Common inspection types
A contractor inspection may be free or low cost but can lead to a repair quote. A home inspector may document visible concerns. A structural engineer usually costs more but can provide an independent professional opinion.
FoundationCost.ai
Foundation inspection cost depends on who performs the inspection, whether written findings are included, and whether you need an independent structural engineering opinion.
Planning range
Treat this as an educational range. Your local quote can move higher or lower based on access, repair quantities, soil conditions, water management, permits, and whether an engineer is involved.
Free calculator
Enter what you know. The range updates instantly and stays conservative.
Second opinion
Send the basic project details and quote text. The form is built to work before you add a mail provider, and can email leads once `RESEND_API_KEY` and `LEAD_TO_EMAIL` are set.
A contractor inspection may be free or low cost but can lead to a repair quote. A home inspector may document visible concerns. A structural engineer usually costs more but can provide an independent professional opinion.
Ask whether the visit includes elevation readings, crawl space or basement review, photos, written findings, repair recommendations, and whether the inspector sells repairs.
| 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 |
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.
Paste the quote into the checker to identify vague scopes, missing warranty details, and questions worth asking before you commit.
No. Online cost pages are useful for planning and quote comparison, but a local inspection is needed to diagnose movement, water, soil, access, and structural conditions.
Compare diagnosis, repair method, quantities, warranty terms, exclusions, drainage or plumbing assumptions, permit responsibility, payment schedule, and cleanup.
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.