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50+ years of expertise. 20,000+ customers served. Proven national system.
Foamjection helps homeowners across Oregon 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 Oregon homeowners with certified local professionals who use high-density foam injection to lift, level, and stabilize concrete the right way.
Oregon’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 Oregon, 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.
Oregon concrete settlement is often tied to steady rain, poor drainage, hillside runoff, soft or shifting soils, freeze-thaw cycles in colder areas, and changing ground moisture below the slab. In many parts of the state, concrete also has to deal with older neighborhoods, mature trees, sloped lots, coastal moisture, and water that can slowly weaken the base beneath driveways, sidewalks, patios, porches, garage floors, and commercial slabs.
Foamjection serves Oregon homeowners and property owners in larger metro areas, Willamette Valley communities, coastal towns, rural properties, and smaller cities where sinking concrete can create trip hazards, drainage problems, uneven slabs, and unsafe walking surfaces.
In the Portland metro area, homeowners in Portland, Oregon City, Lake Oswego, West Linn, Milwaukie, Tigard, Tualatin, Sherwood, and Troutdale often deal with driveway settlement, sidewalk trip hazards, patio sinking, front step movement, and garage floor issues. These problems are often tied to rainwater, roof runoff, tight lot drainage, tree roots, and voids forming below concrete.
In the Willamette Valley, property owners in Salem, Keizer, Woodburn, Silverton, Mount Angel, Stayton, Sublimity, Turner, and Jefferson may notice settled slabs around sidewalks, driveways, porches, patios, entry steps, and commercial walkways. Wet seasons, soil movement, and poor drainage can all leave empty spaces below concrete.
Farther south and through the central valley, Foamjection supports communities like Springfield, Junction City, Veneta, Harrisburg, Lebanon, Sweet Home, Roseburg, and Sutherlin. In these areas, seasonal rain, sloped drainage, erosion, and changing soil moisture can affect driveways, garage floors, walkways, patios, and exterior slabs.
Along Oregon’s coastal and river-influenced communities, property owners in Newport, Lincoln City, Waldport, Toledo, Scappoose, St. Helens, and Vernonia often see settlement around patios, walkways, steps, driveways, porch slabs, and commercial entry areas. Coastal moisture, soft soil, and storm runoff can make proper slab support especially important.
Concrete settlement in Oregon often starts where water collects, drains slowly, or moves under a slab. A driveway may drop near the garage. A sidewalk panel may become uneven near the front entry. A patio may begin holding water. Porch steps may pull away from the slab around them. A garage floor may sound hollow or show a low area near a crack.
These signs are common around garage aprons, driveway approaches, front walkways, porch slabs, entry steps, patios, sidewalks, retaining wall areas, and concrete near downspouts. In wet areas, water can soften or wash away support below the slab. On sloped lots, runoff can move under concrete and create hidden voids. In colder areas, freeze-thaw movement can make small settlement problems worse over time.
Some Oregon homeowners first notice the issue after a long rainy season. 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.
Oregon weather can make small concrete problems worse over time. Long wet seasons, roof runoff, hillside drainage, coastal moisture, winter freezing in colder areas, and changing soil moisture can all affect the ground below a slab. When concrete has already started to sink, these conditions 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 Oregon homeowners, foam injection is a clean and practical way to repair sinking concrete before the problem spreads.
Foamjection helps with residential, commercial, rural, coastal, and property management concrete lifting projects throughout Oregon. Homeowners often call for driveway lifting, sidewalk leveling, patio repair, porch leveling, garage floor lifting, concrete step repair, and void filling below settled slabs.
Businesses, churches, schools, rental properties, offices, restaurants, warehouses, municipal properties, HOAs, coastal rentals, farms, and managed buildings may also need concrete lifting when sidewalks, entryways, walkways, parking areas, loading areas, or exterior slabs become uneven.
Common Oregon 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 Oregon properties, this process is especially useful when settlement is caused by rainwater washout, hillside runoff, soft soil, poor drainage, coastal moisture, freeze-thaw movement, erosion, 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, entryways, coastal properties, and high-traffic areas where downtime matters.
