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50+ years of expertise. 20,000+ customers served. Proven national system.
Foamjection helps homeowners across Kentucky 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 Kentucky homeowners with certified local professionals who use high-density foam injection to lift, level, and stabilize concrete the right way.
Kentucky’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 Kentucky, 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.
Kentucky concrete settlement is often tied to clay-heavy soil, freeze-thaw cycles, heavy rain, poor drainage, erosion, and changing ground moisture below the slab. In many parts of the state, concrete also has to deal with rolling terrain, older homes, rural properties, river-area moisture, and soil that can soften, shrink, expand, or wash out over time.
Foamjection serves Kentucky homeowners and property owners in Northern Kentucky suburbs, Ohio River communities, Western Kentucky towns, rural neighborhoods, and commercial areas where sinking concrete can create trip hazards, drainage problems, uneven slabs, and unsafe walking surfaces.
In Northern Kentucky, homeowners in Covington, Newport, Bellevue, Dayton, Fort Thomas, Fort Mitchell, Fort Wright, Edgewood, Erlanger, and Florence often deal with driveway settlement, sidewalk trip hazards, front step movement, patio sinking, and garage floor issues. These problems are often tied to hillside drainage, older concrete, freeze-thaw movement, and water reaching weak soil below the slab.
In Western Kentucky, communities like Paducah, Owensboro, Henderson, Hopkinsville, Madisonville, Princeton, and Benton may see settlement around sidewalks, garage aprons, patios, porches, pool decks, and exterior slabs. Heavy rain, soft soil, drainage issues, and voids below the concrete can all cause slabs to drop or tilt.
Foamjection also supports smaller Kentucky communities like Beaver Dam, Hartford, Greenville, Central City, Dixon, Providence, Marion, and Eddyville. In these areas, settled concrete can affect homes, farms, churches, schools, rental properties, businesses, and managed properties.
Concrete settlement in Kentucky often starts near areas where water collects, moves downhill, or reaches the soil below the slab. A driveway may drop near the garage. A sidewalk panel may become uneven after winter. A patio may begin holding water. Front steps may pull away from the porch. A garage floor may sound hollow or show a low area where the soil below the slab has shifted.
These signs are common around garage aprons, driveway approaches, front walkways, porch slabs, patios, sidewalks, entry steps, pool decks, and concrete near downspouts. On sloped lots or properties near drainage paths, water can move under the concrete and slowly wash away the support below the slab.
Some Kentucky homeowners first notice the issue as a trip hazard. Others notice widening gaps, pooling water, cracked corners, or concrete that no longer lines up with the slab beside it. Once the base below the concrete weakens, the slab may continue to move if the empty space underneath is not filled and stabilized.
If the concrete is still in usable condition, polyurethane concrete lifting can often raise and stabilize the existing slab without removing it. Foamjection’s foam injection process is designed to fill voids below the slab, lift the settled area, and help restore support underneath.
Kentucky weather can make small concrete problems worse over time. Winter freezing, spring rain, heavy storms, humid summers, and changing soil moisture can all affect the ground below a slab. When concrete has already started to sink, these seasonal changes can cause more movement if the weak area below the slab is not repaired.
It may be time to request an estimate if you notice a driveway lip near the garage, uneven sidewalk panels, widening gaps, water pooling near a patio, porch steps pulling away, cracks near a low spot, hollow sounds under concrete, or garage floor areas that no longer feel properly supported.
Fixing settled concrete early can help reduce trip hazards, improve drainage, protect the existing slab, and avoid full replacement when the concrete is still a good candidate for lifting. For many Kentucky homeowners, foam injection is a clean and practical way to repair sinking concrete before the problem spreads.
Foamjection helps with residential, commercial, rural, and property management concrete lifting projects throughout Kentucky. Homeowners often call for driveway lifting, sidewalk leveling, patio repair, porch leveling, garage floor lifting, pool deck lifting, and concrete step repair.
Businesses, churches, schools, rental properties, warehouses, offices, restaurants, farm shops, municipal properties, and managed buildings may also need concrete lifting when sidewalks, entryways, walkways, loading areas, shop floors, parking areas, or exterior slabs become uneven.
Common Kentucky concrete lifting projects include:
Concrete replacement can be expensive, messy, and slow. It may still be needed when the slab is badly broken, crumbling, or structurally damaged. But when the concrete is still solid, lifting the existing slab can often solve the problem with less downtime.
Foamjection uses high-density polyurethane foam to lift and stabilize settled concrete. Small holes are drilled through the slab, foam is injected below the surface, and the material expands to fill empty spaces and raise the concrete. Once the lift is complete, the holes are patched and the work area is cleaned up.
