๐ South Carolina
South Carolina's coastal counties sit at or below sea level with brackish water tables. The Upstate is Cecil clay just like North Carolina. Both extremes defeat gravity-fed drainage. Pressure-fed flow doesn't care about elevation.
9 Counties Served
Every county page includes local rainfall data, soil conditions, common drainage problems in that area, and a free evaluation booking.
Hilton Head & Bluffton. Lowcountry tidal clay and brackish water table.
View Beaufort โSummerville & Goose Creek. Charleston metro, high water table.
View Berkeley โHistoric district & James Island. Sea-level drainage challenges.
View Charleston โSummerville. Charleston suburbs on saturated coastal plain.
View Dorchester โUpstate SC. Piedmont clay, rolling terrain, dense growth.
View Greenville โMyrtle Beach. Coastal sand-over-clay with surge concerns.
View Horry โIndian Land. Charlotte-suburb growth on Carolina red clay.
View Lancaster โColumbia western suburbs. Sandhills meet clay.
View Lexington โRock Hill & Fort Mill. Cecil clay, Charlotte commute belt.
View York โWhy South Carolina Is Challenging
South Carolina's coastal counties sit at or below sea level with brackish water tables.
Coastal SC properties from Charleston to Hilton Head have water tables within 1โ3 feet of grade. Drainage systems that depend on water leaving the property by gravity have nowhere for it to go.
Tropical systems compound annual rainfall with surge events.
Sea-level terrain, brackish groundwater, historic-district excavation restrictions.
Serving South Carolina
Schedule a free 20-minute evaluation. We'll confirm service availability, assess your property, and tell you exactly what's causing your drainage problem.
Serving the Southeast ยท Free evaluation ยท No obligation