Slab Leak Repair

Slab Leak Repair: The Complete 2026 Homeowner Guide

10 min read

By Foundation Repair Plus Editorial Team

A slab leak is a pressurized water-line failure inside or below the concrete slab. By itself, it’s a plumbing problem. Left alone, it becomes a foundation problem — the leak erodes supporting soil and the slab settles. The fastest, cheapest fix is a fast, accurate diagnosis.

Quick answer: Most slab leak repair jobs in the U.S. run $1,500–$6,000, with a typical home landing around $3,800. Time on site is usually 1–3 days; permitting and engineering add another 1–2 weeks before work starts. Real numbers depend on your soil, the severity, and whether the access is good.

What is slab leak repair?

Slab leaks are pressurized water-line leaks beneath the concrete slab. Left alone they erode the soil under your foundation and cause settlement. Detection is acoustic and thermal; repair is either spot access through the slab, line rerouting overhead, or full repipe — chosen by what's most durable for your home. It is not "patching cracks" — those are a symptom. The job, properly scoped, addresses why the foundation is moving (or why water is getting in) so the cosmetic problems do not return next year.

You can think of the work in three layers:

  1. Diagnosis. A licensed contractor walks the home, runs an elevation survey (often a laser-level grid taken every 6–10 feet), and identifies the failure mode — settlement, heave, lateral pressure, water intrusion, or a combination.
  2. Engineering. For any structural work, the plan is signed by a professional engineer. This is where pier counts, depths, and locations come from. It is also what your municipality wants to see for permit.
  3. Execution. Crews install the system, hydraulically lift if needed, restore grade and finishes, and re-survey. A reputable contractor warranties the work for the life of the home.

Signs you need slab leak repair

Foundation symptoms tend to escalate together. Two or more of these in the same home usually warrant a free professional inspection:

  • Hot spots on the slab floor
  • Sound of running water with all fixtures off
  • Unexplained spike in your water bill
  • Mildew smell or wet spots near baseboards

A useful rule of thumb: if a single symptom worsens noticeably over one season (3 months), get an inspection. Slow drift over years is normal in clay-belt geographies. Fast drift over weeks is always worth a phone call.

Severity, mapped

The same symptom can mean different things depending on the rest of the home. Use this rough triage table:

What you seeLikely causeUrgency
Hairline vertical crack in a poured wallConcrete shrinkageLow — seal when convenient
Stair-step crack in brick veneerDifferential foundation movementMedium — inspect this season
Horizontal crack across a wallLateral soil pressureHigh — inspect this month
Door that won’t latch + cracking above itFrame is rackingMedium — inspect this season
Active water through a crack during rainFailed waterproofingHigh — fix before next storm cycle
Visible inward bow in a basement wallWall failing under soil loadHigh — call today

How the work actually unfolds

The choreography on a typical slab leak repair project goes like this:

  1. Free on-site inspection (60–90 minutes). Contractor walks the perimeter, the interior, and any accessible crawl space or basement. They take elevations, photograph cracks, and ask about your timeline.
  2. Written estimate (24–48 hours later). You should receive a scope of work, a clear price, the warranty terms, and a description of what is not included (e.g., final landscape restoration).
  3. Engineering and permit (1–2 weeks). For pier work or wall reinforcement, an engineer signs the plan. The municipality issues a permit. You sign the contract and pay a deposit.
  4. Mobilization and excavation (day 1). Crew protects landscaping, locates utilities, and excavates to footings or accesses the affected area.
  5. Installation and lift (days 1–3). Piers are driven, brackets are set, and the home is hydraulically lifted (slowly — typically a quarter inch every 15 minutes) until elevations match the plan.
  6. Backfill, restoration, and re-survey (final day). Excavations are backfilled, grade is restored, and a final elevation survey confirms the lift.
  7. Warranty registration. You receive paperwork transferable to the next owner.

What is included in a typical scope

A proper slab leak repair bid covers more than the headline work. Look for:

  • Acoustic and thermal leak detection
  • Pressure isolation and confirmation
  • Slab spot-repair OR rerouted line install
  • Concrete patch and finish
  • Soil moisture inspection of surrounding areas

If the bid omits any of these and a competitor’s does not, ask why. The cheapest bid is rarely the cheapest project.

Cost breakdown

National data and local adjustments for the three metros our network covers:

