Tag: Dallas Texas

  • 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.

  • Texas Multifamily Real Estate in 2026

    When it comes to Texas real estate, Dallas and Austin usually get most of the attention. If a major sale makes headlines, it’s probably happening in one of those two metros. But the latest LoopNet report on 2026’s top multifamily markets suggests it may be time to broaden that focus.

    While national headlines often spotlight Washington, D.C., and Las Vegas, Texas investors should pay close attention to the affordability rankings. Out of the 50 largest U.S. cities, two Texas markets stand out as lower-cost entry points.

    Top Entry Points: El Paso and San Antonio

    LoopNet’s study weighed cap rates, property taxes, inventory, and lifestyle factors to compare investment potential. While yield-chasers may still look to Detroit for double-digit cap rates, investors looking for steady Texas markets and lower operating costs should keep El Paso and San Antonio on the radar.

    El Paso claimed the top national spot for affordability, with an average multifamily listing price of $631,250. This is not just a low-price land play. It is also tied to cross-border trade, logistics, and the broader nearshoring story. While uncertainty around trade policy remains a factor, El Paso is still well positioned to serve the workforce connected to the border’s logistics and industrial corridors.

    For a North Texas investor used to million-dollar teardowns in Preston Hollow, securing a cash-flowing asset for under $700,000 is hard to ignore.

    San Antonio also landed in the top five for affordability, with an average asking price of $1.29 million. San Antonio’s appeal goes beyond price. Projects like the $65 million Mira at the Pearl show continued investment in walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods, even as investors need to watch vacancy and concessions closely.

    The city offers big-city perks at a clear discount compared with Austin, though investors still need to underwrite vacancy and concessions carefully.

    The Dallas Shift: From Bargain Market to Quality Play

    So, with more affordable options in El Paso and San Antonio, is Dallas losing its edge?

    Not really. The era of cheap DFW real estate is mostly over, but 2026 data shows Dallas becoming a more mature market where location, asset quality, and tenant profile matter more than bargain pricing.

    The DFW metroplex still benefits from strong renter demand, but the market is also working through a large supply wave. Developers are not just building units. They are competing harder to fill them. Data shows that cities with strong lifestyle metrics, including easy park access and James Beard-recognized dining, tend to have stronger renter appeal. That is where Dallas still has an edge.

    With Harold Simmons Park moving forward and the continued draw of neighborhoods like Bishop Arts, these amenities can help support demand even as supply stays elevated. Dallas is no longer a simple value play. In 2026, it is better viewed as a quality-focused market for investors who want long-term appreciation and higher-income tenants.

    The 2026 Supply Reset

    One of the clearest takeaways from current market data is the supply reset. Pandemic-era construction created a heavy wave of deliveries in 2024 and 2025, but that pipeline is starting to thin.

    Completions are dropping. The U.S. is expected to see fewer new multifamily deliveries in 2026 as construction starts slow and the under-construction pipeline shrinks.

    Concessions are still in play. Austin and Dallas have seen heavy rent concessions, including six to eight weeks of free rent in many Texas submarkets. If demand keeps catching up and supply keeps cooling, those deals could become less common.

    The window to buy into a softer market may not stay open forever. With fewer new units delivering, well-located Class B and C assets in San Antonio and El Paso could see stronger rent growth in 2027 and 2028, especially if investors buy at a disciplined basis today.

    Portfolio Diversification for North Texas Investors

    For North Texas investors, this data points to a practical diversification strategy.

    Even if you are priced out of your local 8-plex market, San Antonio and El Paso offer a way to stay under familiar Texas regulations while chasing better yield-on-cost. In El Paso, cap rates can still run meaningfully higher than what most investors see in the Dallas urban core.

    Property taxes remain a hot topic. They may be higher than Denver’s 0.44%, but the lack of state income tax and broad inventory still make Texas attractive for many investors compared with coastal markets like Boston or San Francisco.

    In El Paso specifically, multifamily real estate is closely tied to the industrial and logistics story. Targeting assets near last-mile distribution centers and employment corridors is a smart place to start in 2026.

    The Long View on Texas Real Estate

    There is plenty of upside in Texas multifamily, but the best move depends on your strategy. If you want stability, strong tenant demand, and exposure to a major Sun Belt market, Dallas is the clear choice. If you want to scale your portfolio cost-effectively, it is worth looking closely at El Paso and San Antonio.

    For investors, the story comes down to basis, cash flow, and demand.. Based on the 2026 data, the future of Texas multifamily still looks strong, but the better story is its range. Dallas, San Antonio, and El Paso give investors very different ways to play the same state.