French drain installation in Asheville.
Buncombe’s soils are all well drained — so an Asheville French drain isn’t fighting a water table. It’s fighting runoff on the steep ridges and water perching on the clay-over-saprolite once a tight lot is cut. We read your lot’s drainage class, set the pipe at the layer that perches the water, and daylight it to a stable outlet. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.
A French drain — perforated pipe in a gravel-filled, fabric-lined trench — only earns its keep where the water is in the soil, and Buncombe County is a special case. Every dominant USDA-NRCS series here (Clifton, Tate, Evard, Burton) is rated well drained — there is no poorly-drained bottomland like Henderson’s Dillard or Transylvania’s Toxaway. So an Asheville French drain almost never fights a standing water table. It fights two things instead: runoff concentrating at the foot of a steep Evard/Burton ridge cut (typical 34.8–40.8%), and water perching on the Typic Hapludults clay subsoil over saprolite once a tight 0.55-acre infill lot is cut or compacted. We read your lot’s drainage class and dig before recommending a trench — a French drain in clean well-drained ground is money in a hole.
In Buncombe County, a French drain isn’t about a water table
Most French-drain advice online is written for a flat suburban yard with a high water table: dig a trench, drop in gravel and pipe, done. Asheville breaks that, and the reason is in the soil survey. All 10 dominant USDA-NRCS series in Buncombe County (survey NC021) are rated well drained — Clifton, Tate, Evard, Burton, Braddock. There is no poorly-drained bottomland here the way there is over in Henderson County (the Dillard flats along the French Broad and Mud Creek) or Transylvania. So in Asheville the water rarely stands — it moves, and a French drain only matters where you can catch it moving.
Where the water actually shows up here
Two Buncombe-specific cases call for a drain. The first is concentrated runoff on a steep cut. Climb the ridges above town — Town Mountain, Beaverdam, Reynolds — and you are on Evard and Burton soils at a typical 34.8% and 40.8% grade, running as steep as 95%. Water sheds fast off that ground and piles up at the foot of a benched pad, a fill toe, or a driveway, where a curtain drain across the slope intercepts it before it reaches the structure. The second is perched water on a clay subsoil — covered below.
Clay over saprolite: why “well drained” still floods a cut lot
Buncombe’s mountain soils sit on saprolite — weathered-in-place bedrock — and the dominant Clifton, Tate, and Evard series are all Typic Hapludults: a clay-rich subsoil over that saprolite. On undisturbed ground the survey rates them well drained, and they are. But once you cut or compact the lot — routine on Asheville’s tight 0.55-acre infill parcels and on benched ridge pads — rain soaks the loose surface, then perches on the dense clay or the saprolite contact and runs sideways along that boundary instead of soaking away. That is why a crawlspace floods even on a well-drained, sloped lot. The fix is to set the perforated pipe at or just into that contact so it intercepts the flow — which is why depth on a clay site is often 2 to 4 feet, not the textbook foot. Go deeper and you risk hard saprolite or rock, which changes the method and the price. We flag that on the walk.
Build detail that decides whether it lasts
Three things separate a French drain that works for 30 years from one that silts up in three: filter fabric (non-woven, wrapping clean washed #57 stone so the soil can’t migrate in and clog it), consistent fall to a real outlet (a steady grade, not a sag that traps water), and a daylighted outlet lower than the water you’re collecting. On Asheville’s steep ridge lots the outlet is usually easy; on a tight Braddock/Tate valley-terrace lot it is the part that takes planning. This is the trenched system itself — it works hand in hand with surface drainage and curtain-drain work and the wider Asheville grading scope, so one crew sets both the surface grade and the subsurface pipe.
All Buncombe series are well drained, so the drain fights runoff on the Evard ridges and perched water on the Typic Hapludults clay subsoil — not a water table.
Buncombe’s soils — and the drain each one calls for once it’s cut.
