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💧 Basement Waterproofing: what it costs in the GTA (2026)

Straight numbers from a family crew building here since 1979 — reviewed July 2026.

Typical range — typical interior waterproofing project:
$4,000 – $12,000
ScopeTypical 2026 range
Repairs$800–$2,500
typical interior waterproofing project$4,000–$12,000

Exterior excavation waterproofing costs more; interior systems work in any season.

What moves the price
Linear feet of wall treatedInterior vs exterior approachSump pump and drainage add-onsFinishing repairs after the fix

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Tighty Whitey Samm Simon, the LF Builders mascot

“The plastic-wrap test costs nothing and settles the humidity-or-leak argument in a day. Do it before you spend a dollar.”

— Tighty Whitey Samm Simon · renovation.reviews

The homeowner’s guide

Where basement water really comes from

Ninety percent of wet basements start outside at grade level: downspouts dumping at the wall, soil sloped toward the house, window wells without drainage. Toronto clay holds water against your foundation like a sponge, and hydrostatic pressure pushes it through any crack, cold joint, or tie-rod hole it finds. Before anyone sells you excavation, fix the cheap stuff: extend downspouts 6 feet, regrade the first 6 feet of soil away from the wall, clean the wells. Sometimes that's the whole cure.

Interior vs exterior waterproofing, straight up

Exterior means excavating to the footing, membraning the wall, and new weeping tile: the gold standard, and the expensive, landscaping-destroying one. Interior means a perimeter channel under the slab edge routing water to a sump: less invasive, works in any season, and handles most GTA situations at $70–$120 per linear foot. Interior doesn't stop water entering the block; it manages it before it reaches your floor. For a finished basement in clay soil, managed and dry beats theoretical and perfect.

Cracks: which ones matter

Hairline vertical shrinkage cracks in poured concrete are near-universal and mostly cosmetic; they get injected with polyurethane from inside in an afternoon. Horizontal cracks, stair-step cracks in block walls, or any crack you can fit a coin in are structural conversations, not DIY injection kits. Width matters less than pattern and change: mark the ends with pencil and a date. If it grows, call. If it weeps but doesn't grow, injection plus drainage usually closes the case.

Sump pumps and the insurance angle

A sump is your basement's last line, and it fails silently until the storm you needed it. Test it every spring: lift the float or pour a bucket in; it should kick on in seconds and shut off clean. Add a battery backup if your area browns out in storms, which is exactly when you need pumping. Worth knowing: several insurers discount for backwater valves and sump backups, and some GTA municipalities run subsidy programs for them. Ask before you buy; it's real money back.

Your once-a-season walk-around

Tick what checks out. Anything you can’t tick is worth a closer look.

Things people get told (that aren’t quite true)

“Waterproof paint fixes leaky basements”

It hides them for a season. Paint can't fight hydrostatic pressure; it bubbles and peels while water finds the next path. Money spent on paint is money not spent on drainage, which is the actual fix.

“A dry summer basement is a dry basement”

August tells you nothing. The test is March melt and those 50mm summer storms. If you've only lived through a dry season, keep the plastic-wrap test handy.

“Exterior excavation is always the right fix”

It's the most thorough and the most expensive, and for many GTA homes an interior system delivers the same dry floor for far less, without destroying gardens and driveways. The right answer depends on the wall, the water, and the finish level inside. Anyone with one answer for every house is selling their shovel.

How worried should you be?

1. What are you noticing?
2. Your downspouts…
3. The basement is…

The season calendar

SpringMelt season: watch walls weekly, test the sump
SummerBest time for interior systems; dry access
FallClean wells and gutters; extend downspouts before freeze
WinterWatch for ice at the foundation from roof melt
Questions we hear every week

What does basement waterproofing cost in Toronto?

Interior systems typically run $70–$120 per linear foot — $4,000–$12,000 for most homes in 2026. Exterior excavation is more, but not always necessary.

How do I tell seepage from condensation?

Tape a 12-inch square of plastic wrap to the wall for 24 hours. Moisture behind it means seepage through the wall; moisture on top means indoor humidity.

Does a wet basement always need excavation?

No. Interior weeping-tile systems with a sump handle most cases at lower cost, in any weather.

Is winter a bad time to waterproof?

Interior work is a great winter project — crews are available and it beats the spring melt.

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