Quick Summary:
- Mudjacking uses a heavy cement-based slurry pumped through larger holes to lift sunken concrete slabs
- PolyLift uses expanding polyurethane foam injected through small 5/8-inch holes verified from KC Waterproofing’s site
- Foam is lighter, cures faster, and doesn’t introduce water into soil that may already be prone to movement
- Kansas City’s expansive clay soil makes material weight a key factor in how long a concrete repair holds
- Polyurethane foam lifting has largely replaced mudjacking as the preferred method for residential concrete repair
- KC Waterproofing uses PolyLift on driveways, sidewalks, patios, and interior slabs across the Kansas City area
PolyLift vs. Mudjacking: Which Concrete Leveling Method Is Right for Your Home?
A sunken driveway slab, a settled sidewalk panel, a patio that’s developed an obvious tilt toward the house. These are the kinds of problems Kansas City homeowners tend to notice gradually, then all at once. Once you start looking into how to fix it, two methods come up repeatedly: mudjacking and polyurethane foam lifting. They accomplish the same basic goal but work differently, and those differences matter depending on your soil conditions, the slab, and how long you want the repair to last.
Both methods involve drilling holes into the sunken concrete and injecting material underneath to lift the slab back into position. Beyond that, the process, the material, the hole size, the cure time, and the long-term behavior of the repair are all distinct. Understanding the difference helps you ask better questions and make a more informed decision before committing to either.
How Mudjacking Works
Mudjacking is the older of the two methods and has been used for concrete repair for decades. The process involves drilling a series of holes into the sunken slab and pumping a slurry mixture underneath. That mixture is usually made up of water, soil, sand, and cement. As the slurry fills the void beneath the slab, the pressure builds and lifts the concrete back toward its original position. Once the slab is level, the holes are patched and the area is usable again within a day or two.
Here’s a quick look at how the method breaks down:
- Holes: Larger diameter holes are drilled into the slab to accommodate the slurry mixture
- Material: A water-based slurry of soil, sand, and cement is pumped beneath the slab
- Lift mechanism: The volume and pressure of the slurry raises the concrete back into position
- Cure time: The area is generally usable again within 24 to 48 hours
- Cost: Material is widely available and relatively inexpensive, which can make it attractive for larger projects
The limitations are tied directly to the material. Slurry is heavy, adding significant weight to the soil beneath the slab. It’s also water-based, which means it can erode, shrink, or wash out over time, particularly in areas with poor drainage or soil that shifts seasonally. If the underlying cause of the settlement hasn’t been addressed, mudjacking can be a temporary fix rather than a permanent one.
Contact KC Waterproofing for a Free Estimate
How PolyLift Works
PolyLift is KC Waterproofing’s method for concrete leveling, and it works on the same principle as mudjacking with a fundamentally different material. Instead of a heavy slurry, a polyurethane foam is injected beneath the slab through small 5/8-inch holes. The foam expands rapidly after injection, filling voids and lifting the concrete back to its original position. Once it hardens, it provides a stable, lightweight base that doesn’t erode or compress the way slurry can.
Here’s how the process breaks down:
- Holes: Small 5/8-inch holes are drilled into the slab, leaving a much less visible repair than mudjacking
- Material: Expanding polyurethane foam fills the void beneath the slab and hardens in place
- Lift mechanism: The foam expands to fill irregular voids and lifts the slab as it sets
- Cure time: The foam hardens quickly, making the area usable again far sooner than mudjacking allows
- Weight: The foam is lightweight and won’t add meaningful load to the soil beneath the slab
The smaller holes and faster cure time make PolyLift a less disruptive repair for driveways, sidewalks, patios, and interior slabs. The finished product is also more consistent because the foam expands to fill irregular voids that slurry might not fully reach. Learn more about KC Waterproofing’s concrete leveling services to see how PolyLift is applied on residential projects across the Kansas City area.
Weight and Soil: Why the Material Matters in Kansas City
Kansas City sits on expansive clay soil that swells when wet and shrinks when dry. That cycle of expansion and contraction is one of the primary reasons concrete slabs settle in the first place. The soil shifts, voids develop beneath the slab, and the concrete follows. It’s a pattern that repeats across the metro in every season.
When mudjacking fills those voids with a heavy cement-based slurry, it adds considerable weight to soil that is already struggling to support the slab above it. On stable, well-compacted ground that additional load may not be a significant issue. On the kind of clay-heavy, moisture-sensitive soil common across Kansas City’s KS and MO sides, it can accelerate the same settling process the repair was meant to fix.
PolyLift’s lightweight foam addresses this directly. Because the material weighs a fraction of what slurry does, it fills and supports without compounding the load on compromised soil. It also doesn’t introduce water into the substrate, which matters in areas where drainage is poor or the soil beneath the slab has a history of movement. For Kansas City homeowners dealing with recurring settlement, that difference in material weight isn’t a minor technical detail. It’s often the reason one repair holds and another doesn’t.
Why Polyurethane Foam Lifting Has Become the Preferred Method
Mudjacking was the standard for concrete leveling for a long time, but the limitations of a heavy, water-based fill became more apparent as contractors watched how repairs held up over time. Polyurethane foam lifting emerged as a direct response. The material doesn’t shrink, erode, or wash out the way slurry can, and because it expands to fill irregular voids rather than relying on hydraulic pressure, it tends to produce more consistent results. In Kansas City, where clay soil movement is a recurring factor in slab settlement, a repair that doesn’t add weight or moisture to an already compromised substrate holds up differently than one that does.
What KC Waterproofing Uses and Why
KC Waterproofing has been serving Kansas City homeowners since 1985, and PolyLift is the concrete leveling method they use for a reason. The team has worked on enough Kansas City driveways, sidewalks, patios, and interior slabs to understand how local soil conditions affect the long-term performance of a repair. Lightweight polyurethane foam that hardens in place and doesn’t add load to shifting clay soil is the right tool for the conditions homeowners here deal with year after year.
If your concrete has settled and you want a professional assessment of what’s underneath and whether leveling is the right approach, contact KC Waterproofing to schedule a free estimate.









