Grading is one of the most fundamental excavation tasks—creating or correcting the slope of ground around your property. It's essential for drainage, foundation protection, and usable landscaping. But when should you DIY grading and when should you hire a professional? Understanding the difference saves money, prevents costly mistakes, and protects your property long-term.
Taylor Creek grading services across King County and Pierce County. Here's our guide to DIY vs. professional grading.
What is Grading?
Grading is the reshaping of ground to achieve a specific slope. Proper grading slopes at least 1% away from structures (1 foot drop per 100 feet) for at least 6 feet. This prevents water from pooling against foundations. Grading also creates level building pads, slopes for drainage, and aesthetically pleasing landscapes.
Simple DIY Grading Projects
You Can DIY If:
- The project is small (under 1,000 sq ft)
- You're moving minimal soil (raking and leveling, not excavating)
- There are no utilities or structures nearby
- The existing slope is already fairly reasonable
- You have basic tools (rake, level, shovel)
DIY Examples:
- Fixing a low spot in a yard (adding a few cubic yards of fill)
- Creating a gentle slope for drainage away from a shed
- Leveling a small patio area
- Raking and grading a small garden bed
Cost: Free to $500 for materials (soil, gravel)
When You NEED a Professional
Signs a Professional is Required:
- Grading near a foundation (risk of improper slope causing water damage)
- Large areas (over 2,000 sq ft)
- Significant elevation change needed
- Utilities are present (gas, electric, water lines)
- Complex drainage requirements
- Existing structures or trees at risk
- Permit requirements
- Safety concerns or liability issues
Why DIY Grading Goes Wrong:
- Improper slope: Homeowners often don't achieve proper 1% slope, causing water to pool against foundation or in landscaping.
- Settling issues: Soil compaction is critical. DIY-filled soil settles unevenly, creating new depressions and water problems.
- Utility damage: Without proper locating (811 call), DIY grading risks hitting buried gas, electric, water, or sewer lines—catastrophic and expensive.
- Erosion problems: Improper grading creates erosion channels that worsen over time.
- Property damage: Poor grading can cause neighbor water issues, foundation problems, or liability claims.
Critical: If grading is near your foundation or affects drainage patterns, hire a professional. A $3,000 professional grading job prevents $30,000 in foundation damage. It's not an expense—it's insurance.
Professional Grading Costs
- Small grading project (under 1,500 sq ft): $500-$2,000
- Medium project (1,500-5,000 sq ft): $2,000-$5,000
- Large project (5,000+ sq ft): $5,000-$15,000+
- Site assessment/consultation: Free from Taylor Creek
The Safety Factor
Grading can be physically demanding and injury-prone. Moving large amounts of soil by hand strains the back. Operating grading equipment requires training. One mistake—hitting a utility line—can be dangerous and expensive. Professional graders have insurance, training, and equipment.
Proper Slope Explanation
A proper slope is 1% minimum—meaning 1 foot of elevation drop per 100 feet of distance. For a typical 20-foot length, that's 2.4 inches of slope. Using a level or transit to achieve this consistently is more complex than it sounds. Professionals use lasers and levels to ensure accuracy. DIYers often fall short, creating water problems.
The Bottom Line
DIY grading is fine for small, simple landscaping. But grading near structures, large areas, or where drainage is critical demands professional expertise. The cost of a professional grading job is minimal compared to the cost of foundation damage or liability if something goes wrong.
Call Taylor Creek for a free grading assessment. We'll advise whether you can DIY or recommend professional solutions. Call 425-465-5586.