Mudjacking vs. Polyurethane Foam Lifting for Foundations
Two principal technologies dominate the concrete slab and foundation lifting sector in the United States: mudjacking (also called slabjacking or pressure grouting) and polyurethane foam injection. Both methods address settlement and void formation beneath concrete slabs, but they differ substantially in material composition, cure time, weight loading, and long-term performance profile. Understanding how these technologies are classified, regulated, and applied enables property owners, engineers, and contractors to navigate the foundation services landscape with greater precision.
Definition and scope
Mudjacking is a hydraulic lifting process in which a slurry — typically a mixture of water, soil, sand, and Portland cement — is pumped under pressure through drilled holes into the void space beneath a settled concrete slab. The slurry fills the void, displaces the slab upward, and hardens to form a supportive substrate.
Polyurethane foam lifting (also called polyjacking or foam injection) uses a two-component expanding polymer resin injected through smaller-diameter holes. Once the two components mix at the injection point, an exothermic reaction causes the foam to expand — sometimes 20 to 30 times its original volume — filling voids and exerting controlled uplift pressure against the slab.
Both methods are distinguished from full foundation replacement or underpinning by their minimal-excavation profile. They fall within the broader category of geotechnical repair and soil stabilization work, subject to oversight by licensed structural or geotechnical engineers depending on project scope and jurisdiction.
State contractor licensing boards regulate who may perform these services commercially. In California, for example, foundation repair work falls under the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB, License Classification C-61/D-06 and Class A General Engineering). In Florida, similar work is governed by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, which administers the Division of Professions contractor categories.
How it works
Mudjacking — process sequence:
- A contractor drills holes typically 1.5 to 2 inches in diameter through the settled slab at pre-surveyed injection points.
- A pump introduces the slurry mixture under pressures typically ranging from 15 to 50 psi, depending on void depth and slab load.
- The slurry flows laterally under the slab, filling voids and generating hydraulic uplift.
- Crew members monitor slab movement with levels or laser instruments; injection ceases when the target elevation is reached.
- Drilled holes are patched with cement grout. Curing time before foot traffic is typically 24 to 48 hours; vehicular traffic generally requires 3 to 7 days.
Polyurethane foam — process sequence:
- Holes of 5/8-inch diameter (significantly smaller than mudjacking ports) are drilled at measured intervals.
- A two-component polymer resin is injected using a proportioning pump with a static mixing nozzle.
- The foam expands within seconds, filling voids and lifting the slab. Expansion pressure is carefully controlled to avoid over-lifting.
- Technicians can make incremental lifts of as little as 1/4 inch per injection pass to achieve precise elevation control.
- Hole patching and surface finishing follow injection. Foam cures within 15 to 30 minutes, permitting rapid return to service.
The weight differential is operationally significant: mudjacking slurry adds 100 to 150 pounds per cubic foot of fill, while polyurethane foam adds roughly 2 to 4 pounds per cubic foot — a distinction that matters when the underlying soil's bearing capacity is already compromised. For a more complete picture of how these services fit within the broader repair spectrum, the foundation directory purpose and scope outlines how contractors and service categories are organized.
Common scenarios
Residential applications:
- Sunken driveway aprons, garage floors, and sidewalk panels caused by soil erosion or differential settlement
- Interior slab settlement in slab-on-grade construction, including garage slabs and basement floors
- Pool deck lifting where lightweight fill is required to minimize load on surrounding soils
Commercial and municipal applications:
- Warehouse and industrial floor leveling where equipment operation requires flatness tolerances within defined floor flatness (FF) numbers per ACI 117 (American Concrete Institute standard for tolerances in concrete construction)
- Highway and airport pavement panel lifting, where the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Advisory Circulars, including AC 150/5370-10, address pavement maintenance standards at certificated airports
- Bridge approach slab correction to eliminate the "bump at the end of the bridge" settlement pattern
Geotechnical failure contexts:
- Void formation beneath slabs caused by plumbing leaks, soil washout, or organic material decomposition
- Post-flood settlement where saturated subgrades lose bearing capacity — a scenario with specific relevance to FEMA-designated flood zones under 44 CFR Part 60 minimum floodplain management standards
Decision boundaries
The choice between mudjacking and polyurethane foam is not primarily aesthetic — it is structural and site-specific. The following factors drive qualified selection:
When mudjacking is technically appropriate:
- Slab is in stable, well-drained soil and the primary issue is void filling rather than load redistribution
- Budget constraints favor lower material cost (mudjacking material costs are generally 25 to 50% lower than polyurethane foam per linear foot of lift)
- Project timeline permits the 24–48 hour cure window before slab reuse
When polyurethane foam is technically appropriate:
- Soil bearing capacity is compromised; adding 100+ lb/ft³ of slurry mass would exacerbate settlement
- Precision elevation control within 1/4-inch increments is required (common in industrial flooring governed by ACI 360R, Guide to Design of Slabs-on-Ground)
- Access constraints limit hole diameter to less than 1 inch
- Project requires same-day return to service
When neither method is appropriate:
- Foundation structural failure involves cracked or displaced footings rather than slab settlement — this requires underpinning (push piers, helical piers) or full replacement
- Soil conditions involve expansive clay with ongoing volumetric change cycles, where lifting without soil treatment provides only temporary correction
- A licensed structural or geotechnical engineer has identified conditions outside the operational envelope of pressure grouting
Permitting requirements vary by jurisdiction. Slab lifting in many municipalities is classified as repair or maintenance work and may not require a permit for residential applications under a defined dollar threshold. However, commercial projects — particularly those involving slabs adjacent to load-bearing walls or affecting occupied structures — commonly require a building permit and post-work inspection under the International Building Code (IBC), which is adopted with amendments in 49 states. The resource overview for this platform describes how to locate licensed contractors by service type and region.
References
- California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) — License Classifications
- Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation — Contractor Licensing
- American Concrete Institute — ACI 117: Specification for Tolerances for Concrete Construction
- American Concrete Institute — ACI 360R: Guide to Design of Slabs-on-Ground
- FAA Advisory Circular AC 150/5370-10 — Standards for Specifying Construction of Airports
- International Code Council — 2021 International Building Code (IBC)
- eCFR Title 44, Part 60 — Criteria for Land Management and Use (FEMA Floodplain Standards)