If your concrete is sinking, uneven, cracked, or creating a trip hazard, Foamjection can help. Use the Oregon city links on this page to find concrete lifting service near you, or request a free, no-pressure estimate today.
From Portland, Salem, and Oregon City to Lake Oswego, Springfield, Newport, Roseburg, and communities across the state, Foamjection helps Oregon 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 Oregon meet strict national standards for:
Homeowners across Oregon 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 Oregon because the soil under the slab changes over time. Rain, poor drainage, erosion, soft soil, tree roots, and weak fill dirt can all cause empty spaces to form under driveways, sidewalks, patios, garage floors, steps, and pool decks.
Once the ground under the concrete loses support, the slab can crack, drop, tilt, or create a trip hazard. Polyurethane concrete lifting helps fill those voids and support the slab without tearing out the existing concrete.
Yes. Oregon’s wet weather can make concrete problems worse when water drains under or around the slab. Over time, water can wash away soil, soften the ground, and create weak spots below the concrete.
This is why sinking concrete is often found near driveways, sidewalks, patios, porches, garage floors, and areas close to downspouts. Fixing drainage issues can help protect the lifted concrete long term.
Yes. Polyurethane foam can be used to fill voids under concrete caused by washout, erosion, or weak soil support. The foam expands under the slab, fills empty spaces, and helps lift the concrete back toward a safer position.
This can be a good option when the concrete is still in usable shape but has started to sink because the soil below it has moved or washed away.
Yes. Sinking driveways can often be lifted with polyurethane foam. This is common when driveway slabs drop near the garage, street, walkway, or control joints.
Driveway lifting can help reduce trip hazards, improve curb appeal, and help water drain away from the home instead of pooling near the slab.
Yes. Uneven sidewalks and walkways are often good candidates for concrete lifting. If one section has dropped and created a raised edge, polyurethane foam may be able to lift the slab and reduce the trip hazard.
This is usually faster and cleaner than replacing long sections of sidewalk, especially when the concrete is still in decent condition.
Concrete lifting is often a better option when the slab is still solid but has settled. It is usually faster, cleaner, and more affordable than removing and replacing the concrete.
Replacement may be needed if the concrete is badly cracked, broken into many pieces, or crumbling. But if the main problem is sinking or uneven concrete, polyurethane lifting may be able to save the existing slab.
Polyurethane concrete lifting can be used on many residential concrete surfaces, including driveways, sidewalks, walkways, patios, porches, steps, garage floors, concrete slabs, pool decks, and some interior floors.
The best results usually happen when the concrete is mostly intact but has dropped because of weak soil, poor drainage, erosion, or voids under the slab.
Mudjacking uses a heavier cement-based material to raise settled concrete. Polyurethane concrete lifting uses lightweight expanding foam to fill voids, lift the slab, and add support under the concrete.
Polyurethane foam usually requires smaller injection holes, adds less weight to the soil, and can often be used sooner after the repair is complete.
Yes. Polyurethane foam is designed to stay stable under concrete after it cures. It does not wash away like loose soil, which makes it helpful in areas where rain and drainage issues have caused voids under the slab.
For the best long-term results, the source of the water problem should also be addressed. Proper grading, downspout control, and drainage can help prevent future soil washout.
Most 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 polyurethane lifting a convenient option for driveways, sidewalks, patios, steps, porches, and other high-use concrete areas.
Your concrete may be a good candidate for lifting if it is sinking, tilted, uneven, separated, or creating a trip hazard but is still mostly intact.
Common signs include gaps under the slab, water pooling, raised sidewalk edges, driveway panels dropping near the garage, leaning steps, or patios sloping toward the home. A quote can help confirm whether lifting or replacement is the better option.
Quote timing depends on your location and the details of the project, but the process is usually simple. Photos of the settled concrete can often help show the problem and speed up the review.
If your driveway, sidewalk, patio, porch, steps, garage floor, or pool deck has started to sink, it is better to get it checked before the issue gets worse or becomes a larger safety concern.
If you’re dealing with sinking or uneven concrete anywhere in Oregon, 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?