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50+ years of expertise. 20,000+ customers served. Proven national system.
Foamjection helps homeowners across Colorado fix sinking concrete without tearing it out or overpaying for replacement. Whether you’re dealing with uneven sidewalks, settled driveways, sunken patios, or interior concrete floors, our proven polyurethane concrete lifting process delivers fast, clean, long-lasting results.
As the nationwide leader in polyurethane concrete lifting—powered by HMI, Foamjection helps Colorado homeowners with certified local professionals who use high-density foam injection to lift, level, and stabilize concrete the right way.
Colorado’s climate and soil conditions make concrete settlement a common issue throughout the state—from urban areas to rural communities.
Common causes include:
Left untreated, sinking concrete often worsens over time—creating trip hazards, drainage problems, and costly repairs.
Foamjection helps repair and stabilize a wide range of concrete surfaces across Colorado, including:
If your concrete is uneven, sunken, or creating a safety concern, our process offers a reliable concrete repair solution without replacement.
Foamjection uses advanced polyurethane foam injection to lift and stabilize settled concrete with precision.
This process—often referred to as polyjacking or slab lifting—allows certified professionals to:
Most surfaces are ready to use again almost immediately.
Concrete lifting and leveling services available in the cities listed below.
Colorado concrete settlement often looks different than it does in wetter southern states or flat Midwest areas. Many properties along the Front Range deal with a mix of expansive clay soil, dry weather, sudden storms, snowmelt, freeze-thaw cycles, and sloped drainage. Over time, these conditions can weaken the support below driveways, sidewalks, patios, garage floors, porch slabs, and commercial concrete surfaces.
Foamjection serves Colorado homeowners and property owners in fast-growing metro areas, established neighborhoods, foothill communities, and mountain-adjacent towns where concrete movement can create trip hazards, drainage problems, and uneven slabs.
Along the Denver metro area, homeowners in Denver, Aurora, Lakewood, Arvada, Westminster, Thornton, and Centennial often see settlement around driveway approaches, garage aprons, sidewalks, front steps, and patios. These areas can be affected by soil expansion, poor drainage, irrigation runoff, and seasonal temperature swings.
South of Denver, communities like Castle Rock, Castle Pines, Highlands Ranch, Littleton, Lone Tree, and Parker often deal with concrete movement near newer homes, sloped lots, walkout basements, patios, driveways, and sidewalks. When water moves across or below a slab, it can leave voids that cause the concrete to drop or tilt.
In northern and central Colorado, Foamjection also supports areas like Boulder, Longmont, Fort Collins, Loveland, and Greeley. Concrete settlement in these areas can show up around sidewalks, garage floors, pool decks, entryways, commercial slabs, and exterior walkways.
Foamjection also helps property owners in southern Colorado communities like Colorado Springs, Monument, Elizabeth, and Franktown, where elevation changes, drainage patterns, soil movement, and freeze-thaw cycles can all play a role in sinking concrete.
Concrete settlement in Colorado often starts in the places where water, weight, and soil movement come together. A driveway may dip near the garage. A sidewalk panel may rise on one edge and sink on the other. Patio concrete may start sloping toward the house. Front steps may pull away from the porch. Garage floors may develop hollow spots or low areas where the soil below the slab has shifted.
These issues are especially common around garage aprons, driveway approaches, front walkways, entry steps, patios, pool decks, basement walkout areas, and concrete next to foundations. In some Colorado neighborhoods, irrigation overspray and poor downspout drainage can make the problem worse by sending water below the slab.
Small concrete movement may not seem urgent at first. But once water starts entering a gap, it can wash out more soil and leave a larger empty space below the slab. That is when a small low spot can turn into a bigger trip hazard, drainage issue, or concrete repair problem.
If the slab is still in usable condition, polyurethane concrete lifting can often raise and stabilize the existing concrete without removing it. Foamjection’s process is designed to fill voids below the slab, lift the settled area, and help restore support where the concrete has lost its base.
Sinking concrete usually gets worse when water keeps reaching the weak area below the slab. A small gap near a driveway, sidewalk, patio, porch, or step can allow more water to wash soil away. Once that support is gone, the slab may continue to move.
It may be time to request an estimate if you notice uneven edges, widening gaps, pooling water, hollow sounds under the slab, cracks near a low spot, or concrete pulling away from the home, garage, porch, or steps.
Fixing the problem early can help reduce trip hazards, improve drainage, protect the existing concrete, and avoid the cost of full replacement when replacement is not needed. For many Arkansas homeowners, polyurethane concrete lifting is a fast, clean, and practical way to repair settled concrete before the problem spreads.
Foamjection helps with more than residential concrete lifting. Uneven concrete can also create problems for businesses, churches, schools, rental properties, warehouses, offices, restaurants, municipal buildings, and managed properties across Arkansas.
For homeowners, the most common concerns are safety, curb appeal, water drainage, and protecting the value of the property. For commercial and public properties, uneven concrete can also create liability concerns, access issues, and a poor first impression for customers, tenants, visitors, and employees.
Common Arkansas concrete lifting projects include driveway lifting, sidewalk leveling, patio lifting, porch leveling, step lifting, garage floor lifting, pool deck lifting, interior slab lifting, commercial walkway repair, and void filling below concrete slabs.
The advantage of foam injection is that it helps repair the support problem under the slab without major demolition. Instead of removing the concrete and starting over, high-density polyurethane foam is injected below the surface to fill empty spaces, lift the slab, and help stabilize the area underneath.
Concrete replacement can be expensive, messy, and time-consuming. It may still be needed when the slab is badly broken, crumbling, or structurally damaged. But when the concrete is still in usable condition, lifting the existing slab can often save time, reduce disruption, and restore function faster.
