A corner pop is a specific type of concrete crack that occurs at the corner of a slab foundation. Visually, it appears as a triangular or wedge-shaped piece of concrete that has cracked away from the corner — typically forming a V-shaped or L-shaped crack that runs outward from the very tip of the foundation corner. In some cases, the broken chunk remains in place and appears only as a surface crack. In others, the piece shifts slightly downward or outward, creating a visible step or gap at the corner of the slab.
Corner pops are one of the most frequently misunderstood foundation conditions Houston homeowners encounter. They look dramatic — a chunk of your foundation appears to be breaking off — but they are often cosmetic rather than structural. The key is knowing how to tell the difference, which requires understanding why corners are structurally vulnerable in the first place.
It is worth noting that the term "corner pop" is used informally in the field. Engineers and inspectors may also call it a corner fracture or corner spall. Whatever the name, the underlying cause and the evaluation process are the same.
Slab foundations are reinforced with a grid of steel rebar — or post-tension cables in most Houston homes built after 1980 — and that reinforcement is what gives concrete its tensile strength. Unreinforced concrete is strong under compression but cracks easily when pulled or bent. The steel inside handles those tension forces.
However, rebar placement follows the geometry of the slab: it runs parallel to the sides of the house, forming a grid pattern across the field of the slab. The actual 90-degree tips of the foundation corners receive the least reinforcement coverage. There is no rebar running diagonally through the corner to resist the forces that try to pull it apart when the concrete is under stress. This is partly a construction convention and partly a practical reality — running diagonal rebar into every corner is uncommon in residential practice.
At the same time, corner soil conditions differ from mid-slab conditions. A foundation corner has two sides exposed to the elements — two exterior walls — meaning the clay soil beneath and beside that corner dries out faster than soil beneath the center of the slab. As the soil under a corner loses moisture and contracts, the corner of the slab loses support from below. The combination of reduced rebar coverage and disproportionate soil drying makes foundation corners the most likely place on a slab to develop a crack first.
Beaumont clay — the soil type that underlies most of the Houston metropolitan area — has what geotechnical engineers call a very high plasticity index, typically ranging from 30 to 50 or higher. Plasticity index is a measure of how dramatically a soil changes volume with moisture fluctuations, and Beaumont clay is among the most expansive in the United States.
During Houston's dry summer months, the top several feet of Beaumont clay can shrink significantly. At the surface near exposed foundation corners, this shrinkage is most pronounced. As the clay pulls away from the concrete edge, the corner of the slab is left momentarily with reduced or no soil support. The concrete, experiencing both its own weight at an unsupported point and the ongoing thermal movement of Houston's extreme summer heat, finds the weakest location — the corner — and cracks along that line of least resistance.
This is why corner pops are especially prevalent in Houston compared to other parts of the country, and why they so reliably appear or worsen after a dry summer rather than randomly throughout the year. The seasonal pattern is one of the clues that helps professionals distinguish a clay-driven cosmetic corner pop from a more serious structural event with a different cause.
Neighborhoods built on particularly heavy clay deposits — many areas in the southwest, northwest, and far east of Harris County — tend to see more corner pops than areas with sandier or more mixed soils. If your neighbors have mentioned similar cracks, that is consistent with a soil-driven rather than structure-driven problem.
Often, no — but the answer depends entirely on what you observe when you examine the crack carefully. Corner pops fall along a spectrum from purely cosmetic to genuinely concerning, and the difference lies in a few specific observations:
A corner pop is likely cosmetic if:
A corner pop warrants professional inspection if:
Not every crack at or near a foundation corner is a corner pop. It helps to understand how a classic corner pop differs from other crack types that indicate structural movement requiring intervention.
A true corner pop is localized: it is confined to the very tip of the foundation corner, typically running only 12 to 24 inches from the corner tip along each adjacent side. The resulting crack pattern forms a rough triangle or wedge. A structural crack from differential settlement, by contrast, tends to run along the length of the slab — often for several feet — and may have vertical displacement where one side is higher than the other. Structural cracks are also more likely to be diagonal and to cross the mid-section of the slab or the perimeter beam, not just the exposed corner tip.
Another practical difference: a classic corner pop typically does not produce immediate symptoms in the living space directly above it, because the isolated corner area is not where the main load-bearing happens. A structural crack that runs along the perimeter beam or mid-slab can cause a section above it to drop noticeably — which is when you start seeing the sticking doors and diagonal interior drywall cracks that are the hallmarks of active foundation settlement. For a comprehensive look at the different types of cracks and how to evaluate them, see our article on foundation slab cracks.
The appropriate repair depends on the severity of the crack and whether it is accompanied by foundation movement elsewhere.
Cosmetic repair (for hairline to minor cracks with no displacement): An epoxy injection or flexible polyurethane caulk can be used to fill the crack, prevent water intrusion (which can erode the soil beneath and worsen the void), and improve appearance. This is a straightforward repair that can often be completed in under an hour. Cost typically ranges from $200 to $500 depending on crack size and the material used.
Structural repair (when corner pop accompanies foundation movement): If the corner pop is a symptom of broader foundation settlement — meaning the corner section has dropped relative to the rest of the slab — filling the crack without stabilizing the foundation accomplishes little beyond cosmetics. The correct sequence is to first install pressed steel piers to stabilize and, where possible, lift the settled section back toward its original elevation. Once the foundation is stabilized, the crack can be filled and sealed. Filling the crack before stabilization will result in the repair cracking again as movement continues. For a full overview of repair approaches, see our slab foundation repair page.
In some cases, the right recommendation from an inspection is simply to monitor. If a corner pop is hairline, stable, and isolated, the cost-benefit analysis of immediate repair versus watchful waiting may favor monitoring — especially in homes with no other foundation symptoms. A good inspector will tell you honestly which category your situation falls into.
If the corner pop is hairline, shows no vertical displacement, and is not accompanied by any other foundation symptoms, you can monitor it. Document it with a photograph and a ruler for scale. Check it every two to three months. If it does not change and you have no interior symptoms, cosmetic repair or continued monitoring may both be reasonable choices. If it is widening, shows displacement, or appeared alongside sticking doors or wall cracks, have it professionally inspected. The inspection is free — there is no reason to guess about a crack on your foundation.
In most cases, no. Standard homeowner's insurance policies in Texas generally exclude foundation damage, which insurers classify as gradual damage or earth movement rather than a sudden covered event such as a storm or fire. Some policies include specific riders for slab leaks — but corner pops from clay soil movement are typically considered normal wear and maintenance, not a covered loss. Review your specific policy and exclusions, but do not count on insurance reimbursement for this type of repair.
A purely cosmetic corner pop — hairline crack, no displacement, isolated to one corner with no other symptoms — typically costs $200 to $500 to fill and seal with epoxy or polyurethane caulk. If the corner pop is part of a broader foundation problem requiring pier installation to stabilize the structure before filling the crack, the cost is determined by the number of piers needed, the depth required to reach stable bearing soil, and the size of the affected area. Contact Duratech for a free inspection and written estimate before any work is discussed — we will give you a clear, honest picture of what is actually needed.
Many corner pops are cosmetic — but some signal deeper differential settlement. Duratech's free inspection tells you which. Call (713) 849-4040 or schedule online.