Concrete Lifting Cost Calculator
Get an instant estimate for mudjacking, polyjacking, and slab leveling. Choose your mode below.
Estimate what your concrete lifting project should cost. Adjust the fields below for a custom low, typical, and high price range.
What changes your price
Raises cost
- Difficult access, tight spaces, stairs, or slopes
- Deep voids and severe settlement
- Load-bearing or structural slabs
- Urban or coastal high-cost markets
- Emergency or rush scheduling
- Extra crack sealing or drainage work
Lowers cost
- Bundling several areas in one visit
- Easy, open, flat access
- Off-season (winter) scheduling
- Larger projects (500+ sq ft) get volume rates
- Rural or low cost of living areas
- Choosing mudjacking over polyjacking
Polyjacking vs mudjacking
Mudjacking costs about $3 to $9 per square foot and is great for budget projects and large, stable areas. Polyjacking (foam) costs about $5 to $25 per square foot, uses dime-sized holes, cures in minutes, resists water, and typically lasts 10 to 15+ years. Polyjacking usually costs 40% to 100% more than mudjacking but often lasts longer.
Want more free tools to grow your contracting business?
Get free calculators, estimate templates, and lead generation tools built for contractors.
Get Free Contractor ToolsEstimates are for educational and planning purposes only and are not a guaranteed quote. Actual concrete lifting costs vary by region, contractor, site conditions, settlement severity, and material prices. Always get a written estimate from a licensed, insured contractor before starting work.
Concrete Lifting: Frequently Asked Questions
Answers for homeowners planning a project and contractors pricing the work.
For Homeowners
Concrete lifting usually costs between $3 and $25 per square foot. The price depends mostly on the method you choose. Mudjacking, which uses a sand and cement slurry, runs about $3 to $9 per square foot. Polyjacking, which uses expanding foam, costs about $5 to $25 per square foot. Your final price also changes with project size, how badly the slab has sunk, and how easy the area is to reach. Small jobs cost more per square foot because of minimum charges. Large, open jobs cost less per square foot because the crew can work faster. For a quick estimate tailored to your project, use the calculator at the top of this page.
Lifting a driveway usually costs between $600 and $7,500, with most homeowners paying somewhere in the middle. A partial driveway repair, where only a few panels have sunk, often runs $600 to $3,500. A full driveway with many sunken sections can cost $1,200 to $7,500. Mudjacking is the cheaper choice, while polyjacking costs more but lasts longer and resists water. The size of your driveway in square feet is the biggest factor. Access matters too, since a crew can work faster on a flat, open driveway than one with tight corners or slopes. Get at least two or three written quotes so you can compare fair pricing in your area.
Mudjacking costs about $3 to $9 per square foot. Polyjacking costs about $5 to $25 per square foot. That means polyjacking usually costs 40% to 100% more than mudjacking. Mudjacking pumps a heavy slurry under the slab through larger holes and works well for big, stable areas on a budget. Polyjacking injects lightweight foam through dime-sized holes, cures in minutes, and resists water erosion. Even though polyjacking costs more up front, it often lasts 10 to 15 years or longer, while mudjacking may last 5 to 10 years. If your soil is poor or the slab carries weight, the extra cost of polyjacking is often worth it for the longer life.
Yes. Almost every contractor sets a minimum job charge. This covers the cost of driving to your home, setting up equipment, and the crew’s time, even for a tiny repair. Most minimums fall between $500 and $700, though some small operations start around $300 and busy urban companies may charge $800 to $1,200 or more. This is why a small sidewalk job can feel expensive per square foot. The fixed cost of showing up does not shrink just because the job is small. To get more value, many homeowners bundle several repairs into one visit. That way the minimum charge is spread across more work.
Leveling a sidewalk usually costs between $300 and $3,200, depending on how many sections need work and the method used. A single sunken slab might only need the minimum job charge of $300 to $700. Several sections in a row will cost more. Mudjacking is the budget option at roughly $300 to $1,800 for a typical sidewalk. Polyjacking with foam runs about $650 to $3,200 but lasts longer and uses smaller holes. Because sidewalks are often small jobs, the minimum charge usually drives the price. If you have other sunken concrete nearby, ask the contractor to handle it all in one trip to get better value for your money.
Yes, in most cases concrete lifting is much cheaper than full replacement, often by 50% to 70%. Replacing concrete means breaking out the old slab, hauling it away, pouring new concrete, and waiting days for it to cure. Lifting simply raises the slab you already have back into place in a few hours. Replacement can cost $10 to $15 or more per square foot, while lifting often costs far less. Lifting also lets you use the area the same day. The main time replacement makes sense is when the concrete is badly cracked, crumbling, or too damaged to save. If the slab is solid but just sunken, lifting is usually the smarter buy.
Lifting a garage floor usually costs between $500 and $6,000. A one-car garage floor often runs $500 to $3,000, while a two-car garage can cost $800 to $6,000. The size of the floor in square feet is the main driver. Polyjacking is popular for garage floors because the foam is strong enough to support vehicle weight and uses small, tidy holes. Mudjacking is cheaper but uses larger holes and adds heavy weight under the slab. If your garage floor has sunk near the door or center, a contractor can inject material to raise it evenly. Always ask whether the price includes filling the holes and any needed crack sealing.
Several things shape your final price. The biggest is square footage, since larger areas need more material and time. The method matters too, with foam polyjacking costing more than mudjacking. How far the slab has sunk affects the amount of material needed to fill voids. Site access plays a role, because tight spaces, stairs, and slopes slow the crew down. Your location changes the price, with urban and coastal areas costing more than rural ones. Minimum job charges raise the price on small projects. Extra work like crack sealing or fixing drainage adds cost. Finally, rush or emergency service usually carries a premium. The calculator above lets you adjust these factors for a custom estimate.
Usually not, but it depends on what caused the problem. Standard homeowner insurance often does not cover concrete settling from normal soil movement, erosion, or age, because these are seen as maintenance issues. However, if the damage came from a covered event, such as a sudden plumbing leak or certain types of water damage, you may have a claim. It is worth reading your policy and calling your agent to ask. Take photos and keep records of the damage and any repair quotes. Even when insurance does not pay, concrete lifting is far cheaper than replacement, so the out-of-pocket cost is often manageable. Never assume coverage without checking your specific policy first.
It depends on the method and your soil. Polyjacking with foam typically lasts 10 to 15 years or longer because the foam is waterproof and does not wash away. Mudjacking usually lasts 5 to 10 years, since the slurry can erode over time if water gets underneath. The real key is what caused the sinking. If the soil keeps shifting or water keeps washing it away, even a good repair can settle again. That is why good contractors look at drainage and soil conditions, not just the slab. Fixing the root cause, like poor drainage, helps your repair last much longer. Ask your contractor what warranty they offer as a sign of confidence.
For many homeowners, yes. Polyjacking costs 40% to 100% more than mudjacking, but it offers real advantages. The foam is lightweight, so it does not add heavy load to already weak soil. It cures in 15 to 60 minutes, so you can use the area almost right away. It uses dime-sized holes instead of larger ones, so repairs look cleaner. Best of all, the foam is waterproof and often lasts 10 to 15 years or more. Mudjacking is still a smart choice for large, stable areas on a tight budget. But if your soil is poor, the slab bears weight, or you want the longest-lasting fix, polyjacking is usually worth the extra money.
The simple rule is this: if the slab is solid but sunken, you can lift it. If it is badly broken, crumbling, or full of deep cracks, you may need to replace it. Lifting works best on concrete that is still in one or a few large, stable pieces. Look for trip hazards, pooling water, or doors that no longer open over a sunken slab. These are signs lifting can help. On the other hand, spider-web cracking, flaking surfaces, or many small broken chunks point toward replacement. A good contractor will tell you honestly which option fits. Since lifting is much cheaper, it is always worth asking if your slab can be saved first.
Ignoring sunken concrete usually makes the problem worse and more expensive. A small dip can grow as soil keeps washing away or settling. Sunken slabs create trip hazards that could injure family or visitors, which may even create liability for you. Water often pools in low spots and can run toward your foundation, causing bigger and costlier damage. Cracks tend to spread, and a slab that could have been lifted cheaply may eventually break apart and need full replacement. Acting early almost always saves money. A repair that costs a few hundred dollars today could turn into a multi-thousand-dollar replacement later. If you notice sinking, it is wise to get an estimate soon.
Most residential concrete lifting jobs take just one to four hours. The crew drills small holes, pumps material underneath to raise the slab, and then patches the holes. Polyjacking is the fastest, since the foam cures in 15 to 60 minutes and you can often use the area the same day. Mudjacking takes a bit longer to set, sometimes 24 to 72 hours before heavy use. Larger or harder-to-reach jobs take more time, but even big projects rarely last more than a day. Compare that to full replacement, which can take several days plus curing time. The speed of lifting is one of its biggest advantages, since it causes very little disruption to your day.
It depends on the method. With polyjacking, the foam cures in about 15 to 60 minutes, so you can usually walk and even drive on the surface the same day, often within an hour. This quick turnaround is a major reason homeowners choose foam. With mudjacking, the slurry needs more time to set, so contractors often suggest waiting 24 to 72 hours before parking a vehicle on it. Light foot traffic may be fine sooner. Always follow the advice your specific contractor gives, since cure times can vary with weather and material. If quick use matters to you, such as for a daily-use driveway, mention that when getting quotes.
There will be small patched holes, but they are usually not very noticeable. Polyjacking uses dime-sized holes about 5/8 inch wide, which the crew fills with a cement patch when finished. Mudjacking uses larger holes around 1.5 to 2 inches, so those patches are a bit more visible. Over time the patches blend in, though they may not match perfectly on colored or stamped concrete. If appearance is very important, such as on a decorative patio, ask your contractor how they handle patching and whether they can color-match. For most driveways and sidewalks, the holes blend in well and are a small trade-off for saving the slab.
It is smart to get at least two or three quotes before hiring. This helps you see the fair price range in your area and avoid overpaying. It also lets you compare more than price. Pay attention to the method each contractor recommends, the warranty they offer, and whether they are licensed and insured. Be careful with quotes that are far lower than the rest, since they may skip important steps or use lower-quality materials. The lowest price is not always the best value. A slightly higher quote with a strong warranty and good reviews often saves money over time. Use the calculator above to get a ballpark figure so you can judge each quote fairly.
Ask a few key questions before signing. Are you licensed and insured? Which method do you recommend for my slab, and why? What warranty do you offer, and what does it cover? Is the price a firm quote or could it change once work begins? Will you fill the holes and seal any cracks? How long until I can use the area? Can you address the drainage or soil issue that caused the sinking? Do you have recent reviews or references I can check? Good contractors will answer clearly and not pressure you. Asking these questions protects you and helps you pick a pro who does quality, lasting work.
Warranties vary, but many reputable contractors offer between 2 and 10 years, and some polyjacking companies offer lifetime or transferable warranties. Foam repairs often come with longer warranties because the material is waterproof and stable. Read the fine print to see what is actually covered. A good warranty should cover further settling of the lifted area under normal conditions. Some warranties do not cover new sinking caused by major soil shifts, floods, or earthquakes. A contractor who stands behind their work with a solid written warranty is usually a safer choice. Always get the warranty in writing rather than as a verbal promise, and keep it with your records.
Concrete lifting can be done in most seasons, but spring and fall are often ideal because the weather is mild and the ground is stable. In cold climates, winter can be harder because frozen ground and freezing temperatures may affect some materials, though polyjacking foam can still work in cooler conditions. Many contractors are also less busy in the off-season, so you might get faster scheduling and even lower prices. Summer is fine but tends to be the busiest time. If your repair is urgent, such as a growing trip hazard or water pooling near your foundation, do not wait for the perfect season. Acting early prevents bigger and costlier damage.
For Contractors
Pricing per square foot is a useful starting point, but it should never be your only tool. Mudjacking often falls around $3 to $9 per square foot, while polyjacking runs $5 to $25. The trick is that small jobs need a higher per-foot rate to cover your fixed costs, while large jobs can drop to lower rates because of volume. Build your number from the ground up: add labor, materials, equipment, overhead, and profit, then divide by square footage to check your effective rate. This keeps you from underbidding. The contractor calculator on this page does this math for you, so you can quote with confidence instead of guessing.
The right markup depends on the profit margin you want to keep. Here is the catch many contractors miss: markup and margin are not the same. A 20% markup only gives you about a 16.6% net margin. To hit a true target margin, divide your total cost by (1 minus the margin). For example, for a 25% margin, divide cost by 0.75. Most healthy contractors aim for a markup that lands them in the 15% to 30% margin range after overhead. Set your markup based on your real costs and local market, not a random number. The calculator above converts your target margin into the correct selling price automatically.
Start by adding up your yearly overhead: rent, insurance, vehicle costs, phones, software, advertising, office help, and anything else that is not tied to one specific job. Then divide that total by the number of jobs you expect to do in a year, or by your total direct costs. Many contractors apply overhead as a percentage of direct costs, often 10% to 30%. For example, if overhead is 15%, you add 15% on top of labor and materials for every job. The key is to never quote a job using only labor and materials. If you skip overhead, you are slowly losing money. Review these numbers every year as your business changes.
Most concrete lifting contractors aim for a net profit margin of 15% to 25% after all costs, including overhead. The old 10-10 rule, 10% overhead and 10% profit, is often too low and leaves money on the table, especially for skilled, specialized work like polyjacking. Remember that profit is what is left after paying for labor, materials, equipment, and overhead. It is not the same as your owner’s wage. Specialized foam work can support higher margins because fewer competitors offer it and the value to the customer is high. Set your margin based on your costs, your market, and the value you deliver. The calculator above lets you set a target margin and builds your price around it.
Your minimum job charge should cover the real cost of showing up, even for the smallest repair. Add your travel time, fuel, setup, crew time, and a fair profit, then round to a clean number. Most contractors land between $500 and $700, while busy urban markets may go $800 to $1,200 or more. The goal is simple: never lose money just to drive to a job. A solid minimum also protects your schedule by filtering out tiny, unprofitable calls. Explain the minimum to customers as a mobilization cost, and encourage them to bundle nearby repairs to get more value. The calculator above applies your minimum automatically and warns you when a job falls below it.
Yes, you should. The two methods have very different costs and value. Polyjacking foam is more expensive per pound, requires costly equipment, and delivers faster cure times and longer life. That justifies a higher price, often 40% to 100% above mudjacking. Mudjacking uses cheaper slurry and simpler gear, so it should be priced lower to stay competitive on budget jobs. Do not charge the same rate for both, or you will either lose poly jobs to overpricing or lose money on mud jobs. Price each method based on its real material, labor, and equipment costs, then add your margin. Use the method selector in the calculator above to model each one separately.
Small jobs are where many contractors quietly lose money. The fix is a firm minimum job charge that covers travel, setup, and crew time, plus profit. Never quote a small sidewalk or step repair on square footage alone, because the per-foot math will not cover your fixed costs. Instead, lead with your minimum. You can also boost value by bundling: offer to handle other sunken areas during the same trip so the customer gets more for the visit. Some contractors batch small jobs in the same neighborhood on one day to cut travel time. Always protect your margin first. The calculator above flags when a job falls below your minimum so you never underprice.
Material waste is real and should be built into every quote. Foam expands and can overshoot the void, and slurry mix is rarely used to the last drop. A safe approach is to add a waste factor of 5% to 15% on top of your estimated material. Deep or irregular voids waste more, so lean toward the higher end when conditions are uncertain. Track your actual material use against your estimates over time so you can fine-tune this number for your crew and equipment. If you skip the waste factor, your real material cost will eat into your profit on every job. The calculator above includes a waste percentage field so it is never forgotten.
The best answer is usually a blend. Use square footage and material estimates to build your true cost, but present the customer with a clear project price, not a confusing per-foot rate. Per-slab pricing can work for simple sidewalk jobs where slabs are a standard size. Project pricing is cleaner for customers and lets you fold in your minimum, access challenges, and add-ons. Behind the scenes, always calculate from cost up: labor, materials, equipment, overhead, and profit. Then check the per-foot rate to make sure it is sane for the job size. This protects your margin while giving the customer a simple number. The calculator above shows both the total quote and the effective per-foot rate.
Hard access slows your crew down, and slower work means higher cost, so your price should reflect that. Tight spaces, stairs, slopes, backyards with no gate access, and long hose runs all add labor time. A common approach is to add a multiplier of 1.2 to 1.5 on top of your base price for difficult sites. Always inspect access before quoting, since a job that looks simple in photos can be a headache in person. Note where you can park, how far you must run lines, and any obstacles. Build the extra time into your labor hours rather than hiding it. Being upfront about access costs helps you protect your margin and avoid surprises on the job.
Crew labor rates for concrete lifting typically range from $45 to $150 per hour, depending on your region and skill level. But the rate you bill must include labor burden, which is the extra 25% to 40% you pay on top of wages for payroll taxes, workers compensation, and benefits. If you pay a worker $55 per hour, your true loaded cost might be $70 or more. Always price from the loaded rate, not the base wage, or your margin will quietly shrink. Multiply the loaded rate by crew size and job hours to get your labor cost. The calculator above asks for your base rate and burden percentage, then computes the loaded labor cost for you.
Most price objections come from a lack of understanding, not a lack of money. Lead with value. Remind the homeowner that lifting costs 50% to 70% less than full replacement and is finished in hours, not days. Explain what they are really paying for: skilled labor, quality material, equipment, a warranty, and a lasting fix. If they compare you to a lowball quote, ask what method and warranty that price includes. Show the long-term cost: a cheap fix that fails in two years costs more than a quality fix that lasts fifteen. Stay calm and confident, never defensive. A clear, itemized estimate helps too, which is why a professional breakdown like the one this calculator produces builds trust.
Walk away when the job cannot meet your minimum charge and the customer will not bundle more work or accept your minimum. If driving across town for a single tiny repair means losing money or skipping a better job, it is not worth it. Before declining, try options: offer your minimum charge clearly, suggest adding nearby repairs, or schedule it on a day you are already working in that area. Sometimes a small job leads to referrals or a larger future project, so weigh that too. But never take a job that drains your time and margin out of guilt. Knowing your true costs makes this call easy. The calculator above shows instantly whether a job clears your minimum.
Commercial jobs follow the same cost-up formula but with bigger factors to weigh. Expect larger square footage, which can lower your per-foot rate through volume, but also stricter requirements. Many commercial sites need work done after hours or on weekends to avoid disrupting business, which adds labor cost. You may face load-bearing slabs, heavier traffic, permits, insurance requirements, and detailed documentation. Build all of these into your estimate, and add a premium for night or rush work. Commercial clients often value reliability and a clear proposal over the lowest price. Always confirm scope in writing and protect yourself with a contingency for hidden voids. The calculator above lets you model large square footage and add-on costs for these jobs.
Yes, bundling discounts are usually a smart move. When a customer lets you fix several areas in one visit, you spread your fixed travel and setup costs across more work, so you can lower the per-area price and still keep a healthy margin. A discount of 10% to 20% on bundled work is common and feels generous to the customer while improving your day’s total profit. Bundling also reduces the number of trips you make, saving fuel and time. Just make sure the bundled price still clears your true costs and minimum. Use bundling as a selling tool: when a homeowner hesitates on price, offer to handle nearby sunken areas at a better combined rate.
Good phone qualifying saves you wasted trips. Ask a few quick questions: What area is sinking, and roughly how many square feet? How far has it dropped? Is it a driveway, sidewalk, garage, or patio? Is the slab cracked or still solid? When are they hoping to have it done? Asking about budget gently, or sharing your typical minimum, filters out price shoppers early. Listen for urgency and whether they are the decision maker. If the job sounds too small for a special trip, suggest bundling or your minimum charge upfront. Sending a quick ballpark range, or pointing them to an online calculator, helps set expectations before you ever drive out for an inspection.
A thorough inspection protects your quote. Measure the area and note how far the slab has settled. Check the soil and look for the cause: poor drainage, washed-out base, plumbing leaks, or tree roots. Probe for voids and estimate how much material you will need. Look at access for your equipment and hoses. Ask the homeowner how long it has been sinking and whether it is getting worse. Check for cracks that may need sealing and any drainage issues to address, since these are add-ons. Confirm whether the slab is solid enough to lift or too damaged. Documenting all of this lets you quote accurately and avoid surprises that eat your margin once work begins.
Speed and clarity win jobs. Provide a clean, professional estimate quickly, ideally on the spot or same day, since the first solid quote often wins. Make the document easy to understand, with the scope, method, warranty, and price clearly listed. Explain the value, not just the number, and show how lifting beats replacement. Offer simple next steps and an easy way to say yes, such as a digital signature or deposit. Follow up politely if you do not hear back within a few days. Confidence matters: if you believe in your price, the customer is more likely to as well. A tidy breakdown, like the one this calculator produces, makes your quote look trustworthy and professional.
Closing rates vary, but many concrete lifting contractors aim to close 30% to 50% of qualified estimates. If you are closing far below that, your pricing, follow-up, or lead quality may need work. If you are closing nearly every job, you might be priced too low and leaving profit behind. Track your numbers: how many estimates you give, how many turn into jobs, and at what price. Better phone qualifying raises your rate by filtering out tire-kickers before you drive out. Fast, clear, professional quotes also lift your close rate. Do not chase a 100% close rate. A healthy mix of strong margins and a solid close rate beats winning every low-priced job.
Do not race to the bottom. You rarely win by being the cheapest, and it destroys your margin. Instead, compete on value. Explain what your price includes that the lowball quote may not: proper method, quality material, a real warranty, licensing, insurance, and a crew that does lasting work. Point out that a cheap repair that fails in a year or two costs more than doing it right once. Show professionalism with a clear estimate and good communication. Many customers will pay a bit more for trust and peace of mind. Target homeowners who value quality, not just the lowest number. If a customer only cares about price, it may not be your job to win.
Free estimates are standard in this industry and usually expected by homeowners. They help you win trust and get in front of customers. The key is to protect your time. Use phone qualifying first so you only drive out for real, well-matched leads. For far-away or tiny jobs, consider offering a ballpark range by phone or pointing people to an online calculator before committing to a site visit. Some contractors charge a small inspection fee for complex jobs and credit it toward the work if hired. For most residential lifting, though, a free, fast, professional estimate is your best sales tool. Just make every visit count by qualifying leads before you go.
Focus on long-term value, not just the higher sticker price. Explain that polyjacking foam is waterproof, so it will not wash away like mudjacking slurry can. It cures in minutes, so they can use their driveway the same day. It uses dime-sized holes, so the repair looks cleaner. And it often lasts 10 to 15 years or more, compared to 5 to 10 for mudjacking. Frame it as cost per year of service, not cost today. A repair that lasts twice as long is often the better deal even at a higher price. Offer both options so the customer feels in control, then let the longer warranty and lifespan make the case for foam.
Contractors use a range of tools, from simple spreadsheets to full job-management software like Jobber, Knowify, or EstimateRocket. These platforms help you build estimates, track costs, send invoices, and manage scheduling. Foam suppliers also offer material calculators that estimate how much product a job needs. The right tool depends on your size. A solo operator may do fine with a clean spreadsheet and a reliable pricing formula, while a growing crew benefits from software that keeps quotes consistent across estimators. The most important thing is to price from a real cost-up formula every time, not gut feel. A free tool like the calculator on this page gives you fast, consistent ballpark numbers to start from.
Tracking starts with comparing your estimated costs to your actual costs on every job. Record the labor hours, material used, equipment time, and any extras for each project, then check them against your quote. This shows you which jobs make money and which lose it. Over time you will spot patterns, like underestimating material waste or labor on tight-access jobs, and you can fix your pricing. Use simple software or even a spreadsheet, as long as you do it consistently. Watch your gross margin per job and your overall net profit. If your estimates and actuals drift apart, adjust your defaults. Good tracking turns guesswork into a reliable pricing system that protects your margin.
For polyjacking, the core equipment includes a proportioner or pump, an air compressor, hoses, injection guns, and the polyurethane foam itself. You will also need a work truck, van, or trailer to carry it all. A full polyjacking rig can run from about $25,000 for the injection gear up to $118,000 or more for a complete setup with a vehicle. Mudjacking requires a slurry pump and mixing equipment, which is generally cheaper to start. You will also need drills, patching materials, safety gear, and basic hand tools. Plan for operating capital of $30,000 to $50,000 to cover early overhead. Starting lean with reliable core equipment, then upgrading as jobs grow, is a smart approach.
Starting a polyjacking business is a real investment. A complete rig setup, including injection equipment and a work vehicle, often runs from $118,000 to $250,000 or more. The injection gear alone, such as a proportioner and compressor, can cost $25,000 to $100,000, while a truck and trailer add $54,000 to $76,000. On top of equipment, plan for $30,000 to $50,000 in operating capital to cover overhead before steady income arrives. You will also want a marketing budget, often around 5% of revenue, to generate leads. Many owners start with financed equipment or a lighter setup and scale up. The high entry cost is also good news: it limits competition, which supports stronger pricing once you are running.
Use a mix of channels so you are not relying on one source. A strong local website that ranks in search, paired with Google Business Profile reviews, brings in steady organic leads. Helpful tools like an online cost calculator keep visitors engaged and capture interest. Local service ads and targeted Google Ads can work, though cost per lead can be high. Referrals from happy customers and partnerships with realtors, home inspectors, and plumbers are gold. Door hangers and yard signs near completed jobs build neighborhood awareness. Shared lead platforms exist but often sell the same lead to several contractors, which lowers quality. Owning your own lead sources, like your website and reviews, gives you the best long-term value.
The best online leads usually come from sources you own, not ones you rent. Build a fast, mobile-friendly website with clear service pages, real photos, and strong calls to action. Rank for local searches like your city plus concrete leveling by publishing helpful content and earning reviews on Google. Interactive tools, like a cost calculator, keep visitors on the page longer and turn curiosity into contact. Google Business Profile and local service ads put you in front of nearby buyers. Avoid leaning only on shared lead platforms, since those leads go to several contractors at once and start a price war. Owning your traffic means lower cost per lead and higher quality over time.
A converting website is fast, mobile-friendly, and makes it easy to take action. Lead with what you do and the areas you serve. Use clear before-and-after photos, real reviews, and trust signals like licensing and warranty. Make your phone number and a contact form easy to find on every page. Add interactive tools, such as a cost calculator, to engage visitors and capture leads who are not ready to call yet. Write simple, helpful content that answers common questions and ranks in search. Keep forms short and your calls to action obvious. Avoid clutter and slow-loading pages. The goal is to turn a curious visitor into a booked estimate with as little friction as possible.
Yes. A cost calculator is one of the best tools you can add. It keeps visitors on your page longer, answers their first question, and builds trust by being upfront about pricing. Many homeowners leave a site because they cannot get a ballpark number without filling out a form. A calculator solves that and warms the lead before they ever call. It also positions you as transparent and professional, which sets you apart from brochure-style competitor sites. You can place a call to action right after the result to capture the lead while interest is high. Free, embeddable calculators like the one on this page make it easy to add this powerful feature to your own site.
Build your own concrete lifting calculator and lead tools
Get free, ready-to-use contractor tools that turn website visitors into booked jobs.
Get Free Contractor Tools