
After a hard rain, you notice a new low spot or a growing crack. You’re trying to figure out if water is washing out support under your concrete or if you’re just seeing normal wear.
In Wilmington-area storms, water can move fast through sandy soil and change what’s happening under a driveway or walkway before the damage looks dramatic. This guide helps you read the signs that point to under-slab erosion and voids and choose the right next step so you don’t waste money sealing the top while the real problem keeps getting worse.
The Three Clues Water Is Undermining Your Slab
If water under concrete slab is getting under your driveway, patio, or walkway and stealing support, you usually aren’t just chasing the problem with “a crack.” You see a pattern. It’s the slab’s “toe tag” after a downpour.
Look for this high-signal trio if you’re wondering how to tell if water is under slab:
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Ponding or a new low spot after rain: water starts collecting where it used to sheet off, or it sits longer than it should.
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Edges or joints that don’t line up anymore: one panel sits lower, a control joint opens unevenly, or you feel a lip that wasn’t there before.
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Cracks that change after storms: a crack looks wider, a section seems to drop a little, or you notice fresh grit/soil washed out along the crack line—often a hint of voids under concrete.
If you spot all three, treat it as a support problem and document what changes after the next heavy rain. Take a few photos right after the next heavy rain, and include a level or straight board in the shot. Date the photos in your Notes app so a pro can track what’s shifting.
Rule out look-alikes before you spend
You can spend a weekend sealing or patching, only to watch the same low spot return after the next storm because poor drainage causing concrete damage was the real issue underneath. A quick read on the most common look-alikes keeps you from paying for the wrong fix.
Not every wet-looking stain or rough patch means water is washing out soil under your slab.
| What you’re seeing | More consistent with | Typical clues | What to do next |
|---|---|---|---|
| New dip/low spot; water collects after rain | Under-slab erosion/voids | Ponding where it didn’t before; water pooling near foundation; changes after storms | Redirect water; document after rain; consider pro inspection if it persists |
| Uneven joint/edge “lip” or panels don’t line up | Under-slab erosion/settlement | Mismatch at joints; section feels lower | Check drainage entry paths; call leveling/foundation pro if growing |
| Flaking/pitting/sandy crumble on surface | Spalling/scaling (surface) | “Freckles,” thin chips; surface roughness without new dips | Surface repair options; address salts/moisture exposure |
| Concrete feels damp on humid days (even without rain) | Slab sweating (condensation) | Damp film tied to humidity/dew point; not tied to storms | Improve ventilation/dehumidification; avoid “sealing” as a void fix |
| Hairline crack that stays fairly consistent | Shrinkage/age cracking | Thin, stable; no storm-to-storm change; no new ponding | Monitor; seal only if appropriate for surface water entry |
Surface spalling/scaling often shows up as flaking or pitting on the top layer (think driveway “freckles” and thin chips), which can come from moisture carrying salts or surface wear, even when the base is still firm. And some “always damp” concrete is just slab sweating: on humid coastal days, moisture condenses when the concrete surface sits below the dew point, so it feels wet without any rainwater traveling underneath.
Also separate movement from normal aging. Shrinkage/age cracking tends to be hairline and fairly consistent, not a crack that visibly changes after storms or pairs with a new low spot. If you’re about to patch or seal as a quick weekend fix, pause. Sealing the top is a waste if there’s a void, and it won’t stop condensation. Here’s the sanity check: after a heavy rain, do you see any new dip, joint mismatch, or fresh ponding where it didn’t happen before?
Clogged or overflowing gutters can dump a surprising amount of roof runoff right next to slabs and foundations during Wilmington downpours. Read more in our article: Safely Clean Gutters If not, you’re more likely dealing with a surface or moisture-film issue than under-slab erosion.
What to do next if water is the cause
A Wilmington homeowner extends a downspout and reshapes a small low area at the slab edge, and the “new dip” stops getting worse after the next two rains. Another ignores the runoff path, and the lip at the joint grows until the fix is no longer a simple lift.
Start with drainage: route water away from the slab instead of focusing on filling cracks. Avoid surface-only fixes if the base is still washing out. For the cheapest first move, redirect bulk water for a couple of storms and watch whether the slab keeps moving. Extend downspouts so they discharge well away from the concrete to avoid downspout drainage problems, and clear gutters.
If you still see new ponding, widening joints, or a growing lip at a joint, call a concrete leveling or foundation repair pro about concrete settling from water. Water’s gonna win if you wait. A real inspection should go beyond “looks uneven” and include checking slope/level changes and likely water entry paths (some companies can even locate voids with tools like ground-penetrating radar on larger areas).
Call a plumber first if you get a stronger leak cluster: an unexplained higher water bill or damp spots that show up even without rain (common slab-leak warning signs are often described together, not as a single symptom: higher bills plus persistent dampness and other indicators). In that scenario, fixing drainage or lifting concrete before you stop the leak can turn into paying twice.
Most storm-related home checklists start with controlling roof runoff because it’s one of the fastest ways to reduce water pressure around the house. Read more in our article: Check Roof After Storm
Roof not getting any younger? Contact us at Contact us or call 910-241-1152 to find out where you stand.