French Drain Installation Suffolk County, NY

Stop the Water Before It Becomes a Real Problem

French drain installation in Suffolk County, NY designed for the soil, the water table, and the storms you actually deal with here.

Professional Site Prep

We prepare each area properly before work begins.

Clean, Reliable Work

Our crew keeps the project organized from start to finish.

Built for Long-Term Results

Every service is completed with durability in mind.

Why Choose Us

What Makes Our Work Different

Licensed and Fully Insured

We carry full general liability and workers’ compensation coverage protecting your property and your peace of mind from day one.

We Call 811 Before Digging

Every project starts with mandatory utility locating. Your gas lines, electrical conduit, and water mains stay safe no exceptions, no shortcuts.

Drainage Meets Landscaping

We restore your lawn and landscaping after installation so your yard looks right when we leave, not like a construction zone.

French Drain Services in Suffolk County, NY

Your Yard Shouldn't Look Like a Swamp After Every Storm

If water pools in your yard for days after it rains, or you’ve noticed moisture creeping into your basement after a nor’easter, you’re dealing with a drainage problem that isn’t going to fix itself. Long Island’s high water table, clay-heavy soils, and aging housing stock make this one of the most common property issues across Suffolk County, NY from Huntington and Northport down to Babylon, Islip, and Patchogue. A French drain system intercepts water before it reaches your foundation, redirects it away from your yard, and gives it somewhere to go. It’s a permanent solution not a pump you have to babysit, not a temporary fix that buys you one more season. We install residential French drain systems across Suffolk County, NY and we approach every project the way a landscaping company should: understanding how the drainage integrates with your property, not just digging a trench and walking away.

Residential French Drain Installation, Long Island

What Changes When Drainage Actually Works

A properly installed French drain system doesn't just move water it gives you your yard back and protects everything underneath it.

Your yard dries out after storms instead of staying soggy for days.
You stop worrying about basement seepage every time the forecast calls for heavy rain.
The landscaping you’ve already invested in sod, plantings, garden beds stops drowning in saturated soil.
Hydrostatic pressure against your foundation drops, reducing the risk of cracks, seepage, and long-term structural damage.
Your outdoor space becomes usable again no mud, no standing water, no sinking ground underfoot.
You protect your property’s value instead of watching water quietly erode it season after season.

French Drain Contractor in Suffolk County, NY

Long Island Drainage Has Its Own Rules

Suffolk County isn’t a generic market when it comes to drainage. The North Shore the Gold Coast corridor running through Huntington, Northport, Cold Spring Harbor, and Stony Brook sits on clay-heavy soil that holds water near the surface and drains slowly. Clay acts like a natural barrier, and decades of foot traffic and construction equipment compact it further. When it rains hard, that water has nowhere to go. The South Shore communities along Great South Bay Babylon, West Islip, Bay Shore, Islip deal with a different challenge: lower-lying terrain, sandy soils, and FEMA flood zone designations that make proper drainage a matter of insurance compliance as much as comfort. And across mid-island towns like Smithtown, Hauppauge, Commack, and Ronkonkoma, the mix of aging housing stock and a water table that sits just a few feet below grade creates the kind of chronic drainage problems that only get worse over time. We design French drain systems around these realities. In clay soil, that means using geotextile filter fabric around the trench and pipe without it, fine soil particles migrate into the gravel and clog the system within a few years. In lower-lying areas, it means careful outlet planning to ensure water discharges legally and effectively. This is the kind of local knowledge that matters when you’re making a 15-to-25-year investment in your property.

Water Drainage Contractor Suffolk County, NY

The Yard Gets Restored That's Part of the Job

One thing homeowners rarely hear upfront from drainage contractors: what happens to your yard after the trench is dug. Excavating a French drain system means opening up a significant section of your lawn. If the contractor’s job ends there, you’re left with a scarred yard and a landscaping bill from someone else. Because we’re a landscaping company first, restoration is built into the process. After the drain is installed and tested, the trench is backfilled, properly compacted, and the surface is graded and reseeded. You’re not calling a second contractor to fix what the first one tore up. That’s a real difference especially for homeowners in Dix Hills, Setauket, Port Jefferson, or anywhere else on Long Island where the yard is part of the property’s appeal, not just the space between the street and the front door.

Fast Quotes

Modern Equipment

Clean Finish

Our Process

How It Works

A simple process designed to keep everything clear, efficient, and stress-free from start to finish.

Free On-Site Assessment

We walk your property, identify where water originates, and map out how it needs to move before we quote anything.

