When homeowners call us about installing a French drain, the first question they ask is: “How much does it cost?”
And the honest answer is: it depends.
But I always try to give them the full picture — not just a price range, but the “why” behind it. Because French drain pricing isn’t random. The costs go up or down based on a handful of very real, very predictable factors. The more you understand those, the easier it is to plan and budget without surprises.
So here’s what I tell homeowners in plain English.
Typical Cost Ranges for French Drains in Maryland (2026)
|
Drain Type / Scope |
Typical Cost Range |
|
Basic yard French drain |
$2,000 – $4,000 |
|
Medium (30–60 ft run) |
$3,500 – $6,500 |
|
Full yard or complex system |
$6,500 – $12,000+ |
These prices include excavation, pipe, gravel, filter fabric, discharge outlet (pop-up or dry well), and basic landscape restoration. Keep in mind: these are real-world estimates based on jobs we’ve done throughout Anne Arundel, Prince George’s, Howard, and Montgomery counties.
What Makes French Drain Costs Go Up?
Here are the biggest factors that drive cost:
1. Length of the Drain
French drain systems are priced largely by length. Every additional 10–15 feet of trench means: – More pipe – More gravel – More labor – More landscape restoration afterward
That’s why adding “just another 10 feet” can bump your cost by $500–$1,000 or more depending on the access.
2. Depth of the Trench
Not all French drains are created equal. Shallower systems (8”–12”) handle surface-level runoff. But if you’ve got subsurface water, we may need to dig 18–24 inches deep.
Deeper drains mean: – More soil to remove – More gravel backfill – More risk of hitting utilities – Additional compaction or slope control
Every extra inch of depth increases complexity — and cost.
3. Soil Type
Here in Maryland, we run into all kinds of soils: – Sandy in the Eastern Shore – Loamy in parts of Montgomery County – Dense, sticky clay in Bowie, Crofton, and Severna Park
Why it matters: – Clay slows drainage — often requires deeper or longer systems – Rocky soil makes excavation harder and slower – Loose soil needs extra stabilization with geotextile fabric
In other words, soil type can change both the design and the budget.
4. Access for Equipment
If we can get our mini-excavator into the yard, we’re faster, neater, and more efficient. But if your fence is too tight, the gate is blocked, or you’ve got delicate landscaping everywhere, we may need to dig by hand.
That can increase labor by 25–40% depending on the job size.
5. Discharge Method
Where the water goes matters. A French drain needs an outlet. Sometimes that’s a simple pop-up emitter. But in more complex jobs, we might need to: – Tie into a dry well – Install a sump pump + discharge line – Run 50–100 feet of pipe to daylight or a storm drain
The more complex the outlet, the more labor and materials involved.
6. Landscape Restoration
Trenching through sod, mulch, or decorative stone creates a mess. We always clean up and restore what we disturb, but some homeowners want full sod replacement, new mulch beds, or even paver resets.
We’re happy to do that — but it adds to the cost. In fact, on some jobs, restoration can be 15–30% of the total cost.
7. Tying in Downspouts or Add-Ons
If your French drain is part of a bigger system (i.e., we’re also rerouting downspouts, sump discharge, or connecting surface drains), each connection adds cost.
We do these add-ons all the time: – Y-adapters for gutter tie-ins – Catch basins for surface water – Cleanout ports for future maintenance
More components = more labor + more materials.
What Goes Into a Professional French Drain System (Our TLC Approach)
Here’s what our typical install includes: – Full site inspection and slope measurement – Utility locating (we call Miss Utility before we dig) – Trenching to appropriate depth (usually 12”–18”) – Lining trench with filter fabric – Installing perforated SDR or PVC drain pipe – Surrounding pipe with clean 3/4” gravel – Wrapping fabric over top – Optional pop-up, dry well, or discharge to daylight – Landscape restoration: seed, sod, mulch or gravel reset
And yes — we check the slope of the pipe from end to end. Every time.
Hidden Costs to Avoid (My Pro Tips)
Here’s what I tell every homeowner to watch for in a drainage quote:
🚫 No Filter Fabric
Cheap systems skip the filter fabric. That means soil gets into the gravel and pipe over time — and the system fails in 3–5 years.
🚫 Flat Pipes
Some installers lay pipes flat because it’s easier. But French drains need slope — even if it’s just 1% — to move water effectively.
🚫 No Defined Outlet
We’ve seen French drains that just end… nowhere. Water needs a place to go. Otherwise, you’re just creating a wet gravel trench.
🚫 Bare Minimum Gravel
The gravel around the pipe is what helps disperse water. Using only a thin layer (or mixing gravel with soil) means less effective drainage.
🚫 No Cleanouts
If your drain ever clogs, a cleanout lets us flush it fast. Without one, it may need to be dug up to fix.
Real-World TLC Drain Projects
🏡 Severna Park, MD — Backyard Swamp
A homeowner had a soggy backyard year-round. Their old French drain (installed 15 years ago) was clogged and flat.
What We Did: – Removed old system – Re-dug trench with slope – Installed 60 feet of new French drain – Connected 3 downspouts – Re-sodded entire yard edge
Total Cost: $7,800
Results: Yard now drains in under 6 hours. They can finally mow without leaving ruts.
🏡 Annapolis, MD — Basement Wall Saturation
Water was entering a finished basement during spring thaws. Interior sump couldn’t keep up.
What We Did: – Installed 45-foot exterior French drain along foundation – Added sump discharge outlet with pop-up emitter – Regraded mulch bed and added micro-drain in side yard
Total Cost: $5,400
Results: Dry basement, quieter sump, zero moisture issues in 18 months.
🏡 Bowie, MD — Front Yard Standing Water
Rainwater pooled near porch steps and iced over every winter.
What We Did: – Installed short 25-foot French drain – Connected downspout from porch gutter – Redirected to side yard pop-up emitter
Total Cost: $3,100
Results: No more standing water, no more ice patches. Safer, cleaner, and better curb appeal.
Cost Comparison: French Drain vs. Other Fixes
|
Fix Type |
Typical Cost (MD, 2026) |
Best For… |
|
Regrading only |
$1,500 – $4,500 |
Surface runoff issues on sloped lawns |
|
French Drain (yard) |
$3,000 – $8,000 |
Subsurface water, clay soil, or soggy zones |
|
Downspout burial only |
$200 – $500 per unit |
Concentrated roof runoff |
|
Dry well |
$1,000 – $3,000 |
Discharge outlet in tight urban areas |
|
Full system (French + regrade + discharge) |
$6,000 – $12,000+ |
Multi-zone or large-property solutions |
Final Thoughts From Bob
French drains are one of the best long-term solutions for a soggy yard or wet foundation. But they need to be built right — and priced honestly.
At TLC, we don’t do bait-and-switch. We walk your yard, explain the real costs, and build systems that last 20+ years.
If someone’s quoting half the price, ask what they’re skipping. And if you want a quote that includes everything — excavation, pipe, gravel, filter fabric, slope control, outlets, and clean restoration — we’re ready.
📞 Call (410) 721-2342 or request your drainage estimate at AskBobCarr.com
Because good drainage isn’t cheap — and bad drainage isn’t worth the risk.