A french drain is the most reliable long-term fix for chronic basement water in our area. West Chester sits on a mix of clay-heavy soils and shallow bedrock — both push water sideways toward your foundation rather than letting it drain straight down. A properly installed french drain intercepts that water and routes it somewhere it can’t hurt you.
When a french drain is the right call
We recommend a french drain when you’re seeing any of these in your basement:
- Water seeping in at the wall-floor joint (the “cove” where the slab meets the foundation wall)
- Damp or wet spots that come back every spring or after heavy rain
- Efflorescence (white chalky residue) along the lower portion of basement walls
- A sump pump that runs constantly because nothing is feeding it from below
If the water is coming through cracks higher up the wall, that’s a different fix (see foundation crack repair). If you’ve got groundwater rising up through the slab, an interior french drain plus a sump pump is the standard solution.
Interior vs. exterior french drains
Interior french drains are installed by cutting a channel around the inside perimeter of the basement floor, laying perforated pipe in stone, then re-pouring concrete over it. Water that hits the foundation is captured at the footer and pumped out via a sump system. This is the most common fix for existing finished homes because it doesn’t require digging up your yard.
Exterior french drains sit outside the foundation wall, ideally installed during original construction or when you have to excavate anyway. They stop water before it ever touches the foundation. More disruptive, but the more thorough fix when access allows.
For most West Chester homes with an existing wet basement issue, interior is the right answer. Exterior makes sense if you’re already excavating for exterior waterproofing or if landscaping/drainage above-grade is the root cause.
What to expect from us
We’ll come out, look at where the water is actually entering, check your grading and gutters first (sometimes the fix is much cheaper than a drain), and only recommend the system you actually need. Free estimate, no pressure. If a french drain is the right call, we’ll lay out the scope, the cost, and the timeline in writing before any work starts.