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Asheville, NC

Grading contractors for Asheville & Buncombe County.

From benched ridge pads above Town Mountain and Beaverdam to tight West Asheville infill lots — we grade the Buncombe County ground you actually have. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.

34.8%
Ridge slope
0.55
Median lot (ac)
30%
Parcels ≥ 1ac
NC021
Soil survey
Prefer to talk? (828) 944-9618
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Project size
Under ¼ acre ¼–1 acre 1–5 acres 5+ acres
Timeline
ASAP 1–3 months Just planning
Where’s the job?

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A Ridgeline estimator will call within 24 hours to schedule your free on-site estimate. Need it sooner? Call (828) 944-9618.

Licensed & insured 15+ years in WNC Free on-site quote
What's different about hiring grading contractors in Asheville, NC?

Asheville grading is set by Buncombe County’s slope split. Ridge lots above town — toward Town Mountain, Beaverdam, and Reynolds — sit on Evard and Burton soils at a typical 34.8–40.8% grade and need benched cut-and-fill with retaining. Cove, terrace, and West Asheville infill lots on Tate and Braddock soils run a gentle 11.6–14.4%, where the work is leveling and drainage. With WNC’s tightest median lot at just 0.55 acres and only 30% of parcels reaching an acre, most Asheville jobs stay under the one-acre state permit trigger.

The Asheville slope split

Most buildable ground in Buncombe County falls into two very different grading jobs, and which one you have is set by elevation. Down in the French Broad and Swannanoa valleys and on the older terraces — West Asheville, Kenilworth, Oakley, parts of Arden — you’re on Braddock (well drained), Tate, and Clifton soils at a gentle 11.6–16% grade. That ground mostly needs precise leveling, compaction, and drainage rather than heavy cutting.

Climb the shoulders toward Town Mountain, Beaverdam, Reynolds, and the Blue Ridge Parkway and the picture flips. Here the soils are Evard and Burton — well-drained but steep, a typical 34.8% and 40.8% grade and running as steep as 95% in spots. These need a benched cut-and-fill pad: cut the high side, build compacted fill on the low side, and hold it with retaining and erosion control.

The tightest lots in Western North Carolina

Buncombe County has the smallest median lot of any WNC county we serve — 0.55 acres across 90,626 parcels, with only 30% reaching a full acre and 5.7% reaching five. That reflects Asheville’s dense urban core: a lot of the work here is confined-access infill grading where protecting the neighbor’s line, the right-of-way, and existing trees matters as much as the cut itself. On the larger ridge and county parcels, sites still need real pad prep and often clearing first.

Permits: where the 1-acre line falls here

Because the median Asheville-area lot is just 0.55 acres, a large share of residential grading jobs stay under North Carolina’s one-acre disturbance trigger (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)). Cross it — on a bigger tract or a multi-lot clearing — and you need an approved E&SC plan filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity at $119/acre. The City of Asheville and Buncombe County also run local grading and stormwater rules, so we confirm whether the state DEMLR Asheville Regional Office or a local program has jurisdiction before any dirt moves. Detail: Buncombe County permits.

Buncombe County soil NC021

Valley-to-ridge split: Tate in the coves, Evard & Burton on the heights.

34.8%
Ridge slope (Evard)
14.4%
Valley slope (Tate)
0.55
Median lot (ac)
30%
Parcels ≥ 1 acre
Buncombe County ground

The soils under your Asheville lot.

Dominant USDA-NRCS series in Buncombe County (survey NC021), from valley terrace to high ridge — the numbers that decide whether your job is leveling or cut-and-fill.

Buncombe County dominant soil series — source: USDA-NRCS Web Soil Survey (NC021)
Soil seriesTypical slopeSlope rangeDrainage classGrading implication
Braddock 11.6% 2–30% Well drained Level, compact & drain
Tate 14.4% 2–30% Well drained Level, compact & drain
Clifton 16% 2–50% Well drained Partial bench + erosion control
Evard 34.8% 8–95% Well drained Benched cut-and-fill + retaining
Burton 40.8% 8–95% Well drained Benched cut-and-fill + retaining

County envelope: slope across Buncombe’s dominant series ranges from 2% on the valley terraces to 95% on the steepest ridge ground.

