Foundation Settlement & Sinking in Grand Junction Homes
Foundation settlement is one of the most common — and most misunderstood — structural problems affecting homes on the Western Slope. Here’s what it is, why it happens in Grand Junction’s soils, and what your options are when your foundation starts to sink.
Think Your Foundation Is Settling? Get a Free Assessment.
Foundation settlement rarely corrects itself — and the longer it progresses, the more costly the repair. We offer free on-site assessments for Grand Junction area homeowners so you know exactly what you’re dealing with.
- Free on-site estimate — no cost, no commitment
- Identify the cause and extent of settlement
- Honest recommendation — we’ll tell you if it can wait
- Local Western Slope team — fast response
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Understanding Foundation Settlement
Foundation settlement occurs when the soil beneath a home’s foundation compresses, shifts, or erodes — causing the foundation to sink downward. Some degree of settlement is normal in the years immediately following construction as the soil compacts under the weight of the structure. The problem arises when settlement is uneven, excessive, or ongoing.
Uniform settlement — where the entire foundation sinks evenly — is generally less damaging than differential settlement, where one part of the foundation sinks more than another. Differential settlement distorts the structure above it, causing the telltale signs homeowners notice first: cracks in walls, sticking doors, gaps at wall-floor or wall-ceiling joints, and sloping floors.
What Causes Foundation Settlement in Grand Junction
Expansive Clay Soil Cycles
Grand Junction’s clay soils swell when wet and shrink when dry. When soil beneath a footing dries and shrinks, it can pull away — leaving the footing without full bearing support. Over repeated wet-dry cycles, this produces uneven settlement throughout the foundation.
Poorly Compacted Fill Soil
Homes built on fill soil — common in newer Grand Junction, Fruita, and Clifton subdivisions — can experience settlement as that fill naturally compresses over the first several years after construction. Inadequately compacted fill settles faster and more unevenly.
Soil Erosion Beneath Footings
Water that flows beneath a foundation — from poor drainage, irrigation leaks, or plumbing failures — can gradually carry soil particles away, creating voids that allow footings to sink into the vacated space.
Organic Soil Decomposition
Soil with organic material — tree roots, buried debris, or organic-rich topsoil left beneath a slab — decomposes over time, reducing its volume and leaving voids that cause the foundation above to settle.
Signs Your Grand Junction Home May Have Foundation Settlement
Diagonal cracks from door & window corners
Cracks that run diagonally from the corners of door and window openings are classic indicators of differential settlement — the frame above is distorting as the foundation beneath it moves unevenly.
Sloping or uneven floors
A floor that slopes noticeably toward one side of a room, or that has low spots you can feel or measure, is often directly traceable to differential settlement in the foundation below.
Gaps at wall-floor or wall-ceiling junctions
Separation between walls and floors, or between walls and ceilings, indicates that different parts of your home are moving independently — a hallmark of differential foundation settlement.
Stair-step cracks in brick or block
Cracks that follow the mortar joints in brick or concrete block walls in a stair-step pattern indicate differential settlement — one section of the foundation has moved more than the adjacent section.
How Foundation Settlement Is Repaired
The goal of foundation settlement repair is to stabilize the foundation at its current position — or, where possible, to lift it back toward its original elevation. The primary methods used in Grand Junction area homes include:
Steel Push Piers
Driven deep through unstable soil until they reach stable bearing layers or bedrock, push piers transfer the foundation load away from the problem soil. Can stabilize and sometimes lift a settled foundation back toward its original position.
Helical Piers
Screwed into stable soil below the settlement zone, helical piers provide immediate load-bearing capacity and are particularly well suited for lighter structures and areas with limited access around the foundation.
Slab Pier Systems
For slab-on-grade foundations that have settled, mini piers installed through the slab lift and re-level it — restoring both structural integrity and a level surface without full slab replacement.
Void Fill & Foam Injection
Where settlement is caused by voids beneath a slab, expanding polyurethane foam injected through small holes fills those voids and provides immediate support — a targeted solution for isolated settlement caused by erosion.
Foundation Settlement FAQs
Yes — some uniform settlement in the first few years after construction is normal and expected. The concern is differential settlement (uneven sinking) and settlement that is ongoing rather than having stabilized. If you’re seeing cracks, sloping floors, or sticking doors that are getting worse over time, the settlement has likely not stabilized and warrants professional evaluation.
In many cases, yes — pier systems can lift a settled foundation partially or fully back toward its original elevation. The degree of lift achievable depends on how long settlement has been occurring, the condition of the structure above, and the specific soil conditions. We’ll give you a realistic expectation of potential lift during the free assessment based on your home’s specific situation.
Newer homes in Grand Junction and Fruita built on fill soil can show settlement signs within the first 3 to 10 years. Watch for diagonal cracks appearing at door and window corners, floors that seem to be sloping slightly, or doors and windows that gradually become harder to operate. These signs in a newer home often indicate fill soil settling rather than underlying geology — and are worth having evaluated before they develop further.