One of the first questions Houston homeowners ask after getting a foundation repair estimate is: how long will this take? It's a reasonable concern — nobody wants a crew at their house for weeks. The good news is that the vast majority of residential foundation repairs in Houston are completed in one to three days. Here's what determines where your project falls on that range.
Slab foundation repair is the most common type of job in Houston. Most residential slab piering projects — where steel piers are driven or pressed into the soil to stabilize and lift a settled concrete slab — are completed in a single day. Larger homes with more pier points may require a second day.
A typical slab repair day looks like this: the crew arrives early morning and begins excavating small access holes (roughly 2 feet by 3 feet) at each pier location around the perimeter. Pier sections are then driven or pressed into the ground until they reach load-bearing soil. Once all piers are seated, the crew uses hydraulic jacks to lift the foundation back toward its original elevation. After the lift, piers are mechanically locked, holes are backfilled, and the site is cleaned up.
On a job with 10–15 piers on an average Houston home, an experienced crew can realistically complete the full process in 8–10 hours. Jobs with 20 or more piers often run into a second day. Learn more about our complete process on the slab foundation repair page.
Pier and beam foundations give contractors direct access to the underside of the structure through the crawl space, which often makes the repair faster than slab work that requires excavating around the exterior. Replacing damaged wood beams, adding or adjusting support posts, and releveling a pier and beam home is typically a single-day job for a crew that knows what they're doing.
That said, pier and beam jobs vary significantly based on what's actually wrong. A straightforward leveling adjustment — shimming posts and resetting beams — can be done in a few hours. A pier and beam home with extensive wood rot, damaged sills, and multiple failed support posts may take two full days. Our pier and beam repair page has more detail on what the inspection will reveal.
Some repairs fall outside the typical one-to-two-day window. Situations that extend the timeline include:
This is the biggest single factor for slab jobs. The inspection estimate will specify how many pier points are needed, and that number directly determines the labor hours required. A 10-pier job and a 25-pier job are not the same day of work.
Houston's clay soil can be surprisingly variable even within a single property. In most cases, piers advance through the clay at a predictable rate. Occasionally, crews encounter a particularly hard layer or, less commonly, pockets of softer material that require additional time or technique adjustments. These situations are uncommon with experienced crews who know the local geology.
Tight side yards, fences that need to be temporarily removed, landscaping around the foundation, and proximity to AC units or utility equipment all affect how quickly a crew can work around the perimeter. The inspector will note access challenges during the initial visit.
Foundation repair is typically performed rain or shine — concrete doesn't care about weather, and pier installation isn't weather-sensitive. However, extreme conditions (standing water around the foundation, a tropical weather event) may cause scheduling adjustments.
Foundation repair is not a quiet job. Expect the sound of hydraulic equipment running intermittently throughout the day, some vibration inside the home during the lifting phase, and a crew working around the perimeter of your house. Most homeowners find the actual disruption much less significant than they expected.
Inside the home, you may hear cracking or popping sounds during the lifting phase. This is normal — the house is physically returning to its original position, and materials that have settled and dried in a shifted position are adjusting. Existing cracks may open slightly or shift as the structure moves. Doors that were sticking may suddenly close freely, or temporarily become harder to open before the structure settles into its new position.
Our crew will walk through the home before and after the lift to document conditions and note any changes to discuss with you.
Yes, in almost all cases. There is no reason most Houston homeowners need to vacate during a one- or two-day foundation repair. Utility service (electricity, water, gas) typically remains uninterrupted. You will have limited access to the exterior of the home while the crew is working along the perimeter, and certain areas of the yard may be dug up temporarily.
The main reason some homeowners choose to be away is the noise and disruption — hydraulic equipment is loud. If you have young children who nap during the day, pets that react badly to strangers or equipment noise, or simply prefer not to be present, planning to be elsewhere for the day is a perfectly reasonable choice.
Once the repair is complete and piers are locked, there is a short period where the structure continues to adjust. Interior materials — drywall, flooring, trim — were dried and set in a shifted position. As the house returns to level and humidity conditions change slightly, some continued movement and settling is normal for several weeks after the repair.
What this means practically: don't rush to patch cracks or repaint walls the day after repair. Give the structure 30–60 days to settle, then address cosmetic repairs. Most cracks will close partially on their own as the structure adjusts; some may remain and need patching.
Duratech provides documentation of all work performed and your lifetime transferable warranty at project completion. If you notice any concerns in the weeks following repair, contact us — we stand behind our work.