Foundation Repair Experts ·Bellevue, WA
Foundation Repair in Bellevue
In Bellevue, a foundation that is moving almost always traces back to the ground under the house, not the house itself. The Eastside sits on dense glacial till in some places and softer fill and slope soils in others, and homes on the hillsides above Lake Washington and Lake Sammamish deal with slow soil movement over the years. If your home shows cracks climbing the drywall, sloping floors, or doors that stick, it is worth examining before the movement worsens. We will locate the soil that actually holds, drive steel piers down to it, and give you an honest assessment first. The evaluation is free, with no pressure.
Warning Signs
Signs your Bellevue home may have a foundation problem
Most people notice one small thing first. A door that sticks, a crack that wasn't there last year. Any one of these is worth a free look.
Cracked walls
Cracks in drywall or plaster, often running off door and window corners, point to a foundation that is moving.
Sloping floors
Floors that roll underfoot or tilt toward one side mean the structure below has settled unevenly.
Sticking doors
Doors and windows that suddenly stick or will not latch are a sign the frame has racked out of square.
Leaning chimney
A chimney pulling away from the house is settling on its own, separate from the rest of the structure.
Foundation cracks
Cracks in the foundation wall itself, especially horizontal ones, point to real pressure or movement.
Cracks in brick
Stair step cracking through brick or block joints is a classic sign of uneven settlement.
Gaps around windows
Gaps opening above or beside windows mean the wall around them is on the move.
Cracks in the floor slab
Cracks in a slab or in tile can mean the concrete underneath has settled or heaved.
Gaps at the deck or porch
A porch, deck, or step pulling away from the house is settling apart from the main foundation.
Why It Happens Here
What causes foundation problems in Bellevue
Around Bellevue it usually comes down to the glacial soils under the house and the water moving through them during our long wet winters.
Glacial till and soft interbeds
The Eastside sits on dense glacial till in many spots, with softer silt, sand, and old fill in others. When a footing rests on the soft layers, it settles unevenly.
Hillsides above the lakes
Homes on the slopes in Somerset, Cougar Mountain, Lakemont, and along the Lake Washington and Lake Sammamish shorelines deal with slow soil creep that pulls a foundation apart over time.
Wet winters and drainage
Long wet winters and water that pools against the footing or drains toward the house wash out the soil that supports it, and over time that becomes settlement.
Older homes and cut-and-fill lots
Many hillside lots were built on cut-and-fill that was not fully compacted for the load, and that fill keeps settling for years after the house goes up.
Our Bellevue Track Record
We log every pier we drive in Bellevue
Across more than 100 Bellevue projects we have installed over 300 steel piers. Most homes here reach firm soil around 165 feet down, but the ground varies across the Eastside, and on our deepest jobs the piers have averaged about 75 feet. We do not pick a depth, the soil does, and we log it on every pier. Here are some of the areas where we have worked.
How We Fix It
Real repairs, not patch jobs
What we do
- ✓ Helical piers. Screw type steel piers turned down to stable soil or bedrock.
- ✓ Push piers. Hydraulic steel piers driven deep when load capacity is the priority.
- ✓ Foundation lifting and house leveling, back toward the original height where the site allows.
- ✓ Full documentation and a lifetime warranty that transfers to the next owner.
Why it holds
- ✓ American made steel piers, code evaluated (ICC ES ESR 1854).
- ✓ We log the depth to refusal on every pier. The soil sets the depth, not us.
- ✓ ISO 9001:2015 certified manufacturing.
- ✓ Warranty backed by a trust, so the coverage is actually funded.
Our Process
Four steps, and most jobs are done in a few days
Schedule
Book a free on site evaluation online or by phone. No commitment.
Inspect
A specialist finds the root cause, not just the cracks you can see.
Repair
Our crew does the work. Most homes are finished in a few days.
Warranty
You get a lifetime transferable warranty, backed by a trust.
Common Questions
Bellevue foundation repair questions
How much does foundation repair cost in Bellevue?
It depends on how many piers you need and how deep they have to go, which changes a lot from one Bellevue lot to the next. The honest answer is that we have to see it. The free inspection gets you a firm written number with no pressure, and financing is available.
How deep do the piers go in Bellevue?
We install to firm soil, not to a set number. Around Bellevue that is usually close to 10 feet, but on hillside and fill lots our piers have reached well past 50 feet. We log the depth on every pier.
Do you do earthquake retrofitting on homes?
Usually not. A real seismic retrofit on a house gets expensive fast, and we don't do the Simpson strap and bracket tie downs that most home retrofits use. Where this work makes sense for us is on commercial and larger structures, where steel piers anchor the building to deeper, solid ground. If you're a homeowner dealing with settlement or cracking, that's the part we can help with.
What happens if I don't fix it?
We won't tell you the sky is falling. Foundation movement is hard to predict, and only time tells whether it gets worse. What we can say for sure is that it won't fix itself, it won't get better on its own, and it never gets cheaper to repair. Catching it earlier usually means fewer piers and a smaller job.
Will my yard get torn up?
We keep it as clean as we can. There's some digging at each pier location, but our crews work tight, protect what they can, and put the soil and sod back when we're done. Most yards look close to normal within a few days.
Get a free Bellevue foundation evaluation
Cracks, sticking doors, sloping floors. We'll tell you exactly what is going on, with no pressure and no invented problems.
Explore More