French Drain Cost & Installation in Hamilton, OH — What It Actually Takes in Clay Soil

A French drain is the standard fix for water moving through soil: a gravel trench with perforated pipe that intercepts groundwater and carries it somewhere harmless. In Hamilton’s heavy clay, it’s often the right fix — and also the one most often quoted without anyone checking whether you need it. Here’s how to think about it before you spend thousands.

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French drain cost in Hamilton, Ohio

National 2026 data puts exterior French drains at roughly $10–$35 per linear foot, and interior basement-perimeter systems at $40–$85 per linear foot. For typical projects:

What pushes Hamilton jobs toward the higher end of those ranges:

Get at least two local bids and make each one tell you where the water will discharge. A bid that doesn’t answer that question isn’t a real plan.

Do I actually need a French drain?

A French drain solves subsurface water — water moving through the soil. It does not solve roof water, and it’s overkill for pure surface puddling.

An honest contractor checks the cheap causes first. If the first thing a salesperson does is quote a full perimeter system without walking the lot in detail, get a second opinion.

How does a French drain work in clay soil?

In free-draining soil, water finds its own way down. In clay, it can’t — it travels sideways along the saturated layer until it hits your foundation or pools in a low spot. A French drain works with that behavior: the gravel trench is the path of least resistance, so the sideways-moving water enters the trench, drops into the perforated pipe, and flows by gravity to a discharge point. In clay, trench depth, fabric wrapping (to keep clay fines from clogging the gravel), and a genuine downhill discharge matter more than anywhere else. A clogged or flat French drain in clay is just an expensive wet trench.

When DIY is fine

A straightforward exterior French drain is genuinely DIY-able if all of these are true: the run is short (under ~30 feet), the path is open lawn with no hardscape to cut, you’ve confirmed fall with a line level (you need roughly 1 inch of drop per 8–10 feet), and you have a legal discharge point on your own property. Budget a brutal weekend of clay digging, $100–$300 in pipe/gravel/fabric, and call 811 before you dig — free and required in Ohio.

Hire it out when: the water reaches the basement (diagnosis matters more than digging), the run needs to cross driveways or go deep, the lot is flat enough to need a pump or dry well, or the job involves the property line or street right-of-way.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a French drain cost in Hamilton, Ohio?

Exterior French drains run roughly $10–$35 per linear foot installed, so a typical 50–100 foot residential run lands between $1,000 and $6,500 depending on depth, access, and discharge. Interior basement perimeter drains are a different system at $40–$85 per foot. These are national 2026 ranges — get two local bids.

How long does a French drain last in clay soil?

A properly built drain — washed gravel, perforated pipe, and filter fabric keeping clay fines out — typically lasts 20–30 years or more. The usual failure mode in clay is sediment clogging, which is why fabric and clean gravel matter. Cheap installs that skip fabric can clog in well under a decade.

Where does the water go after the drain collects it?

By gravity to daylight (a pop-up emitter or open outlet downhill), into a dry well, or to a sump pump if the lot is flat. In Hamilton you can’t just pipe water onto a neighbor’s lot, and connecting to the public storm sewer requires going through the city. Every bid should name the discharge point explicitly.

Will a French drain stop water in my basement?

Sometimes. An exterior French drain helps when soil water is pressing against the foundation from outside. But if water enters through wall cracks, a failed sump, or rising water-table pressure under the slab — common in older low-lying Hamilton homes — you may need an interior system instead. Diagnose before buying either. See foundation drainage.

Can I install a French drain in winter in Ohio?

Contractors here dig year-round, but frozen or saturated clay slows excavation and trench walls slump in mud season. Late summer through fall is the sweet spot: dry soil, faster digging, and contractors are past the spring panic rush — which sometimes means better pricing and much shorter waits for estimates.


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