System Design and Installation

We locate utilities through NY 811, then install your French drain system using properly sized pipe, washed gravel, and filter fabric matched to your soil type.

Restoration and Final Walkthrough

The trench is backfilled, graded, and reseeded. We walk you through the completed system so you know exactly what was installed and where water now goes.

FAQ | Common Questions

Answers Before You Get Started

Not sure where to begin? We’ve answered the most common questions about our process, services, timelines, and what you can expect when working with our team.

How much does French drain installation cost in Suffolk County, Long Island?
For exterior yard drainage systems in Suffolk County, most homeowners pay somewhere between $30 and $47 per linear foot, all-in. A typical residential property needs 60 to 100 linear feet of drain, which puts the total somewhere between $1,800 and $4,700 depending on scope, soil conditions, and where the water needs to be directed. More complex situations like properties with multiple drainage zones, dry well integration, or low-lying terrain near Great South Bay can run higher. Interior basement perimeter systems cost more, typically $74 to $89 per linear foot locally, because of the concrete cutting and sump pump work involved. The only way to give you an accurate number is to see your property. That’s why we always start with a free on-site assessment rather than a phone quote.
An exterior French drain is installed in your yard typically around the foundation perimeter or across a low-lying area of the lawn to intercept water before it reaches your home. It works by gravity, directing water away from the house toward a dry well, catch basin, or daylight outlet. An interior French drain is installed inside the basement, beneath the concrete floor, to capture water that’s already made it inside and route it to a sump pump. For homeowners in Suffolk County dealing with standing water in the yard, soggy lawns, or water pooling near the foundation, an exterior system is usually the right starting point. If water is already getting into the basement regularly, an interior system may also be part of the solution. We’ll tell you which one or which combination actually fits your situation after we see the property.
This is one of the most common complaints we hear from homeowners across the North Shore and the answer almost always comes down to soil. Much of Suffolk County, particularly in communities like Huntington, Northport, Smithtown, and Stony Brook, sits on clay-heavy soil that absorbs water slowly and holds it near the surface. Unlike sandy soil, clay doesn’t let water pass through easily it pools on top, saturates the root zone, and takes days to drain naturally. Add in Long Island’s high water table, which in many neighborhoods sits just a few feet below grade, and you’ve got a yard that simply has nowhere to send the water. A French drain system creates that path intercepting the water and directing it to a proper outlet so it moves off your property instead of sitting in it.
A properly installed French drain system in Suffolk County should last 15 to 25 years with minimal maintenance. The key phrase is “properly installed.” The most common reason systems fail early especially in Long Island’s clay-heavy soils is missing or inadequate filter fabric. Without geotextile fabric wrapping the trench and pipe, fine soil particles migrate into the gravel with every rainfall. Over time, that sediment accumulates and reduces the system’s ability to drain. Eventually it stops working altogether. We use filter fabric on every installation because in Suffolk County soil, it’s not optional it’s the difference between a system that holds up for two decades and one that clogs in five years. Beyond that, keeping outlet points clear of debris and doing a quick inspection after major storm seasons will keep your system running the way it should.
Permit requirements for French drain installation in Suffolk County depend on the scope of the project and where water is being discharged. Most exterior yard drainage installations don’t require a building permit, but there are important regulatory considerations regardless. New York State law requires utility locating through NY 811 before any excavation this is a legal requirement, not a suggestion, and we follow it on every project. Additionally, stormwater discharge must go to an approved outlet a dry well, a catch basin connected to an approved system, or daylight at a legal discharge point on your own property. You cannot legally direct drainage water onto a neighboring property. If your project involves a dry well or connects to any existing drainage infrastructure, additional approvals may apply. We’ll flag any permit or compliance questions during your assessment so nothing catches you off guard.
This is a question more people should ask before hiring a drainage contractor because the honest answer from a lot of companies is that the landscaping isn’t their problem. We do things differently. After your French drain system is installed and tested, we backfill the trench, compact the soil properly to prevent settling, and restore the surface with grading and reseeding. The goal is a yard that looks like work was done carefully, not like a crew came through and left. If you’ve invested in your lawn, your garden beds, or your landscaping in communities like Dix Hills, Port Jefferson, or Setauket, you shouldn’t have to hire a second contractor to repair what the first one disturbed. Restoration is part of the job not an add-on, not an afterthought.

Still Have Questions?

We’re here to help. Reach out today and our team will walk you through the next steps, answer your questions, and help you get started with confidence.

Cities we provide French Drain In