Home › Drainage & French Drains in Beaverton, OR
Drainage and French drains in Beaverton, OR. Beaverton Excavation Co. installs French drains, catch basins, and footing drains to stop flooding and foundation water. Free estimates.
Drainage work in Beaverton is what keeps winter rain from becoming a foundation, crawl space, or yard problem. Beaverton Excavation Co. installs French drains, catch basins, swales, curtain drains, footing drains, and downspout tie-ins that collect water and move it to a legal outfall. Around here, drainage is not an add-on; it is often the reason an excavation project succeeds.
Beaverton's name comes from beaver-dam country, and that history still makes sense when you see how the low ground holds water. Heavy silty clay slows infiltration, the seasonal water table climbs from October through May, and slopes above town can send runoff downhill in a hurry. We solve saturated yards, wet basements, seepage, and standing water by identifying the source first and then giving it a real path out.
Beaverton Excavation Co. builds drainage systems for homes and light commercial sites where water needs a reliable path away. Depending on the source of the water, we install:
Water is what wrecks foundations, and Beaverton has more than one way to deliver it. The city was named for beaver dams, and low areas near Beaverton Creek, Fanno Creek, and Johnson Creek still behave like wet ground when the rain settles in. At the same time, hillside lots on Cooper Mountain, Sexton Mountain, and the West Slope shed water downslope quickly. We diagnose whether the problem is runoff, roof water, groundwater, or a rising water table, then build the system that matches the source.
Willamette Valley drainage has to be designed around winter groundwater and clay that accepts water slowly. Our French drains are set in clean drain rock, wrapped with filter fabric to keep clay out of the system, and carried to daylight or a drywell sized for local rainfall. The goal is a working drain, not a shallow token trench that clogs after two wet seasons.
Beaverton receives roughly 36 inches of rain across about 161 rainy days, with the load concentrated in the wet months. November and December each bring more than five inches, and problems usually show themselves between November and March. A marine west-coast climate on the Tualatin Valley floor asks drainage to handle sustained winter volume, so French drains, outfalls, and drywells are sized for Beaverton rainfall rather than a generic summer-weather detail.
Where the water goes matters as much as how we collect it. Low ground along Fanno Creek, Beaverton Creek, and Johnson Creek can stay saturated for months, while the slopes above town can send concentrated runoff into yards below. We plan a legal outfall that actually carries water away from the foundation — daylight where allowed, a drywell where it makes sense, or an approved storm connection — and we size the system for a wet Willamette Valley winter, not a summer shower.
Most Beaverton residential drainage systems price out around $1,800 to $5,500. French drains are commonly quoted per linear foot at about $25 to $60 per foot installed, with depth, clay conditions, access, and distance to the outfall setting the final number. A single catch basin or downspout tie-in can be only a few hundred dollars, while multi-run whole-property systems cost more. The Washington County ranges below are a budgeting guide.
| Drainage scope | Typical size | Typical Beaverton cost |
|---|---|---|
| French drain | per linear foot | $25 – $60 |
| French drain system | 100 – 150 ft | $1,800 – $5,500 |
| Catch basin / area drain | each | $350 – $1,200 |
| Downspout tie-in | per downspout | $200 – $600 |
| Foundation / footing drain | per project | $3,000 – $9,000 |
Ranges are typical for the Beaverton / Washington County area and include excavation, pipe, rock, fabric, and backfill. Depth, distance to outfall, rock, and access move the number. We give a firm, itemized quote after a free site visit — no obligation.
Beaverton drainage work is only acceptable if the discharge point is legal. Water cannot simply be piped onto a neighbor's property or out to the street without meeting the rules. Some systems need a plumbing or site permit, and public storm connections fall under Clean Water Services requirements. Beaverton Excavation Co. plans the outfall — daylight, drywell, or approved storm connection — pulls required permits, and includes erosion control so the repair does not create a downstream issue.
We inspect the property when the issue is visible, trace the source of the water, and provide an itemized written price for the fix.
The system and outfall are sized for the soil and water source, with any required permit handled before installation.
Our crew excavates to grade, places perforated pipe in fabric-wrapped clean rock, and installs the basins or tie-ins the design calls for.
After the drain is tested and covered, we compact the backfill and restore the surface so the yard dries out without looking torn apart.
Installed French drains in Beaverton usually cost $25 to $60 per linear foot, depending on depth, access, clay conditions, and the distance to a legal outfall. A 100- to 150-foot system commonly totals $1,800 to $5,500. A catch basin or downspout tie-in can cost less, while full foundation drainage is usually higher. We price the system after diagnosing the water.
The right fix depends on the source. Groundwater and soggy soil point toward a French drain or curtain drain; a single ponding low spot may need a catch basin; roof water usually needs downspout piping; crawl-space seepage may call for footing drainage. We trace the water first so you are not paying for a drain that solves the wrong problem.
Beaverton combines long wet seasons, silty clay, low former-wetland areas, and hillside runoff from places like Cooper Mountain and the West Slope. Water either cannot soak in fast enough or arrives faster than the yard can shed it. The fix is a planned route out: swales, French drains, catch basins, downspout tie-ins, or footing drains sized for local rainfall.
Sometimes. Drainage work may need a plumbing or site permit depending on the system, and public storm connections fall under Clean Water Services requirements. The discharge point has to be legal; it cannot simply dump onto a neighbor or into the street. We design the outfall, check permit needs, and handle the required paperwork.
A cheap or unwrapped drain can clog when clay migrates into the rock and pipe. We bed perforated pipe in clean drain rock, wrap the trench with filter fabric, hold grade to the outfall, and avoid mixing native clay into the drain zone. Built that way, a French drain can work for many years with little attention.
Send over the basics of the job and we will visit the property, walk the ground with you, and price the scope in writing — no pressure and no obligation. Call, text, or use the form; we reply the same business day.
Call or text to reach our team directly. During business hours we pick up when we can, and every message gets a return call.
(971) 397-9361Hours: Mon–Sat, 7am–6pm