Foundation correction, not just surface leveling.
Settled, rocking, or sunken pavers are a tripping hazard and a drainage problem that gets worse the longer it's ignored. Our releveling process corrects the root cause — failed base material — rather than just shimming the surface back into position. We lift, rebase, level, and reinstall so the repair holds for years, not seasons.
Uneven pavers are one of those problems homeowners often defer because the surface is still functional — just inconvenient. What most don't realize is that settlement accelerates over time. Once the base layer beneath a paver section begins to fail, rainwater from Florida's intense storms finds its way under adjacent sections, the soil continues to compact or erode, and what started as two sunken pavers becomes a twelve-paver section within a year or two. The repair cost grows with the scope. Addressing settled pavers early, when the failure is contained, is almost always the less expensive choice.
The root cause of paver settlement in Southwest Florida is almost always a failed base — not the pavers themselves. Sandy soil compacts under load, rain intensity in Florida exceeds what the base installation anticipated, and root intrusion from nearby palms and tropical plants disrupts the bedding layer in ways that surface shimming can't address. Our process lifts the affected pavers, excavates and removes the degraded base material, installs fresh crushed stone and bedding sand to the correct depth, compacts in lifts, and reinstalls the original pavers to the correct height, plane, and drainage pitch.
We use the existing pavers whenever possible. Unless a paver is cracked during extraction — which is uncommon with careful removal technique — the same material goes back in. The cost of releveling is in the labor and base materials, not in paver replacement. After reinstallation, polymeric joint sand is swept into all disturbed joints and mechanically compacted, and a final level check confirms the drainage pitch is correct before we close out the job. What you get is a surface that behaves as it was originally designed to — not one shimmed back to roughly level.
Southwest Florida's climate accelerates surface wear. Here are the most common indicators that it's time to call.
Pavers rock or shift underfoot
Rocking pavers mean the base beneath them has failed. Every step pumps water and debris further under the surface, accelerating settlement in the surrounding area.
Visible height difference between adjacent pavers
A lip or edge that catches your foot is a tripping hazard. It also signals the base in that zone has shifted unevenly — the difference will grow if left alone.
Water pooling where it didn't before
Drainage pitch is set during installation. When pavers settle, the pitch changes and water begins pooling in low spots. Pooled water accelerates further base erosion beneath those sections.
Joint sand washed out in the settled area
When the base fails, joints open up and joint sand washes away in rain events. Open joints are a sign of active settlement and an entry point for more water and root infiltration.
A sunken section near a tree or garden bed
Root intrusion is one of the most common causes of localized settlement in Florida. Roots from palms, oaks, and tropical plants grow under paver installations and displace the bedding layer.
A thorough, step-by-step approach that produces results that last.
We walk the entire surface and mark all settled, rocking, or uneven pavers. Defining the full scope before lifting begins prevents repeated disruption and ensures the repair addresses all problem areas.
Marked pavers are carefully removed and set aside. We inspect each one during extraction for cracks or damage that might affect reinstallation.
The exposed base area is water-jetted to flush out loose material, root debris, and anything else that has accumulated under the failed section.
All degraded base material — whether eroded sand, unstable bedding, or displaced aggregate — is excavated and hauled away. The root cause of the settlement is removed, not buried.
Fresh base material (crushed stone and bedding sand) is installed to the proper depth for the paver thickness and load the surface will carry.
The new base is wetted and mechanically tamped in lifts to achieve firm, stable compaction. Tamping depth and moisture are controlled to prevent future settlement.
Using string lines and levels, we establish the correct height, surface plane, and drainage pitch before any pavers go back in. Getting this right at this stage is what separates a lasting repair from a temporary fix.
The original pavers are returned to position and set precisely to the established height and pitch. We use the existing pavers whenever possible — no unnecessary replacement cost.
A plate compactor is run across the reinstalled section to seat the pavers firmly into the bedding layer and bring the surface into its final plane.
Polymeric joint sand is swept into all disturbed joints and compacted in to stabilize the surface, resist weed infiltration, and lock the pavers in position.
The completed section is checked for level, drainage pitch, joint consistency, and visual match with surrounding pavers before the job is closed out.
Releveling is priced by area and severity. Small spot repairs in SW Florida typically run $300–$600; larger sections involving drainage correction or extensive base replacement cost more. We assess and quote on-site before any work begins.
Yes. In most SW Florida cases we can lift, rebase, and reinstall the existing pavers. Unless pavers are cracked or badly stained, replacement isn't necessary — the problem is the base, not the pavers themselves.
In SW Florida, the primary causes are sandy soil compaction under load, root intrusion from nearby trees, and water erosion beneath the base layer — all accelerated by Florida's rain intensity. We remove the failed base material and replace it properly rather than shimming over the problem.
Yes. After tamping the reinstalled pavers we refill all disturbed joints with fresh polymeric sand and compact it in. This is included in the releveling scope — we don't leave open joints.
Both, and the structural side matters more. Rocking pavers are a tripping hazard, but they also allow water to pool and penetrate the base, which accelerates further settlement. Correcting it early is almost always cheaper than waiting.
Each link below goes to a dedicated page for paver releveling in that city.
We'll come out, assess the surface, and give you an honest quote before any work begins. No pressure, no obligation.
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