Author: Adam Sedlak

  • How Clay Soil Damages Foundations in Oklahoma and Texas

    If you own a home in Oklahoma or Texas, your foundation faces a hidden risk — and it’s right under your feet. Clay soil is one of the single biggest threats to residential foundations across the Southern Plains, and most homeowners don’t realize the damage is happening until it’s already serious.

    As a foundation repair contractor who works on homes across the Tulsa metro every day, I’ve seen firsthand how expansive clay soil warps, cracks, and shifts foundations in ways that can cost homeowners tens of thousands of dollars.

    Here’s what every homeowner — and every real estate professional — should understand about this hidden risk.

    Why Clay Soil Causes So Much Damage

    Not all dirt is created equal. The red clay that blankets much of Oklahoma and north Texas contains minerals called smectites that absorb water like a sponge. When it rains, clay soil can expand by 10% or more in volume. When drought hits — and anyone who’s lived through an Oklahoma summer knows it will — that same soil shrinks dramatically, pulling away from your foundation.

    This constant cycle of swelling and shrinking creates enormous pressure. Imagine your foundation sitting on top of a surface that rises and falls with every weather pattern. Over months and years, that movement causes:

    • Cracks in walls and ceilings — especially diagonal cracks near door frames and windows
    • Doors and windows that stick or won’t close properly — the frames shift as the foundation moves
    • Uneven or sloping floors — one side of the house settles more than the other
    • Gaps between walls and the floor or ceiling — visible separation as the structure shifts
    • Cracked or buckled exterior brick — stair-step cracks in brick mortar are a classic sign

    Oklahoma and Texas: A Perfect Storm

    The geology across Oklahoma and Texas makes foundation problems almost inevitable in certain areas. Tulsa sits on heavy clay deposits, and the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex is built on some of the most expansive clay in the country.

    But it’s not just the soil — it’s the weather. The Southern Plains experience dramatic swings between heavy rain and extended drought, sometimes within the same month. This rapid cycling accelerates the expansion-contraction damage far more than a region with steady rainfall would experience.

    During the historic drought of 2022-2023, foundation repair companies across Oklahoma and Texas saw a sharp increase in emergency calls. Foundations that had been slowly deteriorating for years suddenly cracked and shifted when the clay dried out completely. Then, when the rains returned, the sudden re-expansion pushed already-weakened foundations past their limits.

    The Real Estate Connection

    For anyone buying or selling a home in Oklahoma or Texas, foundation condition should be at the top of the inspection checklist. A foundation issue can derail a deal, reduce a home’s value by 10-15%, and create liability headaches for sellers who didn’t disclose known problems.

    Smart real estate agents in our area have started recommending foundation inspections as part of every transaction — not because every home has a problem, but because catching an issue early changes the entire conversation. A small crack addressed now might cost $2,000 to fix. That same crack ignored for five years could turn into a $15,000 structural repair.

    What Homeowners Can Do

    The good news is that foundation damage from clay soil is both preventable and repairable.

    Here are practical steps every Oklahoma and Texas homeowner should take:

    • Manage moisture around your foundation. This is the single most impactful thing you can do. Make sure gutters are clean and downspouts direct water at least 4-6 feet away from the foundation. Grade your landscaping so water flows away from the house, not toward it.
    • Water your foundation during drought. It sounds counterintuitive, but running a soaker hose around your foundation during dry spells keeps the soil moisture consistent and prevents the extreme shrinkage that causes settling.
    • Watch for early warning signs. Hairline cracks in drywall are common in any home and usually harmless. But diagonal cracks near corners, doors that suddenly won’t latch, or floors that feel uneven are signals worth investigating. The earlier you catch movement, the simpler and cheaper the fix.
    • Get a professional inspection. Most reputable foundation repair companies offer free inspections. A trained eye can spot signs of movement that a homeowner might miss, and catching problems early is always less expensive than emergency repairs.

    Modern Solutions for an Age-Old Problem

    Foundation repair technology has come a long way. Today, methods like steel pier underpinning and helical piers can stabilize and even lift a settled foundation back to its original position. Polyurethane foam injection is another modern solution that fills voids under concrete slabs and relevels surfaces without the mess and disruption of traditional mudjacking.

    These aren’t temporary patches — they’re engineered solutions designed to permanently address the root cause of foundation movement. And because they target the specific areas of damage, most repairs can be completed in one to two days with minimal disruption to the homeowner.

    The Bottom Line

    Clay soil isn’t going anywhere. It’s part of living in Oklahoma and Texas. But understanding how it affects your home — and taking proactive steps to protect your foundation — can save you thousands of dollars and years of stress.

    Whether you’re a homeowner noticing the first cracks, a buyer evaluating a new property, or a real estate professional advising your clients, foundation awareness is one of the smartest investments you can make in this part of the country.


    Adam Sedlak is the owner of Level Home Foundation Repair in Tulsa, Oklahoma, specializing in steel piers, helical piers, crawl space repair, and concrete leveling. For a free foundation inspection, call (918) 361-7787.

