A WNC crew that reads the slope before it moves the dirt.
Ridgeline Grading is a Hendersonville-based grading & excavation outfit working 8 Western North Carolina counties — Buncombe, Henderson, Transylvania, Haywood and the mountains around them. We grade for the ground you actually have.
Ridgeline Grading is a Hendersonville, NC–based grading and excavation crew serving 8 Western North Carolina counties, with its core work in Buncombe (survey NC021), Henderson (NC089), Transylvania (NC175), and Haywood (NC606). It does mountain site work — rough and fine grading, cut-and-fill, land clearing, building-pad prep, driveway grading, and drainage — on ground where the dominant soils sit at a typical 27.8% to 40.2% grade. Rather than price off a national per-acre table, Ridgeline reads each lot’s soil series, slope, and rock on a free site walk, because WNC grading is decided by what’s under the lot, not by its acreage.
What we do
Ridgeline Grading is a single-crew, owner-run site-work outfit built for one kind of ground: Western North Carolina mountain lots. We cut and shape building pads, clear and grub lots, fix drainage and washouts, build gravel driveways that hold a grade, and prep mobile-home pads — across Asheville, Hendersonville, Brevard, Waynesville and the towns between them. Flatland grading is volume and elevation; WNC grading is volume, elevation, slope, rock, and water, all at once. That’s the trade we specialize in.
Why “read the slope first” isn’t a slogan
The soils under our four core counties are well-drained mountain series — Buncombe’s Evard (34.8% typical), Henderson’s ridge Ashe (40.2%, somewhat excessively drained), Transylvania’s Unaka (37.6%), and Haywood’s Wayah (27.8%) — sitting over weathered saprolite that grades like soil in one spot and turns to rock a few feet over. A ridge lot needs a benched cut-and-fill pad placed in compacted lifts and keyed into firm ground; a valley lot on near-flat, only-moderately-drained bottomland needs leveling and engineered drainage instead. Opposite jobs, set by elevation. Reading that before the first cut is the whole job.
The ground sets the work
The mix of jobs we run follows the mix of lots here. Around Hendersonville the median Henderson County parcel is just 0.79 acres, so much of the work is tight residential pad prep and driveways — and with roughly 3,639 homes built in the county since 2020, new-construction site prep stays steady. Out in Transylvania the median lot is 1.24 acres and 21.3% of parcels run over five acres, so the work shifts toward larger clear-and-grade jobs. We size the crew and the iron to the lot in front of us.
Licensed, insured, and straight about permits
Ridgeline is licensed and insured. North Carolina doesn’t require a statewide license for most grading under the general-contractor threshold, but the work is regulated: cross one acre of disturbance on a tract and NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973) requires an approved Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity, at $119 per acre. We confirm whether the state DEMLR Asheville office or a delegated county program has jurisdiction for your address before any dirt moves, and put erosion control in first. Full detail: our NC land grading permits guide.
How we work with you
One number, one crew, a written scope. We come out, read the slope and soil, talk through what you’re building, and put a real estimate in writing — cut volume, rock risk, access, and drainage all called out. No invented dollar tables, no per-acre guesses sight-unseen. Reach out and we’ll walk it.
The four WNC survey areas Ridgeline works most — well-drained mountain soils on steep, rocky grades.
The ground Ridgeline grades, county by county.
Our four core survey areas and the dominant soil series under each — the real numbers behind every cut-and-fill quote. Slope range is the county envelope; “typical” is the most-common grade for that dominant series; median lot is from NC OneMap parcels.
| County | Survey | Dominant series | Typical slope | Slope range | Median lot |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buncombe | NC021 | Clifton | 16% | 2–95% | 0.55 ac |
| Henderson | NC089 | Ashe | 40.2% | 0–95% | 0.79 ac |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Unaka | 37.6% | 2–95% | 1.24 ac |
| Haywood | NC606 | Wayah | 27.8% | 2–95% | 0.92 ac |
Across the four counties, dominant-series slope runs from valley bottoms near 0% to ridge ground reaching 95% — which is exactly why we quote off a site walk, not acreage.
Four steps, no surprises.
The same process on every job, from a half-acre driveway in Hendersonville to a five-acre clear-and-grade in Brevard.
Walk the site
We read the slope, soil series, and rock, and talk through what you’re building.
Stake & estimate
A written scope — cut volume, access, drainage, and what drives the price on your ground.
Clear & grade
Erosion control in, then we cut, fill in compacted lifts, and shape to plan.
Final grade
Fine grade to elevation, drainage checked, site left clean and ready to build.
About Ridgeline Grading — common questions
What is Ridgeline Grading and where does it work?
Why does Ridgeline say it 'reads the slope before it moves the dirt'?
How many counties does Ridgeline Grading serve?
Is Ridgeline Grading licensed and insured?
What kinds of jobs does Ridgeline take on?
Does Ridgeline handle grading permits in WNC?
How do I get an estimate from Ridgeline Grading?
What makes Ridgeline different from an out-of-area grading contractor?
Got a WNC lot that needs grading?
Tell us where the lot is and what you're building — Asheville to Waynesville. We'll walk it and put a real number in writing, free.