Homeowners want to know whether mudjacking or foam lifting is better, whether their sunken slab will sink again after lifting, and whether lifting is cheaper than replacement. A website that explains why slabs sink earns the inspection call. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Concrete Leveling in KC

Web Design for Concrete Leveling Companies in Kansas City

Concrete leveling customers are homeowners with a sunken driveway apron, uneven sidewalk panel creating a trip hazard, settled patio slab, or garage floor that has dropped away from the wall. The central education is why concrete sinks and whether lifting holds: slabs sink because the soil beneath them compresses, washes away through erosion (often from a broken downspout or improper grading), or was never properly compacted during original construction. In KC, heavy clay soil shrinks significantly during droughts and expands when wet — seasonal movement causes gradual slab settlement. Mudjacking (slabjacking): a slurry of Portland cement, water, and soil is pumped through 1.5"–2" holes drilled in the slab — hydraulic pressure lifts the slab. Lower material cost, heavier fill (which can cause slab to re-settle if the underlying soil is still unstable), holes are larger and more visible. Polyurethane foam lifting (PolyLevel, Terene): two-part expanding foam injected through 5/8" holes — expands to fill voids and lifts the slab. Lighter than mudjacking slurry (reduces re-settlement risk), smaller holes (less visible repair), waterproof (no future washout), more expensive. Foam is preferred for driveways and pool decks where water exposure is high. Repair vs. replace: concrete leveling costs 25–50% of slab replacement and is same-day driveable. If the slab is cracked through in multiple sections, severely deteriorated, or the underlying soil problem cannot be addressed, replacement may be necessary. A concrete leveling website that explains why slabs sink, mudjacking vs. foam, and when replacement is the better call earns the homeowner with a driveway apron that drops 3" from the garage floor.

What homeowners research before hiring a concrete leveling company

  • Why slabs sink — soil compression, erosion, clay shrinkage in KC droughts — root cause vs. symptoms
  • Mudjacking vs. foam — material weight difference, hole size, waterproofing, cost comparison
  • Will it sink again — what determines longevity of the lift, soil stabilization, drainage correction
  • Leveling vs. replacement — cost comparison, when each is the right answer, how to assess the slab
  • Driveway apron repair — specific challenges lifting concrete adjacent to the garage floor

What your concrete leveling website would include

  • Why slabs sink section — soil and drainage causes, KC clay shrink-swell behavior, erosion patterns
  • Mudjacking vs. foam comparison — process, hole size, weight, waterproofing, cost, longevity difference
  • Process walkthrough — hole drilling, injection, lifting, grouting holes, same-day driveable
  • Leveling vs. replacement — candidacy criteria, what crack patterns indicate each option
  • Before and after photos — sunken driveways, sidewalks, and patios restored to level
  • Quote form with slab type, settlement amount, crack description, drainage issue, square footage

What clients say

“The biggest conversion problem I had was customers who were ready to replace the whole driveway apron for $4,000 because they did not know lifting was a thing. The other problem was customers who had mudjacking done before and had it sink again — they were skeptical that anything would hold. The website section on why slabs sink and what determines longevity, plus the mudjacking vs. foam comparison, handled both. I close more jobs now and I close them without a lengthy education call first.”

— T. Barnes, concrete leveling specialist, Olathe, KS

Simple pricing

A concrete leveling site with why slabs sink, mudjacking vs. foam comparison, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with process walkthrough, before-and-after gallery, and leveling vs. replacement guide is $425–$750. One driveway apron lift covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

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(816) 520-5652