Is rainwater coming into your basement? This can be a real nuisance, not to mention the damages it causes. Installing a drainage system around the foundation of your house will help. Here are a few steps to prevent rainwater coming into your basement:

Steps

  1. 1
    Dig a trench around the perimeter of the foundation. The trench will need to be dug down to the footers of the foundation and be about 4' wide. You will also need to dig a trench away from the foundation to either a percolation trench, dry well or to daylight if the slope of the land allows. (Percolation trench is also called an infiltration trench similar to the trench you have around the foundation. You will then add perforated pipe at the percolation trench. This is the best way to manage the run off. A dry well is either a pit filled with crushed stone or a structural camber. The easiest way is running it to daylight if the building site has a steep enough slope).[1]
  2. 2
    Lay the filter fabric. Along the bottom of the trench, you will unroll the filter fabric, lapping the filter fabric up the sidewalls of the foundation. Smooth the remaining fabric away from the foundation.[2]
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  3. 3
    Layer crushed stone and pipe. Cover the filter fabric with a 3-4” layer of crushed stone. Now, install the 4” perforated pipe around the whole perimeter of the foundation. Perforated pipe can be installed on level ground. Use a solid 4” PVC tee to connect the ends of the perforated pipe. You will now connect the solid 4”PVC pipe to the tee, which will leads to a percolation trench, dry well or to daylight. Cover the pipe with crushed stone, 8-10” above the footing of the foundation. Then, pull the excess filter fabric over the crushed stone, making sure it laps against the foundation. It is important that the fabric completely cover the crushed stone, this will prevent the soil clogging the pipe.[3]
  4. 4
    Cover with gravel. Fill with a minimum of 6” of gravel or coarse sand is recommended to prevent soil getting under the fabric and clogging the drainage system. Now back fill the trenches. The soil should slop away from the foundation.[4]
  5. 5
    Landscape.[5] You have your drainage system almost completed. Lay a layer of filter fabric over the soil. Plant your favorite shrubs and cover filter fabric with bark mulch or pea stone. Not only will you have a dry basement, you will have lovely landscaping.[6]
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Community Q&A

  • Question
    Which way should the holes be facing on the pipe?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    They should be facing down. If the holes face up, then silt will eventually fill the pipe. Also, with the holes down, the drainage from the pipe begins at the lowest level (bottom) of the pipe instead of at the top of the pipe; a 4" difference in water removal depth.
  • Question
    If holes are on the bottom of the pipe, what keeps the water in?
    Andrew Trenholm
    Andrew Trenholm
    Community Answer
    The holes are on the bottom left and right (do not set a line of holes straight down). Between the holes is just enough gutter (usually about 1" inch high) that works just perfectly for sending water down the pipe.
  • Question
    It seems like removing the soil from the side of my foundation would upset the structural integrity. How deep should I dig below the level of the foundation?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Your pipe needs to be 3 inches below the foundation's footer. Nothing to worry about; most of the house was built on the foundation before the dirt was put against the foundation.
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Warnings

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Things You'll Need

  • 6' filter fabric
  • 4” perforated pipe
  • solid 4” PVC pipe
  • sold 4” PVC tee
  • gravel
  • crushed stone
  • Optional
  • shrubs
  • pea stone or bark mulch

About This Article

wikiHow is a “wiki,” similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, volunteer authors worked to edit and improve it over time. This article has been viewed 184,206 times.
118 votes - 82%
Co-authors: 6
Updated: May 6, 2021
Views: 184,206
Categories: Drains
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