MetroLow endTypicalHigh end
National baseline$1,500$3,800$6,000
Plano, TX$1,500$3,800$6,000
Houston, TX$1,600$4,100$6,500
Denver, CO$1,700$4,200$6,700
Dallas, TX$1,500$3,800$6,100
Austin, TX$1,600$4,100$6,500
San Antonio, TX$1,500$3,700$5,900
Oklahoma City, OK$1,400$3,500$5,600
Tulsa, OK$1,400$3,500$5,500
Phoenix, AZ$1,600$4,000$6,300
Las Vegas, NV$1,500$3,900$6,200
Albuquerque, NM$1,400$3,600$5,800
Los Angeles, CA$1,900$4,800$7,700
Riverside, CA$1,800$4,500$7,100
San Diego, CA$1,900$4,700$7,400
San Francisco, CA$2,000$5,100$8,200
San Jose, CA$2,000$5,000$8,000
Sacramento, CA$1,700$4,400$7,000
Seattle, WA$1,900$4,700$7,400
Portland, OR$1,700$4,300$6,800
Salt Lake City, UT$1,600$4,100$6,500
Colorado Springs, CO$1,600$4,100$6,500
Chicago, IL$1,700$4,300$6,800
Minneapolis, MN$1,600$4,100$6,500
Milwaukee, WI$1,500$3,800$6,100
Detroit, MI$1,500$3,800$6,000
Indianapolis, IN$1,400$3,600$5,800
Columbus, OH$1,500$3,700$5,900
Cleveland, OH$1,500$3,700$5,900
Cincinnati, OH$1,500$3,700$5,900
Kansas City, MO$1,400$3,600$5,800
St. Louis, MO$1,400$3,600$5,800
New York, NY$2,100$5,200$8,300
Boston, MA$1,900$4,800$7,700
Philadelphia, PA$1,700$4,200$6,700
Pittsburgh, PA$1,500$3,800$6,000
Washington, DC$1,900$4,700$7,400
Baltimore, MD$1,700$4,200$6,600
Richmond, VA$1,500$3,800$6,100
Virginia Beach, VA$1,600$4,000$6,400
Atlanta, GA$1,600$3,900$6,200
Charlotte, NC$1,500$3,800$6,100
Raleigh, NC$1,600$3,900$6,200
Nashville, TN$1,500$3,800$6,100
Memphis, TN$1,400$3,500$5,600
Birmingham, AL$1,400$3,500$5,500
New Orleans, LA$1,600$4,000$6,400
Jacksonville, FL$1,500$3,800$6,000
Orlando, FL$1,600$3,900$6,200
Tampa, FL$1,600$4,000$6,400
Miami, FL$1,800$4,500$7,100
Fort Lauderdale, FL$1,700$4,400$7,000

Visualized:

Slab Leak Repair cost range, by metro (2026)National$1,500–$6,000Plano, TX$1,500–$6,000Houston, TX$1,600–$6,500Denver, CO$1,700–$6,700

What drives the spread within a metro:

  • Severity. Cosmetic-only work is at the low end; full underpinning with lift is at the high end.
  • Access. A crew that can swing a track machine into the back yard works faster than one that has to hand-dig past a pool deck.
  • Soil depth to load-bearing strata. Deeper piers cost more — pier counts × depth × material is the largest single line item on most jobs.
  • Engineering complexity. A two-story brick home with multiple additions typically takes a more complex plan than a single-story slab.

DIY versus a licensed pro

A quick honest comparison. Slab Leak Repair is one of the worst home projects to half-do, because the cost of revisiting bad work is usually 2–3x the cost of doing it right the first time.

TaskDIYLicensed contractor
Diagnose the underlying cause❌ Without an elevation survey, mostly guessing✅ Standard part of a free inspection
Cosmetic crack sealing (under 1/8")✅ With a quality urethane✅ Bundled with structural work
Structural pier installation❌ Engineering + equipment cost prohibitive✅ Routine — hydraulics, brackets, calibrated drive heads
Permit and engineering stamp❌ Most municipalities require licensure✅ Pulled by the contractor
Lifetime, transferable warranty❌ None✅ Standard from any reputable installer

The honest DIY zone is small: cosmetic cracks, downspout extensions, regrading topsoil away from the foundation, and clearing window wells. Everything else is professional work.

Common mistakes that cost homeowners money

Five patterns we see again and again:

  1. Fixing the symptom before the cause. Patching a crack does not stop the movement that caused it. The patch reopens within a year.
  2. Hiring on price alone. A bid that is 30% lower than two others usually omits engineering, warranty, or both. Read line-by-line.
  3. Skipping the elevation survey. Without it, "we’ll add piers where it looks bad" is a guess. Pier counts should come from numbers, not vibes.
  4. Ignoring drainage. No structural fix lasts if the soil keeps swinging from saturated to bone-dry every season. Gutters, extensions, and grading are part of every successful project.
  5. Waiting through one more season. Movement compounds. The same job that is $3,800 today is materially more expensive after another freeze-thaw or drought cycle.

Frequently asked questions

Will my insurance cover a slab leak?

Many policies cover the resulting damage (drywall, flooring) but not the line repair itself. Always document the cause — your contractor can help.

Should I reroute or spot-repair?

Spot-repair is cheapest if the line is otherwise sound. If the home has had multiple leaks, rerouting overhead or repiping is cheaper long-term.

Can a slab leak cause foundation problems?

Yes — sustained leaks erode supporting soil and cause localized settlement. Catching them early is the cheapest path.

The bottom line

Slab Leak Repair done right is a multi-decade fix. Done wrong, it is the most expensive recurring repair you will ever pay for. The single highest-leverage thing you can do is get a real on-site inspection from a licensed local specialist before you do anything else — including reading the next article.

It costs nothing, takes about an hour, and you walk away with a written number you can plan around.

Ready for a real number?

The fastest way to know what slab leak repair would cost on your home is a free on-site inspection. We match you with one vetted local specialist — never a five-way bidding war.