Foundation Repair vs Monitoring
When to fix it and when to wait • Publicado el 2 de julio de 2026
You've spotted a crack. Maybe your door sticks a little. You Google "foundation repair DFW" and suddenly you're reading horror stories about $20,000 repairs. Here's the truth: not every foundation issue needs immediate repair. Some can be monitored for years. Others need attention this month. The trick is knowing which is which.
The Three Categories
Scenarios You Can Monitor
Hairline Drywall Cracks
Vertical hairline cracks (< 1/16") in interior drywall are almost always cosmetic — especially in corners or along taped seams. They happen from normal settling and temperature changes. What to do: Mark the end of the crack with a pencil and write the date. Check back in 6 months. If it hasn't grown, it's not structural.
Seasonal Door Sticking
If a door sticks in August but works fine in December — or vice versa — that's seasonal humidity, not foundation failure. DFW's expansive clay soil swells when wet (spring) and shrinks when dry (summer). What to do: Note the pattern. If the sticking is consistent year-round or getting progressively worse, that's a different conversation.
Small Exterior Hairline Cracks in Stucco or Mortar
Tiny cracks in stucco or mortar joints (< 1/16") are often just thermal expansion. Brick and mortar expand and contract with temperature. What to do: Mark them, photograph them, and check back in 6–12 months. If they remain the same size and don't form a stair-step pattern, they're likely cosmetic.
Scenarios You Should Plan For (Within 12 Months)
Consistent Sticking Doors — Multiple Rooms
If doors stick in multiple rooms and the problem is getting worse over time, the foundation is actively shifting. You don't need to fix it this week, but you should schedule an inspection and budget for repairs within the next year. Each year you wait adds roughly 5–10% to the repair scope.
Cracks Wider Than 1/8" — But Not Growing
A crack wider than 1/8" has already passed the cosmetic threshold. If it's stable (not growing over 6 months), it represents past settlement that may be done — or may reactivate in the next drought cycle. What to do: Get an inspection to determine if it's active. If stable, seal it and monitor. If active, plan repairs.
Water Pooling After Heavy Rain
Standing water near the foundation isn't an immediate structural emergency, but it's a problem that compounds quickly. Each rain cycle saturates the soil, which expands and presses against your foundation. What to do: Address drainage within a year — French drains, grading, gutter extensions. This is often $2,000–$6,000 vs $10,000+ if you wait until foundation damage occurs.
Scenarios That Need Immediate Action
Stair-Step Cracks in Exterior Brick
This is the #1 red flag in DFW. A zigzag crack following mortar joints means the foundation has dropped enough to pull the brick veneer with it. This is never cosmetic. What to do: Schedule an inspection this week. The pier count and cost increase the longer it goes unaddressed.
Doors That Won't Close — At All
When a door physically cannot close because the frame is so out of square, the foundation has shifted significantly. This level of movement puts stress on walls, windows, and plumbing. What to do: Schedule an inspection immediately. Repair costs increase roughly 15–20% per year at this stage.
Cracks With Visible Displacement
If one side of a crack is visibly higher than the other — put a ruler across it; if there's a gap on one side — that's displacement. This means the foundation is actively settling unevenly. What to do: This is structural. Schedule an inspection this week. The differential will only increase.
Water Coming Through Foundation Cracks
Water intrusion through foundation cracks means the crack goes all the way through — it's not surface-level. This creates a structural problem AND a mold risk simultaneously. What to do: Address within days to weeks. Every rain event pushes more water through, expanding the crack and saturating interior materials.
The Monitoring Playbook
If you're in the "monitor" camp, do it systematically:
- 1. Mark crack ends with a pencil and write the date next to them
- 2. Take clear photos with a ruler or coin for scale
- 3. Measure door gaps with a feeler gauge or folded paper
- 4. Re-check every 6 months — set a calendar reminder
- 5. If anything has grown more than 1/16" since last check, schedule an inspection
Not Sure Which Category You're In?
That's exactly what a free inspection is for. We'll tell you honestly whether you need to act now, plan for later, or just keep an eye on it. No pressure, no sales pitch — just real data from a manometer survey.
Agende Su InspeccionRelated: 7 signs of foundation problems — what to watch for. Foundation repair cost estimator — get a rough range in 60 seconds. DFW foundation repair costs in 2026.
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