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How Much Does Regrading a Yard Cost in Maryland?

How Much Does Regrading a Yard Cost in Maryland?tlc incorporated

Let’s dig into real costs, case studies, practical steps, and what you need to know before regrading your Maryland lawn.

If your yard slopes in the wrong direction, holds water, or directs runoff toward your house, regrading may be the best solution. However, the potential cost can deter homeowners from investing in regrading their yards, despite the benefits.

We are Maryland’s most trusted yard drainage and grading specialists, delivering slope corrections, soil rebuilding, and honest answers for over 35 years.

Let’s dig into real costs, case studies, practical steps, and what you need to know before regrading your Maryland lawn.

What Does Regrading a Yard Mean?

Regrading means reshaping the slope of your land, so water flows away from your home. It often involves:

  • Cutting high points
  • Filling low spots
  • Blending topsoil
  • Rolling and leveling 
  • Establishing new turf

There are two types of grading jobs we see at TLC:

1. Surface regrading for drainage correction

2. Full-yard machine grading for large slope fixes

Benefits of Regrading Your Yard

  • Eliminates standing water or boggy lawn areas
  • Keeps water out of your basement or crawl space
  • Protects mulch from washouts and prevents plant root rot
  • Prevents patio or walkway erosion
  • Ensures your yard is usable after a storm.

Sometimes we grade as part of a bigger system: after drain installation, soil rebuilding, or before a new lawn or landscape install.

Average Yard Regrading Cost in Maryland 2026 Pricing

Scope Typical Cost Range
Light grading (1 side of house) $1,800 – $3,200
Moderate (2-3 sides, hand tools) $3,000 – $5,000
Full yard (machine grading)  $5,500 – $12,000+
Add topsoil or erosion matting  +$1,000 – $3,000

The primary pricing variables are access, yard size, and whether we will reseed afterward.

What Affects the Price of Grading Work?

  • Yard size and slope severity
  • Can we use machines, or is it all hand tools?
  • Do we need to protect existing gardens, fences, or patios?
  • Are we adding soil or just moving what’s there?
  • Will we reseed, resod, or leave it bare?

We price every job after walking it with the homeowner and showing the scope clearly. 

TLC’s Yard Regrading Checklist

Look for these signs that your yard might need regrading:

  • Water pools in certain spots for more than 24 hours after rain
  • The lawn slopes toward the home
  • You see dirt or mulch washing after storms
  • Gutters are working, but you still get seepage
  • The lawn feels soft, squishy, or uneven when you walk on it
  • Cracks have formed in walkways or near patios

Common Yard Grading Mistakes

  • No slope at all — just leveling flat
  • Grading to the house, not away
  • Using clay subsoil without topsoil
  • Skipping erosion control mats
  • Reseeding too soon or with the wrong blend

Regrading vs. French Drain vs. Swale

Solution Best For Cost Range
Regrading Broad slope correction  $2,000 – $12,000+
French drain Subsurface soggy zones  $3,000 – $7,500
Swale Directing surface flow across a lawn  $1,500 – $4,500

Often, we use both grading and drainage to fix the full water problem.

Real TLC Case Studies

Crofton, MD

The homeowner had a negative slope toward the back door. Water ran straight into the basement stairwell after every rain.

TLC’s solution:

  • Removed old paver patio
  • Laser-graded 1,200 sq ft yard
  • Added topsoil and re-seeded

Cost: $4,600

Result: Water drains away from the home. The basement has been dry ever since. The homeowner said, “We finally feel like the yard is working with us, not against us.”

Davidsonville, MD

A homeowner had a large backyard with standing water near the shed, killing the grass.

TLC’s solution:

  • Machine-graded the back 3rd of the yard (5,000 sq ft)
  • Blended in topsoil and compost
  • Rolled and seeded with erosion matting.

Total Cost: $9,800

Result: No more boggy turf. The lawn is healthy and dry. The homeowners called us after the first storm: “We’ve never seen water move off the yard like that.”

Severna Park, MD

This yard had a gentle slope toward the home. The gutters were fine, but water continued to seep into the crawl space.

TLC’s solution:

  • Hand-graded the foundation perimeter
  • Created a 6-foot-wide slope zone
  • Installed sod and downspout extensions

Cost: $3,900 

Result: Dry crawl space, healthy sod, and no more humidity alarm going off.

FAQs: Regrading in Maryland Yards

Q: Will regrading tear up my whole lawn?

A: Not always. Many jobs target one side or slope. We always minimize disruption and reseed where needed.

Q: Can I regrade myself with a shovel?

A: In small areas, yes. But if you need a consistent slope or blend of soils, it’s better to use a crew with tools.

Q: What if I have a fence, garden, or hardscaping nearby?

A: We protect or work around them. We often grade in tight spaces between structures.

Q: Does this fix foundation problems?

A: It prevents them. Grading is one of the best long-term foundation protection strategies.

Q: How long does it last?

A: Decades, if done right and maintained. Proper slope and turf roots hold soil in place long-term.

TLC’s Process for Regrading Work

  • Walk the site with the homeowner
  • Laser-check slope in multiple directions
  • Discuss goals: drainage, turf health, usability
  • Plan an access route for machines or hand work
  • Establish slope (2% recommended away from home)
  • Blend in topsoil and compact properly
  • Seed, sod, or erosion mat the surface
  • Check results after the first rainfall

We stay in touch after the installation to make sure things settle properly. 

Final Thoughts from the TLC Team

Most water problems don’t start with drains. They start with slope. And slope starts with grading. If your yard isn’t shedding water, your home is slowly absorbing it. But that’s fixable—with the right team and the right tools.

Let TLC show you the grade, the flow, and the plan. We’ve regraded thousands of yards across Maryland, from Annapolis to Glen Burnie to Bowie. Every job starts the same way: with a walkthrough and a conversation.

Contact TLC for Your Next Project

TLC Incorporated began as a small residential lawn sprinklers/irrigation service installation and maintenance business in 1981. Today, TLC Incorporated is recognized as a leader in the lawn sprinkler, outdoor lighting and decorative lighting field throughout the Mid-Atlantic region, including Maryland. Contact us today at (301) 215-2397 to get more information about your next irrigation or outdoor lighting project. Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook, Twitter (X), and LinkedIn!

This entry was posted on Saturday, December 13th, 2025 at 9:45 am. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.