Foundation Repair Service

Sewer, Well & Conduit Line Repair

Durable urethane resin fills gaps around sewer, well, and electrical conduit lines without excavation. Stop water infiltration at pipe penetrations.

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Sewer, Well & Conduit Line Repair

Pipe Penetration Sealing: Utility Line Waterproofing

Every pipe, conduit, and line that enters your foundation is a potential leak point. Sewer lines, well pipes, electrical conduits, and gas lines all create utility penetrations through your foundation wall — and each one can allow water infiltration. We provide permanent pipe penetration sealing and utility penetration waterproofing without excavation.

Common Utility Penetration Problems

Sewer Lines Main sewer lines typically exit through the foundation wall or floor slab. The gap between pipe and concrete is a frequent source of basement water.

Well Lines If your home uses well water, the supply line enters through the foundation. This penetration is especially prone to leaking due to ground movement around the well.

Electrical Conduits Electrical service enters most homes through the foundation. The conduit-to-concrete joint often fails over time.

Other Penetrations

  • Gas lines
  • Water service lines
  • Cable/internet conduits
  • Radon mitigation pipes
  • Oil fill pipes

Why These Penetrations Leak

When your home was built, penetrations were sealed with:

  • Hydraulic cement: Shrinks as it cures, creating gaps
  • Caulk or sealant: Degrades within years
  • Oakum and lead: Old method that eventually fails
  • Nothing at all: Some builders left gaps unsealed

Over time, settling and ground movement widen these gaps. Water finds the path of least resistance—right through your foundation.

Our Injection Sealing Process

1. Locate All Penetrations We identify every pipe, conduit, and line entering your foundation. Some may be hidden behind finished walls or covered by previous repairs. We audit the entire foundation—often finding leak sources homeowners didn’t know existed.

2. Remove Failed Sealant We clear out any deteriorated hydraulic cement, caulk, or oakum from around the penetration. This ensures our injection bonds directly to the pipe and concrete surfaces.

3. Inject Flexible Urethane Our specialized urethane is injected around the penetration under controlled pressure. It flows into every void, expands to fill the full gap between pipe and concrete, and bonds to both surfaces. The material reacts with water to accelerate its cure—so we can seal pipes that are actively leaking without waiting for dry conditions.

4. Verify Complete Seal We confirm the seal is complete and remove any excess material. The repair is waterproof immediately and stays flexible for the life of your home, accommodating movement between pipe and foundation.

Benefits of Our Approach

No Excavation Traditional repairs require digging around your foundation exterior. Our injection works from inside your basement.

Works on All Pipe Types

  • PVC
  • Cast iron
  • Copper
  • Galvanized steel
  • Corrugated conduit
  • Rigid electrical conduit

Permanent Flexibility Our urethane seal remains flexible, accommodating movement between pipe and foundation without cracking.

What Pipe Penetration Sealing Costs

Most utility penetration sealing repairs cost $650-$1,000 per penetration, depending on pipe size, accessibility, and condition. Homes with multiple leaking penetrations often benefit from a full foundation audit — we frequently find leak sources homeowners didn’t know existed. Every repair includes our lifetime guarantee.

Signs You Need Penetration Sealing

  • Water stains around pipes entering your basement
  • Active dripping near utility lines during rain
  • Efflorescence (white powder on basement walls) near penetrations
  • Musty smell in basement near utility entry points
  • Previous hydraulic cement or caulk repairs that have failed
  • Water in basement after rain concentrated near pipe locations

When NOT to Seal (What’s Really Going On)

Sometimes what looks like a pipe leak is actually a different problem:

  • Wall cracks near pipes — the crack is the leak source, not the penetration
  • Condensation on cold pipes — insulation is the fix, not injection
  • Floor drain backup — a plumbing issue, not a foundation issue

We’ll diagnose the actual problem honestly — even if it means the fix isn’t something we do. Text us a photo for a free assessment.

The Attack A Crack Difference

  • Complete penetration audit — we find leaks you didn’t know about
  • Non-invasive pipe penetration sealing — no digging, no mess
  • Same-day completion for most jobs
  • Lifetime guarantee on all utility penetration waterproofing
  • 20+ years sealing pipe penetrations across New England
Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Answered by the Attack A Crack team — 20+ years of foundation repair experience across New England

Why do pipes leak where they enter the foundation?
When pipes were originally installed through your foundation, the gaps around them were filled with hydraulic cement, caulk, or oakum—materials that shrink, crack, and deteriorate over time. As your home settles and New England freeze-thaw cycles widen these gaps, water finds the path of least resistance right through the penetration.
Can you seal active leaks around pipes?
Yes. Our injection process works even with active water infiltration. The flexible urethane we use actually reacts with water to accelerate its cure and expansion, making wet conditions ideal for a complete seal. We don't need to wait for dry weather or pump water out first.
Will the repair affect my plumbing or electrical?
No. Our injection fills only the gap between the pipe and the surrounding concrete foundation wall. The material bonds to both surfaces but doesn't enter your pipes, block conduits, or affect any utility function. We've sealed thousands of penetrations without a single utility disruption.
How do you access pipes that are behind walls?
Many pipe penetrations are accessible from the basement interior without any demolition. For penetrations behind finished walls, we can often work through small access points or remove a single panel. We always discuss access options during your free consultation and aim for the least disruptive approach possible.
Customer Reviews

What Customers Say About This Service

"Luke was incredibly helpful. He responded within minutes and was able to resolve my problem immediately. He is very knowledgeable and left me feeling confident moving forward."

Luke S.

Amston, CT

"Amazingly professional experience from start to finish. Luke, Justin and Mike were fantastic, providing the best solution and scheduling the fix promptly."

Mary K.

Weymouth, MA

Ready to Fix Your Foundation?

Get a free consultation with our experts. We'll assess your foundation and provide an honest quote—no pressure, just honest advice.