Reading Foundation Repair

Foundation Repair in Exeter Township, PA

Exeter Township sits southeast of Reading, running down toward the Schuylkill, and the river's influence shows up in the basements. Closer to the water the table runs high, so soil stays saturated longer and pushes water in at the cove joint and through the walls.

That's why wet basements and sump systems are the frequent call around Exeter and neighboring Birdsboro. We size the drainage and pump to the water a home actually takes on, so the basement stays dry through the storms that matter.

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What Drives Foundation Problems in Exeter

  • Land sloping toward the Schuylkill, where a higher water table keeps soil saturated.
  • Cove-joint seepage and basement flooding as the most common problems near the river.
  • Interior drainage and sump pump systems sized to real storm-season water volume.

What to Expect When You Reach Out

It starts with a few details through the form so we know what you're seeing: the cracks, the water, the sticking doors, whatever made you call. We come out and inspect the foundation inside and out, look at the basement or crawl space, and check how the soil and water are moving around the house. Then you get a written assessment that explains what is actually causing the problem and the repair that fits it, whether that's sealing and reinforcing a crack, bracing a bowing wall with carbon fiber or anchors, driving piers under a settling section, or waterproofing a wet basement. On repair day the crew protects the work area, does the repair, and cleans up before leaving. You get a clear explanation of the work and the number in writing up front, so there are no surprises.

Common Questions from Exeter Homeowners

  • How do I know if my foundation needs repair?
    The common warning signs are cracks in foundation or basement walls, especially stair-step cracks in block or a horizontal crack across a wall, doors and windows that suddenly stick or won't latch, floors that slope or feel bouncy, gaps where walls meet ceilings, and a basement that takes on water or stays damp. One small crack isn't always urgent, but several of these together usually means the foundation is moving. The only way to know for sure is an inspection, which is why we look before we recommend anything.
  • Are foundation cracks serious, or are some normal?
    Some are normal and some aren't. Thin vertical hairline cracks from concrete curing are usually cosmetic. The ones to take seriously are horizontal cracks, stair-step cracks through block joints, cracks wider than about a quarter inch, and any crack that is actively leaking water or growing. Those point to soil or water pressure moving the wall. We tell you straight which kind you have rather than alarming you over a harmless one.
  • What causes foundation problems in Reading and Berks County?
    Mostly the soil and water. A lot of the area sits on clay-heavy soil that swells when wet and shrinks when dry, which pushes and pulls on the foundation. Clay also drains slowly, so water builds up against basement walls and presses inward. Our freeze-thaw winters widen existing cracks, and many Reading homes are old enough that their stone, brick, or block foundations have weakened with age. A repair lasts when it addresses that cause, not just the crack you can see.
  • How do you fix a settling or sinking foundation?
    A foundation that has settled is usually fixed with piers, either steel push piers or helical piers, driven down through the unstable soil to firmer ground that can carry the weight. Once they reach stable soil, the piers support the foundation and, where possible, lift it back toward its original position. It's an engineered fix for the soil problem underneath, not a surface patch.
  • Can you stop water from getting into my basement?
    Yes. Wet basements are one of the most common calls we get in this area because of the clay soil and high water table near the Schuylkill. Depending on what's happening, the fix can include sealing the wall cracks where water enters, installing an interior drainage system and a sump pump to manage water that reaches the foundation, and adding a vapor barrier to cut humidity. We match the approach to where and how the water is getting in.

Get a Free Foundation Inspection in Reading, PA

Seeing wall cracks, a bowing basement wall, sticking doors, or water coming into the basement anywhere in Reading, Wyomissing, West Reading, Sinking Spring, Shillington, Exeter, or Muhlenberg? Request a free written quote and we'll get right back to you. We'll set up a time that works, inspect the foundation, and put our assessment in writing.