Drainage contractors who read the soil first.
French drains, curtain drains, swales, and washout repair across Buncombe, Henderson, Transylvania and Haywood — the right fix for your lot’s drainage class, not a buried pipe everywhere. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.
Drainage in Western North Carolina is two opposite problems, decided by your soil’s USDA drainage class. On the steep ridges, Ashe soils (typical 40.2% slope, classed somewhat excessively drained) shed water so fast it concentrates downslope — the fix is surface grading and swales, not a buried drain. The exception is Henderson County’s Dillard valley bottoms: an Aquic soil with a seasonal water table, classed only moderately well drained at 3.7% slope, where a curtain or French drain is near-mandatory. We diagnose which one your lot is before quoting — exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate.
Drainage in the mountains is a soil question
Most drainage companies sell the same buried French drain to every customer. On WNC ground that’s often the wrong tool — and the USDA-NRCS soil survey says why. Across Buncombe (NC021), Henderson (NC089), and Transylvania (NC175), nearly every dominant ridge series — Evard, Ashe, Porters, Cullasaja — is classed well drained or somewhat excessively drained. Those soils don’t hold water; they move it fast. So the drainage problem on most mountain lots isn’t a wet subsurface — it’s fast surface runoff that needs to be re-graded, not piped.
The two failure modes, and the right fix for each
On a steep, well-drained ridge lot, a summer downpour sheets straight down the slope and concentrates wherever the grade lets it — a driveway, a cut face above a pad, a foundation corner. The fix is surface: graded swales, a diversion above the pad, crowned grade, and culverts placed where the runoff actually collects. Henderson’s ridge Ashe soils at 40.2% typify this.
The opposite case is rarer here, and that’s exactly why naming it matters. Henderson County’s Dillard bottomland soils near the French Broad and Mud Creek are moderately well drained — an Aquic soil with a seasonal high water table at just 3.7% slope. On that ground water sits against the pad, so the fix is subsurface: a curtain drain upslope to intercept it, plus raised, drained engineered fill. We also watch for the clay-over-saprolite break on Buncombe’s Clifton soils, where water perches above the rock and a French drain at the break does the work.
The 1-acre line and where water can legally go
Drainage repairs usually disturb well under an acre, so North Carolina’s Sedimentation Pollution Control Act trigger (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)) — an approved E&SC plan at $119/acre over one acre of disturbance — rarely applies to a single swale or drain line. What always applies is where the water ends up: you can’t lawfully concentrate runoff onto a neighbor’s land, and the outlet has to be stable. We sort jurisdiction (state DEMLR Asheville office vs. a delegated county/town program) and a safe, legal outlet before we trench. Full detail: NC land grading permits, plus the Henderson and Buncombe county guides.
Ridge Ashe sheds water fast; valley Dillard holds it. Different soils, opposite fixes.
Drainage class decides the method.
Dominant USDA-NRCS soil series in the counties we serve, their drainage class and typical slope, and the drainage method each one actually calls for. Well-drained ridge soils want surface grading; only the moderately-drained valley bottom wants a buried curtain drain.
| Soil series | County | Drainage class | Typical slope | Drainage problem | Right fix |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ashe | Henderson | Somewhat excessively drained | 40.2% | Fast runoff concentrates downslope | Surface grading + swales + check measures |
| Evard | Henderson | Well drained | 28.1% | Sheet flow off benched cut faces | Diversion swale above pad + crowned grade |
| Clifton | Buncombe | Well drained | 16% | Clay-over-saprolite perches water | Curtain/French drain at the clay break |
| Dillard | Henderson | Moderately well drained | 3.7% | Seasonal water table sits against the pad | Curtain drain + raised, drained engineered fill |
Henderson County envelope: slope runs from 0% in the Dillard bottoms to 95% on the steepest ridge series — the full range a drainage plan has to handle.
Drainage in WNC is priced by the linear foot of drain, and the type the soil calls for sets the band: a shallow surface run to shed runoff off a well-drained Ashe ridge or a flat Dillard valley lot lands at the low end ($10–$50/linear foot), while a deep curtain drain trenched in upslope of a pad on Dillard bottomland — the one moderately well drained series in our whole dataset, with a seasonal water table at 3.7% slope — or cut into Clifton clay-over-saprolite runs $50–$70/linear foot because depth, rock, and a legal daylighted outlet drive it.
That fits the wider WNC pattern: North Carolina runs about 12% below national on construction, but mountain slope, weathered bedrock, and tight access push real jobs to the high end of every range below. Exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate after we read the slope, soil drainage class, and where the water can outlet.
What drainage work costs in WNC
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.
Diagnose the soil, then drain it.
Read the lot
We check slope, soil drainage class, and where the water is actually coming from and going.
Right tool, in writing
Swale, French drain, or curtain drain — a scoped plan with a safe, legal outlet, priced free.
Grade & install
Surface grading first, then any buried drain, with erosion control on the disturbed ground.
Prove it sheds
We check the finished flow line so water leaves the lot — not your foundation or your neighbor.
WNC drainage — common questions
What does a drainage contractor near me actually fix on a WNC lot?
When does a WNC lot actually need a French drain or curtain drain?
Why do new homes on WNC ridges get water in the crawlspace?
How much does drainage work cost in Western North Carolina?
Do you need a permit for drainage or grading work in NC?
What's the difference between a French drain, a curtain drain, and a swale?
Can you fix an existing washout or erosion gully on a steep lot?
Do you handle the drainage and the grading, or just the pipe?
Standing water, a washout, or a wet crawlspace?
Tell us where the water is and what the lot is doing. We'll read the soil, find the outlet, and put a real number in writing — free.