Every dominant USDA-NRCS series in Buncombe County (survey NC021) is rated well drained, so on undisturbed ground none of them needs a French drain. The drain comes in once a lot is cut or compacted: a near-flat valley terrace gets a shallow yard drain, while a steep ridge shoulder gets a curtain drain across the slope to catch concentrated runoff and water perched on the clay subsoil over saprolite.
| Soil series | Typical slope | Slope range | Drainage class | Drain type that fits once cut |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braddock | 11.6% | 2–30% | Well drained | Yard / footing drain + surface fall |
| Tate | 14.4% | 2–30% | Well drained | Yard / footing drain + surface fall |
| Clifton | 16% | 2–50% | Well drained | Curtain drain up-grade of the pad |
| Evard | 34.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Curtain drain across the slope + intercept runoff |
| Burton | 40.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Curtain drain across the slope + intercept runoff |
County slope envelope: 2% on the valley terraces to 95% on the steepest ridge series. The clay-subsoil watch list — Clifton, Tate, Evard, Unison, Braddock, Cowee, Fannin — are all Typic Hapludults, well drained until a cut perches water on the clay over saprolite. We confirm your lot’s drainage class on the free site walk.
Priced by the foot, the depth, and the rock.
French drains in Asheville are quoted by the linear foot, and depth is what moves you across the range: a shallow yard drain on a near-flat Braddock/Tate valley terrace (11.6–14.4%) sits at the low end, while a deep curtain line trenched into Typic Hapludults clay down to the saprolite contact on a steep Evard ridge (34.8%) sits at the high end. On Buncombe ground the wild card is rock and rippable saprolite in the trench — the deeper you reach the perched layer, the likelier you hit a hard seam that needs a hammer — so most Asheville hillside jobs land toward the top of the typical NC range below, not the bottom. The numbers are published WNC/NC market ranges; your exact price comes from a free on-site estimate where we read the depth to the wet layer and the soil’s drainage class.
What a French drain costs in Asheville, NC
These are typical Western North Carolina market ranges, not a Ridgeline quote. North Carolina construction runs about 12% below the national average, but our mountain terrain — 15–40%+ slopes, weathered bedrock and saprolite, clay, and tight access — pushes most jobs toward the high end of every range. A flat infill lot sits low; a steep escarpment lot sits at or above the top. Your exact price comes from a free on-site estimate.
| Item | Typical WNC range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| French drain (installed) | $25–$98/linear foot | NC ~2% below national |
| Yard / surface drain | $10–$50/linear foot | shallow exterior runs |
| Deep / curtain / foundation drain | $50–$70/linear foot | depth drives cost |
What drives it: depth, length, soil drainage class (clay-over-rock vs sandy), daylighting vs sump, gravel + fabric spec.
Source: published WNC/NC market ranges via costonce.com and fixr.com . Exact pricing on your lot comes from a free on-site estimate — call (828) 510-7217.
We find the water before we dig.
Read the soil
We check your Buncombe lot’s drainage class and find the layer — clay subsoil or saprolite — where the water perches after the cut.
Set fall & outlet
We confirm the line can daylight to a stable outlet lower than the water — easy on a ridge shoulder, planned on a valley terrace.
Trench & build
Fabric-lined trench, washed #57 stone, perforated pipe at the wet layer, stone over, fabric folded & capped.
Prove it drains
We check the fall to the outlet and confirm the line carries water off — then restore the surface clean.
French drain installation in Asheville — common questions
When does an Asheville lot actually need a French drain?
Why is a French drain in Asheville different from one in Hendersonville or Brevard?
What exactly is a French drain, and how do you install one on a Buncombe County lot?
Why does clay over saprolite make Asheville French drains tricky?
What's the difference between a French drain, a curtain drain, and a footing drain?
How deep should a French drain be on an Asheville hillside lot?
Do I need a permit to install a French drain in Asheville / Buncombe County?
What does French drain installation cost in Asheville, NC?
Water in the basement, a wet yard, or a soggy cut pad in Asheville?
Tell us where the water shows up on your Buncombe County lot — we'll walk it, read the soil's drainage class, and put the right drain (or just better grading) in writing, free.