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Polyjacking in Lincoln, NE — Foam Concrete Lifting

Polyjacking uses high-density polyurethane foam injected under your sunken slab. The foam expands, lifts the slab to level, and cures in 15 minutes. It's the modern alternative to traditional mudjacking.

Why Polyjacking

  • Light — the foam weighs ~4 lbs/cubic foot vs ~115 lbs for cement slurry. Won't add weight to weak soil.
  • Fast cure — drive on it in 15 minutes
  • Tight access — works in spaces where a slurry pump can't reach
  • Waterproof — foam doesn't wash out or erode
  • Precise — finer control over how much the slab lifts

When Polyjacking Is the Best Choice

  • Driveways over soft or eroded soil
  • Areas with high water table
  • Tight spaces (basements, crawlspaces, around utilities)
  • Slabs you need back in service immediately
  • Long-term repairs (foam doesn't degrade)

Polyjacking Cost in Lincoln

Polyjacking typically runs 30–50% more than mudjacking. A driveway section that costs $1,500 to mudjack might be $2,200 to polyjack. The premium pays off when conditions favor foam (weak soil, tight access) or when speed matters.

Mudjacking vs Polyjacking — Quick Decision

Choose mudjacking if: standard slab, decent soil, budget matters most.

Choose polyjacking if: weak soil, tight access, fast cure needed, long-term durability.

When in doubt, call — we'll inspect and recommend.

Polyjacking — Quick Answers

How long does polyjacking take to cure? +

Polyurethane foam cures in about 15 minutes. You can drive on the slab almost immediately. That's the main reason commercial property managers prefer it.

Is polyjacking worth the higher cost? +

It depends. Polyjacking runs 30–50% more than mudjacking. The premium pays off on weak soil, tight access, or when speed matters. For standard residential driveways on decent soil, mudjacking is usually the better value.

Will polyjacking foam break down over time? +

No. Polyurethane foam doesn't wash out, erode, or biodegrade. That's why polyjacked slabs often stay level longer than mudjacked ones — though both methods can last decades when soil conditions are stable.