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Chattanooga Foundation Repairs
Foundation Warranty Guide in Chattanooga

Guide

Foundation Warranty Guide

A foundation repair warranty is a written guarantee that the repair will hold for a specified period. Most pier-installation warranties run 25 years on both materials and workmanship. Transferable warranties carry to subsequent homeowners with notification (often 30 to 90 days) and a transfer fee ($50 to $300). Common exclusions: acts of God, neglect, post-install modifications, and consequential damage. Confirm transferability and exclusions in writing before signing.

What to Verify in Writing Before Signing

  • Length: 25 years is standard for pier installation. Lifetime is sometimes narrower.
  • Scope: covers materials, workmanship, or both?
  • Transferability: transferable to subsequent owners? Within what window? Fee amount?
  • Performance guarantee: does the warranty guarantee “no further settlement” or only “no installation defect”?
  • Exclusions list: read all listed exclusions, ask about anything ambiguous.
  • Dispute resolution: arbitration clause? Where? Under whose rules?
  • Bond backing: is the warranty backed by a manufacturer bond or an insurance policy? A small installer’s verbal warranty has different durability than a national-brand product warranty.

Common Warranty Exclusions

  • Acts of God: earthquakes, floods, tornadoes, lightning strikes
  • Neglect: failure to maintain proper drainage that caused new settlement
  • Post-installation foundation modifications: added structural loads, new construction, removal of supports
  • Plumbing leaks beneath the foundation that produce new settlement
  • Consequential damage: cracked drywall, damaged flooring, harmed finishes
  • Damage from underground utility work performed by others
  • Foundation issues outside the original repair area

Lifetime vs 25-Year Warranties

“Lifetime” warranties sound longer but often have narrower scope than 25-year warranties. A typical lifetime warranty covers material defects in the pier system as long as the homeowner owns the property. A typical 25-year warranty covers material defects plus workmanship and may include performance guarantees (“no further settlement of the repaired area”). Read both before assuming lifetime is the better deal; sometimes the 25-year offers stronger actual coverage despite the shorter named term.

What Chattanooga Homeowners Should Verify in a Warranty

Standard warranty terms apply nationwide, but a few Chattanooga-specific points are worth checking explicitly before signing.

Hillside-installation warranty scope

Some manufacturers warrant their pier systems differently when installed on slopes above a certain grade. If your Chattanooga home is on a hillside lot (Lookout Mountain, Signal Mountain, Missionary Ridge), ask whether the warranty terms differ from the flat-lot standard. A 25-year warranty that excludes slope-driven movement on grades over 15 percent has substantially different value than one without that exclusion.

Transferability with Tennessee disclosure law

Tennessee sellers must disclose known foundation repair work on the property disclosure form. A transferable warranty makes this disclosure a selling point rather than a buyer concern. Confirm: is the warranty transferable, what is the transfer fee, what is the notification window after sale, who pays the transfer fee at closing (typically the seller). All four matter at resale.

Local-installer continuity

Manufacturer warranties survive the installer going out of business; installer-workmanship warranties do not. Ask whether the contractor’s workmanship warranty is backed by the manufacturer’s bond program (some manufacturers offer this), or whether it depends on the installer’s continued operation. A 25-year installer warranty from a contractor only 2 years in business carries different risk than one from a manufacturer-bonded program.

Questions

Foundation Warranty Guide FAQs

What is a foundation repair warranty?
A foundation repair warranty is a written guarantee that the repair will hold for a specified period. Most pier-installation warranties run 25 years on both materials and workmanship. The warranty typically covers two failure modes: defective installation (the work was performed incorrectly) and defective materials (the pier system itself fails). "Lifetime" warranties exist but usually carry narrower coverage scope than 25-year warranties; read carefully before assuming lifetime is more generous.
Is a foundation warranty transferable to new owners?
Some foundation warranties are transferable to subsequent homeowners and some are not. Transferable warranties typically require notification of the warranty issuer within a specified time after sale (often 30 to 90 days) and may charge a transfer fee of $50 to $300. Transferable warranties are a significant resale-value advantage because they remove a major buyer concern. Non-transferable warranties terminate at sale, leaving the buyer to negotiate from scratch with the original installer.
What is not covered by a foundation warranty?
Common foundation warranty exclusions include damage from acts of God (earthquakes, floods, tornadoes), damage from neglect (homeowner failed to maintain proper drainage that contributed to the new issue), damage from post-installation modifications to the foundation, damage from added structural loads beyond the original design spec, and damage from plumbing leaks or other water sources not addressed by the original repair scope. Most also exclude consequential damage like flooring or drywall.
How do I make a foundation warranty claim?
To make a warranty claim, contact the installer with documentation of the new issue: photos showing the problem, dates of first appearance, copies of the original warranty document, and the original work order. The installer typically responds within 1 to 2 weeks to schedule an inspection. If covered, the repair is performed at no cost to the homeowner. If excluded, written denial with cited exclusion language is provided. Disputes are typically resolved through binding arbitration per the warranty terms.

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