Do Foundation Cracks Get Worse Over Time
Cracks That Typically Stay Stable
Shrinkage cracks are the most common foundation cracks and the most likely to remain stable over time. These thin vertical or near-vertical cracks form as concrete loses moisture during the curing process. The majority of concrete shrinkage occurs within the first 12 to 24 months after pouring, with most of the total shrinkage complete by year three. Once the concrete has reached its equilibrium moisture content, no further shrinkage occurs and the crack stops growing.
A shrinkage crack that appeared shortly after construction and has remained unchanged for several years will almost certainly remain unchanged for the life of the foundation. These cracks may fluctuate slightly with seasonal temperature changes, as concrete expands in heat and contracts in cold, but the fluctuation is cyclical rather than progressive. The crack width returns to its baseline after each temperature cycle rather than ratcheting wider over time.
One-time settlement cracks also tend to stabilize. When a foundation settles due to initial soil consolidation beneath the footings, the settlement typically occurs during the first few years as the soil adjusts to the weight of the structure. Once the soil has consolidated to its final density, the settlement stops and any cracks it produced remain at their current width. Diagonal cracks from initial settlement in well-drained soils with stable moisture content are often in this category.
The distinguishing characteristic of a stable crack is consistency over time. If you mark a crack's endpoints and measure its width at several locations, and those measurements remain unchanged after six to twelve months, the crack is stable. Stable cracks can be repaired at your convenience rather than as an emergency, and the repair is likely to be permanent because the forces that created the crack are no longer active.
Cracks That Almost Always Get Worse
Horizontal cracks from lateral pressure are the crack type most likely to worsen over time. The soil pressure, water pressure, or freeze forces that caused the wall to bow inward do not stop after the crack forms. Every heavy rain saturates the soil and pushes against the wall again. Every winter freeze cycle expands ice against the wall. Every spring thaw releases water that increases hydrostatic pressure. These forces are cumulative, meaning each cycle pushes the wall a little further inward.
A horizontal crack with one inch of wall bowing today may show two inches of bowing after the next wet season. The rate of progression depends on the soil type, drainage conditions, and climate, but the direction is always the same: more bowing, wider cracks, and increasing structural distress. Without repair, horizontal cracks progress until the wall reaches a point of structural failure, which can happen suddenly during a severe storm or freeze event.
Cracks caused by active settlement will continue to grow as long as the soil beneath the foundation is moving. Conditions that produce ongoing settlement include leaking underground pipes washing away soil, tree roots desiccating clay soils, deteriorating fill material continuing to compress, and eroding hillside soils losing bearing capacity. Unlike initial consolidation settlement that stabilizes on its own, these conditions produce continuous or episodic settlement that progressively widens cracks and creates new ones.
Cracks in deteriorating concrete or masonry tend to worsen even if no external forces are acting on them. Concrete that was poorly mixed, inadequately cured, or exposed to de-icing chemicals can degrade over time, losing strength and becoming more susceptible to cracking. In cold climates, the freeze-thaw cycle accelerates deterioration by allowing water to enter existing cracks, freeze, expand, and break the concrete further. Each cycle widens the crack slightly and may propagate it deeper or longer.
How to Tell If a Crack Is Getting Worse
Visual inspection alone cannot reliably determine whether a crack is growing, because changes of 1/32 or 1/16 of an inch are invisible to the naked eye even though they represent meaningful movement over time. Systematic monitoring with measurements provides the objective data needed to make an informed decision about repair timing and methods.
The simplest monitoring method is marking the crack's endpoints with a pencil or marker and measuring the width at two or three points using a crack width comparison card or caliper. Record these measurements with the date and check them monthly for at least six months, ideally spanning a full seasonal cycle from summer through winter. If width measurements are increasing, the crack is active. If they remain constant, the crack is stable.
For higher precision, crack monitors can be installed across the crack. These inexpensive devices consist of two overlapping plates mounted on either side of the crack, with a grid pattern that shows movement in both width and shear directions. Crack monitors cost $10 to $30 each and provide continuous, easy-to-read measurements without requiring tools. They are particularly useful for cracks where you want to detect very small changes over time.
Professional monitoring by a structural engineer involves installing precision measurement devices and collecting data over a defined period. This approach costs $500 to $1,500 for the initial setup and monitoring period and is warranted for cracks where the stakes are high, such as potential structural failures or pre-purchase assessments of homes with known foundation issues.
When to Act vs When to Watch
Not every growing crack requires immediate repair. The decision to act now or continue monitoring depends on the rate of growth, the crack type, and the potential consequences of waiting.
Act immediately for horizontal cracks in basement walls showing any amount of bowing. These are progressive structural failures that get more expensive to repair with each additional inch of deflection. A wall at one inch of bowing can be stabilized with carbon fiber straps for $3,000 to $10,000. Waiting until it reaches three inches may require I-beams or wall anchors at $8,000 to $15,000. Waiting until five inches may mean wall replacement at $15,000 to $40,000.
Act soon for diagonal or stair-step cracks that are growing, particularly if the growth rate exceeds 1/16 inch per six months. The settlement causing these cracks is actively eroding the foundation's performance, and the underlying cause needs to be identified and addressed before it creates additional damage. Getting a structural engineer's assessment at $300 to $800 is the appropriate first step.
Monitor for hairline and narrow vertical cracks that show no signs of water intrusion. These cracks are likely to stabilize on their own, and monitoring confirms this without the expense of a premature repair. If six to twelve months of monitoring shows no change, the crack can be repaired at your convenience or left alone if it is not causing cosmetic or moisture concerns.
Monitor with caution for any crack in a home you are considering purchasing. Before committing to buy a home with foundation cracks, have a structural engineer assess them. Even cracks that appear stable today may have implications for the home's long-term structural performance, insurability, and resale value. The engineer's report provides documentation of the cracks' current condition that you can use as a baseline for future monitoring.
Shrinkage cracks typically stabilize within a few years and stay that way for the life of the foundation. Horizontal cracks and cracks driven by active settlement almost always get worse. Monitor any crack you are unsure about by measuring width at regular intervals for six to twelve months. Act immediately on horizontal cracks, as delay significantly increases repair costs.