Foamjection’s concrete lifting process is designed for property owners who want a cleaner alternative to replacement. Small holes are drilled into the slab, polyurethane foam is injected below the concrete, and the foam expands to fill voids and raise the settled area. Once the lift is complete, the holes are patched and the area is cleaned up.
For many Arkansas properties, this means less mess, less downtime, and a strong repair that helps address the problem below the concrete — not just the surface appearance.



Foamjection is not a franchise and not a lead reseller.
Our concrete lifting professionals across Colorado meet strict national standards for:
Homeowners across Colorado choose Foamjection because they want results without disruption.
✔ 50+ years of industry expertise
✔ 20,000+ customers served nationwide
✔ Certified local professionals
✔ Clean, controlled lifting process
✔ Save up to 70% compared to replacement
✔ Environmentally responsible materials
It’s a smarter way to fix concrete—and a better long-term investment.
Concrete often sinks in Colorado because the soil under the slab changes with moisture, temperature, and drainage. Expansive clay soil, dry weather, snowmelt, poor compaction, and erosion can all weaken the support under driveways, sidewalks, patios, garage floors, pool decks, and steps.
Once empty spaces form under the concrete, the slab can settle, crack, tilt, or create a trip hazard. Polyurethane concrete lifting helps fill those voids and stabilize the slab without tearing out the existing concrete.
Yes. Many parts of Colorado have expansive clay soil that can swell when wet and shrink when dry. This movement can put stress on concrete slabs and cause them to sink, lift, crack, or become uneven over time.
This is one reason concrete lifting is common around Colorado homes, especially on driveways, sidewalks, walkways, patios, porches, and garage floors.
Yes. Colorado weather can bring snow, ice, sunny days, and quick temperature swings. When water gets under or around concrete and then freezes, it can expand and put pressure on the slab. When it thaws, the soil can soften or wash out.
Over time, this freeze-thaw movement can leave the slab without steady support. Polyurethane foam can help fill voids and lift settled concrete back toward a safer position.
Yes. Snowmelt, runoff, and poor drainage can wash soil out from under concrete. When that happens, driveways, sidewalks, patios, steps, and garage floors may start to sink or slope toward the wrong area.
Polyurethane foam expands under the slab, fills open spaces, and helps support the concrete. For the best long-term result, drainage issues should also be corrected so water does not keep washing soil away.
Yes. Sinking driveways are a common problem in Colorado, especially near garage entrances, control joints, sidewalks, and street edges. If the concrete is still in usable condition, polyurethane foam may be able to lift and stabilize the slab.
This can help reduce trip hazards, improve curb appeal, and help water drain away from the home instead of pooling near the driveway.
Yes. Uneven sidewalks and walkways can often be lifted with polyurethane foam. This is helpful when one section has dropped and created a raised edge, water pooling issue, or safety concern.
Sidewalk lifting is a clean, fast option for homeowners who want to improve safety without replacing long sections of concrete.
In many cases, yes. If the concrete is still mostly intact but has settled, lifting is usually faster, cleaner, and more affordable than full replacement.
Replacement may still be needed if the slab is badly cracked, crumbling, or broken into many pieces. But if the main issue is sinking or uneven concrete, polyurethane lifting can often save the existing slab and avoid the mess of tear-out.
Most Colorado concrete lifting projects can be completed in just a few hours, depending on the size of the area and how much the slab has settled.
Many surfaces can be used again the same day, which makes this a convenient option for driveways, sidewalks, patios, porches, steps, pool decks, and garage floors.
Mudjacking uses a heavier cement-based slurry to raise concrete. Polyurethane concrete lifting uses lightweight expanding foam that fills voids, lifts the slab, and adds support without adding as much weight to the soil underneath.
Polyurethane foam also uses smaller injection holes and is often a cleaner, more controlled option for residential concrete lifting.
Yes. Polyurethane foam is made to stay stable under concrete and resist water once it cures. That makes it a strong option for concrete affected by snowmelt, runoff, soil movement, and freeze-thaw conditions.
Like any concrete repair, long-term results are better when water is kept away from the slab. Proper drainage, downspout extensions, and good grading can help protect the repair.
Your concrete may be a good candidate for lifting if the slab is mostly intact but has sunk, tilted, separated, or created a trip hazard. Common examples include sinking driveway panels, uneven sidewalks, dropped patios, leaning steps, settled pool decks, and garage floors that have voids underneath.
The easiest way to know is to request a quote. A concrete lifting specialist can review the slab, check the surrounding soil and drainage, and let you know if lifting makes sense or if replacement would be the better option.
Quote timing depends on your location and the details of the project, but the process is usually simple. In many cases, photos of the settled concrete can help the team understand the problem and recommend the next step.
If your driveway, sidewalk, patio, steps, porch, garage floor, or pool deck has started to sink, it is better to get it looked at before the problem gets worse or creates a bigger safety concern.
If you’re dealing with sinking or uneven concrete anywhere in Colorado, replacement isn’t your only option.
Our trusted local experts use advanced polyurethane concrete lifting to restore and stabilize concrete faster, cleaner, and for less.
Foamjection is the nationwide leader in polyurethane concrete lifting—powered by HMI. Backed by 50+ years of expertise, 20,000+ customers served, and a proven national system, we help homeowners across the U.S. fix sinking concrete using advanced foam injection for long-term stabilization. From uneven walkways and driveways to patios and garage floors, our process delivers reliable concrete repair while helping homeowners save up to 70% compared to replacement.
Looking for a fast, affordable alternative to tearing out concrete?