Foundation Repair in Spring Branch, TX
We stabilise Spring Branch homes on limestone hills and Guadalupe River terraces with engineered piers matched to the ground and drainage built for sloped acreage lots.

New Braunfels Foundation Repair HQ has spent more than 18 years repairing foundations in Spring Branch, Texas. Spring Branch sits in western Comal County along US 281, about 21 miles northwest of the New Braunfels team that dispatches our crews, with Canyon Lake just to the east and the Guadalupe River winding along its edge. The town takes its name from a spring fed creek that flows into the Guadalupe, and the German settlers who arrived in the 1850s built here with locally quarried stone and cypress cut from the riverbanks. That mix of limestone hills, river terraces, and large acreage lots shapes the foundation problems we see, and our licensed specialists have stabilised homes on all of it.
Foundation repair services in Spring Branch
Every repair we bring to Spring Branch, each with its own page.
Common Foundation Problems in Spring Branch
Spring Branch sits in the limestone country of the Texas Hill Country, and most of the town's foundation trouble traces back to two kinds of ground.
The first is thin soil over rock. Across the hills of western Comal County, a shallow layer of soil rests on hard limestone, and the depth to that rock changes from one end of a house to the other. Part of the foundation ends up bearing on stone that never moves while another part bears on soil that compresses, dries, and shifts. The house settles unevenly, usually starting at a corner, and cracks open in stone veneer and drywall. On the large acreage lots common around Spring Branch, long ranch style homes stretch across more of this variable ground than a compact suburban slab would, which gives the foundation more chances to find a weak spot.
The second is the river. Lots along the Guadalupe and the spring fed creeks that feed it sit on alluvial terrace soils rather than bare rock. These soils hold more moisture, swell after the river runs high, and shrink hard in drought, so riverfront foundations ride a wetter, wider moisture cycle than homes up on the hills. Add the newer subdivisions filling in along the US 281 corridor as the area grows, where builders cut and fill sloped ground before pouring slabs, and you have three distinct movement patterns inside one small town. Diagnosing which one is at work under your home is the first step of every repair we do here.
Repairing Foundations on Acreage and River Lots
A repair plan in Spring Branch depends on where the lot sits. Up on the limestone, we press or drill steel piers down to bedrock, which gives the foundation support that has almost nowhere left to move. On the river terraces, where soft alluvial soil runs deep, helical piers screw down to a torque reading that proves load bearing capacity without needing rock at all. Older pier and beam ranch homes usually need a combination of new piers, sistered or replaced beams, and moisture control in the crawl space. In every case we finish by correcting the drainage, because on sloped Hill Country ground the water that caused the settlement will cause it again if it keeps reaching the foundation. Our guide to what drives repair pricing explains how pier type, pier count, and site access change the total, which matters on long acreage driveways.
Signs a Spring Branch home needs foundation repair
Our foundation repair process
Foundation repair cost in Spring Branch
Foundation repair in Spring Branch, before and after

Nearby areas we serve
Our crews work throughout western Comal County and the surrounding Hill Country. From Spring Branch we regularly head south to Bulverde along US 281, east to the Canyon Lake communities, and northeast toward Wimberley an