona.
Foundation repair companies are sales organizations — their assessment is their sales pitch. An independent PE ($400–$900) provides an unbiased diagnosis of failure mechanism, appropriate repair specification, and reasonable cost range. This investment is essential before committing to $15,000–$40,000 in underpinning work.
Foundation repair is the highest-consequence residential contractor service. An improperly specified or installed pier system can add forces to a failing foundation rather than correcting them. Arizona's contractor licensing system provides meaningful protection.
The Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC) licenses foundation contractors under:
Verify any Phoenix foundation repair contractor at azroc.gov — confirm license status, classification, bond integrity, and complaint history. Foundation repair ranks among the highest-complaint categories in the ROC database — read complaint histories carefully.
For any foundation repair involving underpinning, pier installation, or structural determination: a licensed Professional Engineer (PE) with structural specialty should be involved in diagnosis and specification. Verify PE licenses at the Arizona State Board of Technical Registration (AZBTR). This is separate from the contractor license — structural engineers are not contractors; they are licensed independently.
Note: Many Arizona foundation repair companies have in-house "inspectors" who walk through your home and diagnose the problem. These inspectors are sales representatives, not licensed engineers. Their assessment is not equivalent to a licensed PE's structural opinion.
Foundation warranties in Phoenix are significant investments — verify carefully:
Phoenix-specific: GPR surveys ($500–$1,200) are available from specialty companies and provide below-slab void mapping before invasive repair begins. GPR identifies:
This pre-repair diagnostic prevents installing piers in the wrong location or performing foam lifting when void filling is the underlying requirement. A professional Phoenix foundation repair contractor who offers GPR as a diagnostic option before proposing a solution is operating at a higher standard than average.
Phoenix's alluvial/caliche soil profile creates specific indications for each repair method. Understanding the differences helps evaluate contractor proposals and avoid inappropriate or oversold work.
| Method | How It Works | Best Phoenix Application | Cost Range | Invasiveness |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mudjacking (slabjacking) | Pumped cement slurry beneath slab raises and stabilizes | Sunken sidewalks, pool decks, driveways, interior floor sections on stable caliche | $3–$6/sq ft | Low — 2" drill holes, filled after |
| Polyurethane foam lifting | Expanding foam injected, raising slab | Same as mudjacking; lighter weight, faster cure — better for settled areas near pools or landscaping | $4–$8/sq ft | Low — smaller holes than mudjacking |
| Steel push piers | Hydraulic piers driven to load-bearing stratum | Active settlement — caliche below is at sufficient depth for load bearing; soil is compressible above | $1,200–$2,500/pier | Moderate — interior slab breach for connection |
| Helical piers | Screw-type piers for soft soil | New construction or areas without dense caliche; horizontal applications (retaining walls) | $1,500–$3,000/pier | Moderate |
| Crack injection | Epoxy or polyurethane injected in cracks | Sealing non-structural cracks; waterproofing; not for active movement | $500–$1,500/crack | Low |
| Slab replacement | Remove and re-pour slab sections | Severely compromised slab beyond repair; void below exceeded repair scale | $5–$15/sq ft of removed slab | High — excavation required |
Mudjacking and foam lifting work when:
Push or helical piers are needed when:
Why over-selling of piers is common in Phoenix: Pier installation is substantially more expensive ($12,000–$40,000+) than mudjacking ($800–$3,000). Foundation inspection/sales companies have strong financial incentives to recommend pier installation for problems that mudjacking would address adequately. An independent structural engineer's assessment prevents this outcome.
A critical Phoenix reality: Many foundation settlement problems will recur after repair if the underlying drainage issue isn't corrected first. If over-irrigation, a leaking pool line, or poor surface drainage is actively saturating and destabilizing soil, repairing the slab expression is a temporary cosmetic fix.
Repair sequence for Phoenix:
Skipping step 1 and 2 means piers or foam lifting will show re-settlement in 3–7 years as the same soil disruption continues. A foundation contractor who doesn't ask about your irrigation system and current drainage is not assessing the full problem.
Arizona disclosure law (ARS §33-422) requires sellers to disclose known material defects, including foundation issues. However:
Most Phoenix real estate attorneys recommend resolving foundation issues before listing — repaired documented, warrantied work is more saleable than disclosed-but-unrepaired issues, which tend to cause deal failures at inspection.
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