For Kentucky properties, this process is especially useful when settlement is caused by freeze-thaw movement, clay soil, storm runoff, poor drainage, erosion, hillside washout, or voids below the slab. Instead of removing usable concrete, foam injection helps restore support underneath it.
Many surfaces can be used again quickly, which makes polyurethane concrete lifting a practical option for homes, businesses, sidewalks, patios, driveways, garage floors, shop floors, and high-traffic areas where downtime matters.
If your concrete is sinking, uneven, cracked, or creating a trip hazard, Foamjection can help. Use the Kentucky city links on this page to find concrete lifting service near you, or request a free, no-pressure estimate today.
From Covington, Florence, and Independence to Paducah, Owensboro, Hopkinsville, Madisonville, and communities across the state, Foamjection helps Kentucky property owners fix sinking concrete without replacement when the slab is a good candidate for lifting.



Foamjection is not a franchise and not a lead reseller.
Our concrete lifting professionals across Kentucky meet strict national standards for:
Homeowners across Kentucky 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 Kentucky because the soil under the slab changes over time. Heavy rain, poor drainage, clay soil, erosion, and weak fill dirt can all create empty spaces under driveways, sidewalks, patios, porches, garage floors, and pool decks.
Once the soil loses support, the concrete above it can settle, crack, tilt, or create a trip hazard. Polyurethane concrete lifting helps fill the voids under the slab and raise the concrete without tearing it out.
Yes. Many areas of Kentucky have clay-heavy soil that can expand when wet and shrink when dry. This soil movement can weaken the support under concrete and cause slabs to sink or become uneven.
This is common around driveways, walkways, sidewalks, patios, steps, and garage floors. If the slab is still in good condition, concrete lifting may be a better option than replacement.
Yes. Heavy rain, poor grading, clogged gutters, short downspouts, and water pooling near concrete can wash out the soil under the slab. Over time, this can leave hollow spaces under the concrete.
Polyurethane foam can fill those empty spaces and help stabilize the slab. For the best long-term result, the drainage problem should also be corrected so water does not keep washing soil away.
Yes. Sinking driveways are one of the most common concrete lifting problems in Kentucky. Driveway slabs often settle near the garage, street, sidewalk, or control joints because of weak soil, erosion, or poor compaction.
Polyurethane concrete lifting can raise the settled section, reduce trip hazards, improve curb appeal, and help water drain away from the home.
Yes. Uneven sidewalks and walkways can often be lifted with polyurethane foam. This is helpful when one concrete panel has dropped and created a raised edge that people can trip over.
Sidewalk lifting is usually faster and less messy than replacing long sections of concrete. It can also help improve safety around homes, businesses, churches, schools, and rental properties.
Yes. Patios and porches can settle when the soil under them washes out, shrinks, or was not compacted well during construction. This can cause gaps, cracks, water pooling, or uneven walking areas.
If the concrete is not badly broken, polyurethane foam may be able to lift and support the slab. This can make the area safer and more usable without the cost and disruption of full replacement.
In many cases, yes. Concrete lifting is often more affordable than removing and replacing the slab because it uses the existing concrete instead of tearing it out.
Replacement may still be needed if the concrete is badly cracked, crumbling, or too damaged to lift. But if the main problem is sinking or uneven concrete, lifting can often save time, money, and mess.
Most concrete lifting projects can be completed in just a few hours, depending on the size of the slab and how much it has settled.
Many surfaces can be used again the same day. That makes polyurethane concrete lifting a convenient option for driveways, sidewalks, patios, steps, porches, garage floors, and other high-use areas.
Mudjacking uses a heavier cement-based material to raise settled concrete. Polyurethane concrete lifting uses lightweight expanding foam that fills voids, lifts the slab, and adds support under the concrete.
Polyurethane foam also uses smaller injection holes and adds less weight to the soil below the slab. This can make it a cleaner and more controlled option for many residential and commercial concrete lifting projects.
Yes. Polyurethane foam is made to stay stable under concrete after it cures. It is also resistant to water, which makes it a strong option for slabs affected by rain, moisture changes, and soil movement.
Long-term results are best when water is managed properly around the slab. Fixing drainage issues, extending downspouts, and keeping water from pooling near concrete 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 signs include dropped driveway panels, uneven sidewalks, leaning steps, sunken patios, and garage floors with low spots.
If the slab is severely broken or crumbling, replacement may be the better choice. A concrete lifting specialist can inspect the area and explain whether lifting or replacement makes more sense.
Quote timing depends on your location and the details of the project, but the process is usually simple. Photos can often help show the settled area, cracks, gaps, drainage issues, and nearby concrete conditions.
If your driveway, sidewalk, patio, porch, steps, pool deck, or garage floor is starting to sink, it is better to get it checked before the problem gets worse or becomes a larger safety concern.
If you’re dealing with sinking or uneven concrete anywhere in Kentucky, 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?