  • 5 Foundation Red Flags That Can Stop a Real Estate Deal

    Whether you’re a buyer walking through your dream home or a listing agent trying to close before the end of the quarter, foundation problems can bring the whole process to a halt. Few phrases in a home inspection report create more anxiety than reading about possible structural movement. But not every crack is a crisis, and not every foundation issue kills the deal. Knowing what matters and what doesn’t can keep a transaction on track, save your client thousands of dollars, and prevent a lot of stress.

    Here are five foundation red flags every agent and buyer should know how to spot, and what they actually mean.

    1. Wall and Floor Cracks

    Every home settles. That hairline crack above a doorframe in a ten-year-old house is probably nothing to worry about. However, some cracks can point to bigger issues.

    Watch for these patterns:

    • Hairline cracks less than a sixteenth of an inch wide in drywall are usually cosmetic, especially if they follow the seams of drywall sheets.
    • Diagonal cracks radiating from the corners of windows and doors can signal differential settlement, which means one part of the foundation is moving more than another.
    • Horizontal cracks in basement or below-grade walls are the most serious. They can indicate lateral pressure from soil pushing against the wall.
    • Floor cracks wider than a quarter inch, especially in a slab foundation, should be checked by a professional.

    Multiple cracks spreading across the same wall or room can be a sign that the foundation is shifting.

    2. Sticking Doors and Windows as Warning Signs

    Most people blame humidity or an old house for doors that won’t latch or windows that suddenly get hard to open. Sometimes, they’re right. But when multiple doors and windows stick at the same time, especially on the same side of the house, the real problem could be the foundation.

    Foundation movement shifts the frame of the house, even slightly. That shift throws door and window frames out of square, which is why they stick, swing open on their own, or won’t close flush.

    Pro tip

    Open and close every single door during your walkthrough. If two or three on the same wall give you trouble, make a note of it. This is one of the earliest signs of foundation shifting.

    3. Uneven or Sloping Floors

    Try the marble trick: Set a marble or a golf ball in the center of the room. If it rolls steadily toward one wall, the floor is sloping. You can also use a four-foot level because a drop of more than a quarter inch over four feet is worth investigating.

    Sloping floors are common in older homes across Oklahoma and North Texas, where expansive clay soil is a major factor. This type of soil swells when it absorbs moisture and shrinks during drought, creating a seasonal push-and-pull on foundations that can gradually shift a slab or pier-and-beam system out of level.

    It doesn’t always mean disaster, but it does mean a foundation professional should take a look before anyone closes the deal.

    4. Gaps Between Walls and the Ceiling or Floor

    When you start noticing gaps where the wall meets the ceiling, or where baseboards are pulling away from the floor, that’s more than a cosmetic flaw. These separations usually mean the structure is moving in different directions, with walls pulling away from the frame or the floor settling while the walls stay in place.

    Keep an eye out for:

    • Crown molding separations that appear along the ceiling line.
    • Baseboards pulling away from the wall, especially if you can see daylight or feel airflow.
    • Gaps around built-in cabinetry where kitchen and bathroom cabinets are no longer flush with the wall.

    These signs often show up gradually, which is why sellers sometimes miss them or ignore them. A trained eye during a showing can catch issues that the current owners have simply gotten used to.

    5. Exterior Brick Cracks and Stair-Step Patterns

    If you’re doing a walkthrough and see a crack zigzagging along the mortar joints of an exterior brick wall, especially one that climbs like a staircase, take note. This is a classic stair-step crack and one of the most reliable exterior signs of foundation movement.

    Other warning signs include:

    • Brick pulling away from window or door frames, with visible gaps where caulk has failed or the brick has shifted.
    • Separation at corners where two exterior walls meet and are no longer flush.
    • Crumbling mortar joints concentrated in one area rather than evenly weathered.

    When the foundation beneath it moves, the brick has no choice but to crack. That makes exterior masonry one of the clearest indicators of foundation health.

    Why This Matters for Sellers Too

    If you’re listing a home and you suspect foundation issues, getting ahead of the problem is almost always the best move. A pre-listing foundation inspection removes the guesswork for buyers and takes away some of the leverage a buyer’s inspector might use to renegotiate your price down or walk away entirely.

    Many sellers do not realize that foundation repairs done by a reputable company often come with a transferable warranty, depending on the service. That means the warranty passes to the new owner at closing. For a buyer on the fence, that can be a major selling point instead of a red flag. A repaired and warrantied foundation can actually be more reassuring than one that’s never been evaluated.

    Don’t Let Fear Kill the Deal

    Foundation issues don’t have to kill a deal. Uncertainty and repair-cost concerns are usually what kill deals. Getting a professional evaluation early, whether you’re buying or selling, puts everyone on the same page and keeps the transaction moving.

    In markets across Oklahoma and North Texas, where clay soil affects foundations year-round, knowing what to look for can make a real difference. Learn to read the signs, bring in the right experts, and you’ll close more deals with fewer surprises.

    About the Author:

    Adam Sedlak is the owner of Level Home Foundation Repair in Tulsa, Oklahoma, specializing in foundation repair, crawl space repair, and concrete leveling. With years of hands-on experience helping homeowners and real estate professionals navigate foundation concerns across Oklahoma, Adam and his team are known for honest assessments and reliable solutions.

    Reach them at (918) 361-7787 or visit www.levelhomefoundationrepair.com.