Building a house starts under your feet. Soil conditions and geotechnical investigations determine foundation type, construction cost, long-term performance and risk. This guide explains which soil tests matter, what a geotech report will (and won’t) tell you, common foundation options, red flags to watch for and practical steps to reduce surprises.
Why soil and geotech matter
- Load-bearing capacity controls what foundations are feasible and how deep/large footings must be.
- Soil behavior (e.g., expansive clay, loose sand, organic fill) affects settlement, cracking and drainage.
- Groundwater and contamination influence basement waterproofing, dewatering and environmental remediation.
- Site-specific risks (frost, slope instability, liquefaction in seismic zones) change design and cost.
Before signing land contracts or finalizing plans, invest in the right investigations to avoid costly redesigns.
Core investigation types — what they tell you
| Test / Method | Typical depth | What it reveals | Typical US cost (per location, ballpark) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hand-auger / test pit | 0–3 m (0–10 ft) | Visual soil layers, organic fill, roots, shallow groundwater, infiltration | $300–$1,000 |
| Borehole + disturbed sample | 3–15 m (10–50 ft) | Layering, samples for lab tests, basic bearing info | $800–$2,000 |
| Standard Penetration Test (SPT) | With borehole | Relative density of granular soils, stratigraphy | Often bundled with borehole |
| Cone Penetration Test (CPT) | Continuous to 20+ m | Continuous profile of strength, stratigraphy — excellent for sands | $1,000–$3,000 |
| Percolation / perc test | Shallow (septic zone) | Infiltration rate for septic design | $300–$900 |
| Lab tests (Atterberg, grain size, consolidation) | N/A | Shrink-swell potential, strength, compressibility | $200–$1,000 per test |
| Environmental soil sampling | Depends on suspected depth | Presence of contaminants, petroleum, heavy metals | $500–$3,000+ |
Note: costs vary widely by region, depth and number of borings. Always get multiple quotes.
Reading a geotech report — key sections to focus on
A licensed geotechnical engineer prepares a geotech report. Make sure you (or your architect/builder) review these critical sections:
- Site description and scope — confirms survey points and limits of investigation.
- Subsurface profile — soil layers, depths, groundwater table. Look for variability: inconsistent layers increase risk.
- Laboratory results — Atterberg limits, grain size, moisture content. Expansive soils flagged here.
- Engineering recommendations — allowable bearing pressures, recommended foundation types, footing sizes, compaction requirements, drainage and dewatering notes.
- Limitations and assumptions — geotech reports are based on sampled locations; they are not exhaustive for the entire lot. Watch for wording like “conditions may vary beyond test locations.”
Always have a licensed engineer sign the report. If you see vague language or missing recommendations for foundations and site preparation, request clarification.
Common soil issues and their implications
- Expansive clay (shrink-swell): Causes heave in wet seasons and settlement in dry seasons. Requires stiffened foundations, increased slab reinforcement, moisture control and perimeter drainage.
- Loose or compressible fills: May lead to excessive settlement. Solutions include deeper foundations, densification (dynamic compaction), or pile foundations.
- High groundwater / perched water: Increases excavation difficulty, sump and pump needs, and hydrostatic pressure on basements. Waterproofing and drainage are essential.
- Organic soils / peat: Highly compressible — typically unsuitable as a bearing stratum; require removal and replacement or deep foundations.
- Seismic liquefaction potential: In seismic zones, loose saturated sands can lose strength; mitigation ranges from densification to deep piles.
Foundation options — pros, cons and when to use
| Foundation type | Best for | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slab-on-grade | Moderate soils, low frost | Cost-effective, quick | Vulnerable to expansive soils, less accessible services |
| Shallow footings / strip foundations | Good bearing strata near surface | Economical for small loads | Not for compressible or weak soils |
| Pier & beam (post-tensioned piers) | Sites with some variability, access needs | Raises house, easier repairs | Can be costly, requires crawlspace ventilation |
| Deep piles / driven or drilled caissons | Weak near-surface soils, heavy loads | Transfers loads to competent strata | Higher cost, longer schedule |
| Raft / mat foundation | Large loads, variable soils | Spreads load over large area | Requires engineered design, can be expensive |
Match foundation type to geotech recommendations—never guess.
Practical checklist: what to order and when
- Before contract/closing: review site disclosures and perform a site reconnaissance; check zoning, setbacks and utilities (What to look out for when buying a lot: zoning, easements and utilities explained).
- After option/under contract: commission a geotechnical investigation tailored to the proposed footprint and basement depth. Include perc test if septic is required.
- Before construction documents: require a final geotech report with foundation recommendations and construction-level tolerances.
- During construction: demand construction observation/testing (compaction tests, pile verifications) per the geotech engineer’s instructions.
For sloped sites, pair geotech input with slope stability analysis (What to look out for when building a house on a slope: soil, drainage and stability checklist). For rural lots, verify access and service connections alongside soil testing (What to look out for when building a house on rural land: access, ROWs and service connections).
Red flags that should trigger extra investigation
- Visible fill or debris on site (may be contaminated or highly compressible).
- Large, established trees close to the proposed foundation (root systems, moisture drawdown).
- Standing water or very high water table.
- Inconsistent test results between borings — indicates heterogeneous site.
- Nearby wetlands or mapped floodplains (Floodplains, wetlands and setbacks: what to look out for when buying land to build a house).
- Historic mining or industrial use — consider environmental sampling (Land due diligence when building a house: environmental constraints and hidden site costs).
Questions to ask your geotechnical engineer
- How many borings/test locations are recommended for this lot and why?
- What foundation systems do you recommend and why? Include pros/cons and cost implications.
- What is the estimated allowable bearing pressure and expected settlement?
- Is there liquefaction risk or expansive soil potential? What mitigation is recommended?
- What construction-phase testing and observation do you require?
- Are there drainage, groundwater control or soil replacement recommendations?
- How certain are your conclusions; what additional testing could reduce uncertainty?
Next steps and risk mitigation
- Integrate geotech findings into early designs and budgets to avoid redesigns.
- Include geotech-based conditions in contracts with builders: who pays for additional tests or unexpected remediation? See related guidance to avoid surprises (Avoid costly surprises: what to look out for when picking a lot for your house).
- Coordinate with the architect and structural engineer to align foundation design with site constraints and utilities (Site access and utilities primer: what to look out for when building a house).
- For full context, assess neighborhood and regulatory constraints early (How to evaluate neighborhood context: what to look out for when building a house).
Final checklist before you commit
- Obtain a geotechnical report specific to your proposed footprint.
- Confirm foundation options, contingency budgets and construction testing requirements.
- Verify septic perc, utility locations and easements.
- Budget for unexpected remediation (typically 5–15% contingency for soil-related surprises).
- Work with licensed geotechnical and structural engineers and ensure recommendations are included in permit and construction documents.
Good geotechnical practice reduces risk, protects your budget and yields a durable home. Start soil investigations early, insist on clear recommendations from a licensed engineer, and tie geotech requirements into contracts and construction oversight to avoid costly surprises down the road.
For more on evaluating sites and avoiding land-buying pitfalls, see: