Foundation Repair in Hill Country Village, TX
We stabilise Hill Country Village's older homes on transition ground where clay meets limestone, with pier layouts and moisture plans built around large oak-shaded lots.

New Braunfels Foundation Repair HQ has spent more than 18 years repairing foundations across the New Braunfels and north San Antonio area, including the quiet, heavily wooded city of Hill Country Village. This small Bexar County enclave sits along US 281 just north of Loop 410, about 30 miles southwest of our New Braunfels base, and its housing stock is unlike almost anywhere else we work: custom homes from the 1950s through the 1980s set on large lots, many an acre or more, under a canopy of mature live oaks. Those big wooded lots are exactly why the city incorporated in the 1950s, and they are also why foundations here move in their own particular way.
Foundation repair services in Hill Country Village
Every repair we bring to Hill Country Village, each with its own page.
Common Foundation Problems in Hill Country Village
Hill Country Village sits in far north Bexar County at roughly 940 feet, right where the flatter clay soils of the San Antonio basin give way to the limestone rise of the Texas Hill Country. That transition runs through the city itself, so two neighbours a few hundred yards apart can have very different ground under their slabs. Lots on the lower, southern side tend to carry deeper expansive clay that swells after rain and shrinks hard in a Central Texas drought. Lots on the higher ground to the north often have thinner soil over chalky limestone, where a foundation can bear partly on rock and partly on soil that compresses. Either condition moves a foundation; a lot that straddles both moves unevenly, which is the worst case for a long slab.
The city's signature oak canopy adds a second force. A mature live oak can pull hundreds of gallons of water out of the soil in a hot week, and on these large lots many homes have several big trees standing within reach of the foundation. In a dry summer the clay near those root zones dries and shrinks faster than the soil elsewhere, so the slab edge closest to the trees settles first. We see this pattern constantly in Hill Country Village: a home that stood level for decades starts cracking after a two-year drought because the oaks that shade it are also drying the ground beneath it.
Age matters too. Much of the housing here was built between the 1950s and the 1980s, before modern post-tension slab design was standard, and those original foundations have now been through many wet-and-dry cycles. Runoff draining toward the upper Salado Creek watershed can pond on flat wooded ground during heavy storms, soaking one side of a foundation while the shaded, root-filled side stays dry. That moisture imbalance, not any single event, is what cracks most slabs in this city.
Signs a Hill Country Village home needs foundation repair
Our foundation repair process
Foundation repair cost in Hill Country Village
Foundation repair in Hill Country Village, before and after

Nearby areas we serve
Our crews work throughout the US 281 corridor in north Bexar County. We serve neighbouring Hollywood Park directly across the city line, along with Castle Hills a few miles south and Shavano Park to the west, then back n