FAQ

Grading contractors in Asheville — common questions

How much do grading contractors charge in Asheville, NC?
There is no flat per-acre rate for Asheville grading — the price is set by how much earth moves, the slope, and how much rock is in the cut. Buncombe County’s ground splits hard: cove and terrace lots on Tate and Braddock soils sit at a gentle 14.4–11.6% grade and mostly need leveling, while ridge lots above town on Evard and Burton soils run a typical 34.8–40.8% and need benched cut-and-fill. With a Buncombe median lot of just 0.55 acres — the tightest in WNC — many in-town jobs stay well under the one-acre permit trigger. Exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate.
Why is grading harder on Asheville ridge lots than on city infill lots?
It comes down to slope and the soil under it. Asheville’s in-town and West Asheville infill parcels often sit on Clifton and Tate soils — well-drained foothill ground at a typical 16% and 14.4% grade that grades close to flat. Climb toward Town Mountain, Beaverdam, Reynolds, or the Blue Ridge Parkway shoulders and you hit Evard, Burton, and Cowee soils at 34.8–40.8%, running as steep as 95%. Those need a benched cut-and-fill pad built in compacted lifts with retaining and erosion control — a fundamentally different and costlier job than leveling a flat valley lot.
Do I need a grading permit in Buncombe County?
It depends on disturbed area. Under NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973), any land-disturbing activity that uncovers more than one acre on a tract requires an approved NC Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan, filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity, at $119 per acre. Because the Buncombe County median lot is only 0.55 acres and just 30% of parcels reach an acre, a large share of Asheville-area residential jobs stay under the state trigger. But the City of Asheville and Buncombe County run their own grading and stormwater rules on top of the state plan, so we confirm whether the state DEMLR Asheville Regional Office or a local program has jurisdiction for your address. See our Buncombe County permit guide.
Can you prepare a building pad for a new home on an Asheville hillside?
Yes — hillside pad prep is the core of mountain grading. On the Evard and Burton ridges that ring Asheville, we cut the high side, build engineered fill on the low side in compacted lifts keyed into firm ground, and shape the lot so water sheds away from the foundation. On the tighter West Asheville and Kenilworth infill lots, where the median Buncombe parcel is just 0.55 acres, the challenge flips to working in confined access and protecting the neighbor’s lot line. We compact to the engineer’s spec and can document it. See site preparation for the full scope.
Do you grade gravel driveways on steep Asheville lots?
We do — and steep driveways are where Asheville grades bite hardest. A drive climbing an Evard or Burton ridge above town needs the right pitch, a crowned surface that sheds water, and culverts set where runoff actually concentrates, or the first hard summer storm off the Blue Ridge washes it out. A new connection to a state-maintained road also needs an NCDOT driveway encroachment permit, separate from any E&SC plan. See driveway grading for how we build a drive that holds its grade.
What about drainage and rock on Buncombe County lots?
Buncombe’s dominant Clifton, Tate, and Evard soils are all well drained, so on the slopes water moves fast and concentrates downhill — the grading job is steering that runoff away from the pad with surface shaping and French or curtain drains where it collects. Rock is the other Asheville variable: the steeper Evard, Burton, and Cowee ridges sit over weathered saprolite that rips with a dozer in some spots and turns to hard rock in others. We flag rock on the site walk first, because it changes both the method and the price.
Which areas in and around Asheville do you serve?
All of Buncombe County and the towns around it — Asheville, West Asheville, Black Mountain, Candler, Weaverville, Swannanoa, Fairview, and Arden — plus neighboring Hendersonville and Fletcher in Henderson County. We’re a WNC-based crew (Hendersonville, NC), so most Asheville-area jobs get a same-week site walk and a callback within 24hr.
Free estimate

Grading a lot in or around Asheville?

Ridge bench or tight infill lot — tell us where it is in Buncombe County and what you're building. We'll walk it and quote it free.

Prefer to talk? (828) 944-9618
Free Site Estimate Step 1 of 3

What do you need done?

Pick the closest — you can add detail next.

A few quick details

Project size
Under ¼ acre ¼–1 acre 1–5 acres 5+ acres
Timeline
ASAP 1–3 months Just planning
Where’s the job?

Where do we send the estimate?

No spam — we only call to schedule your free on-site estimate.

You’re all set.

A Ridgeline estimator will call within 24 hours to schedule your free on-site estimate. Need it sooner? Call (828) 944-9618.

Licensed & insured 15+ years in WNC Free on-site quote
Call Free estimate →