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Fletcher, NC

Grading & excavation in Fletcher.

Down on the French Broad valley floor it’s leveling and drainage on Cane Creek bottomland; on the shoulders east of US 25 it’s benched cut-and-fill. We grade the Henderson County lot you actually have. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.

3.7%
Valley slope
40.2%
Shoulder slope
0.79
Median lot (ac)
41%
Parcels ≥ 1ac
Prefer to talk? (828) 944-9618
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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?

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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
What's different about grading in Fletcher, NC?

Fletcher sits on the French Broad valley floor between Asheville and Hendersonville, so it’s the flat side of Henderson County’s grading story. Lots near Cane Creek, Hoopers Creek, and the WNC Agricultural Center sit largely on Dillard bottomland at a typical 3.7% grade and Tate benches around 13% — here the work is leveling, compaction, and drainage, because Dillard soil is only moderately well drained. Lots climbing east onto Evard (28.1%) and Ashe (40.2%) shoulders still need benched cut-and-fill. With a median Henderson County lot of 0.79 acres and over 3,639 new homes since 2020, most Fletcher grading is new-build pad and drainage work.

Fletcher is the valley-floor job

Where Hendersonville’s defining question is the ridge, Fletcher’s is the bottom. The town straddles the French Broad valley floor between the Asheville Regional Airport and the WNC Agricultural Center, with Cane Creek and Hoopers Creek running through it. Most of its buildable ground sits on Dillard bottomland — a typical 3.7% grade in the 0–8% band — and on Tate and Hayesville toe-slope benches around 13%. On near-flat ground the grading problem isn’t the cut, it’s the water.

That matters because Dillard is only moderately well drained. On a valley lot the pad has to be built up in compacted lifts above the seasonal wet line, shaped so water leaves the foundation, and tied into surface drainage or curtain drains where the soil stays damp. Skip that and a flat Fletcher lot holds water against the slab.

The shoulders still need benching

Fletcher is unusual in Henderson County for carrying both jobs within a few miles. Climb east and south of US 25 toward Hoopers Creek and the Buncombe line and the ground rises onto Evard (28.1% typical) and steeper Ashe shoulders (40.2%, somewhat excessively drained). Those lots get the same benched cut-and-fill pad as a ridge in Laurel Park: cut the high side, build compacted fill on the low side, hold it with retaining and erosion control.

New construction is the steady work

Henderson County has been one of WNC’s busiest building markets — roughly 3,639 homes since 2020 and about 6,175 since 2015 — and Fletcher’s position on the I-26 corridor keeps it building. Much of it needs real pad prep before a footing goes in, and with 41% of county parcels at or above an acre, plenty of sites also need clearing first.

Permits: where the 1-acre line falls here

Because the median Henderson County lot is 0.79 acres, many Fletcher 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 larger 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. As an incorporated town, Fletcher may also apply local development rules, so we confirm whether state DEMLR (Asheville office) or a delegated program has jurisdiction before any dirt moves. Detail: Henderson County permits.

Fletcher valley soil NC089

Valley-floor town: Dillard bottomland in the lows, Ashe on the shoulders east of US 25.

3.7%
Valley slope (Dillard)
40.2%
Shoulder slope (Ashe)
0.79
Median lot (ac)
3,639
Homes since 2020
Fletcher / Henderson County ground

The soils under your Fletcher lot.

Dominant USDA-NRCS series in Henderson County (survey NC089), ordered the way Fletcher sits — valley bottom first, climbing to the steep shoulders — the numbers that decide whether your job is drainage or cut-and-fill.

Henderson County dominant soil series — source: USDA-NRCS Web Soil Survey (NC089)
Soil seriesTypical slopeSlope rangeDrainage classGrading implication
Dillard 3.7% 0–8% Moderately well drained Level + engineered drainage
Tate 13% 2–30% Well drained Standard level & compact
Hayesville 13% 2–30% Well drained Standard level & compact
Evard 28.1% 6–70% Well drained Benched cut-and-fill
Ashe 40.2% 8–95% Somewhat excessively drained Benched cut-and-fill

County envelope: slope ranges from 0% on the Fletcher valley floor to 95% on the steepest ridge series — Fletcher lots cluster toward the low end.

FAQ

Grading in Fletcher — common questions

What's different about grading a lot in Fletcher, NC?
Fletcher sits on the floor of the French Broad valley between Asheville and Hendersonville — flatter ground than most of Henderson County. The town’s buildable lots near Cane Creek, Hoopers Creek, and the WNC Agricultural Center sit largely on Dillard bottomland (a typical 3.7% grade) and Tate/Hayesville toe-slope benches around 13%. That makes the dominant job here leveling, compaction, and drainage rather than the deep benched cut-and-fill the higher Henderson ridges demand. Exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate.
Why is drainage the main grading issue on Fletcher valley lots?
Because Fletcher’s low ground is genuinely low ground. The dominant valley soil, Dillard, is only moderately well drained — it sits in the 0–8% bottomland band along Cane Creek and the French Broad, where water collects rather than sheds. On a near-flat 3.7% lot the grading problem isn’t cutting a bench, it’s building a pad that won’t sit wet: precise sub-grade leveling, engineered fill keyed above the seasonal water table, positive slope away from the foundation, and often curtain or French drains. We read the drainage class of your specific lot before recommending anything.
Do any Fletcher lots still need cut-and-fill?
Yes — the lots that climb out of the valley do. East and south of US 25 toward Hoopers Creek and the Henderson–Buncombe line, the ground rises onto Evard (typical 28.1%) and, higher still, Ashe shoulders at 40.2%. Those lots need the same benched cut-and-fill pad as a Hendersonville ridge: cut the high side, build compacted fill in lifts on the low side, hold it with retaining and erosion control. Fletcher is unusual in Henderson County for having both jobs side by side — valley-floor leveling and ridge benching within a few miles. We grade the lot you actually have.
Will I need a grading permit in Fletcher or Henderson County?
It depends on disturbed area, not town limits. Under NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973), disturbing more than one acre on a tract triggers an approved NC Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan, filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity, at $119 per acre (effective 2025-07-01). With Henderson County’s median lot at 0.79 acres and 41% of parcels at or above one acre, many Fletcher residential jobs stay under the state trigger. But Fletcher is an incorporated town with its own development rules, so we confirm whether the state DEMLR Asheville office or a local program has jurisdiction for your address. See our Henderson County permit guide.
Can you prepare a building pad for a new home in Fletcher?
Yes — pad prep is steady work along the I-26 / Fletcher corridor. Henderson County has added roughly 3,639 homes since 2020 (about 6,175 since 2015), and Fletcher’s valley location keeps it a busy build market. On the flat Dillard bottomlands we strip topsoil, build the pad in compacted lifts above the wet line, and shape positive drainage; on the valley-edge Evard lots we cut and key the fill into firm ground to the engineer’s spec. See site preparation for the full scope.
Do you grade gravel driveways on Fletcher lots?
We do. On the flat valley lots the driveway issue is usually a culvert and a crowned, well-shedding base so the drive doesn’t hold water across the Dillard bottom. On the lots climbing onto Evard and Ashe ground east of town, it’s pitch, crowning, and culverts placed where runoff concentrates, or the first big summer storm cuts ruts. A new connection to a state-maintained road such as US 25 also needs an NCDOT driveway encroachment permit, separate from any E&SC plan. See driveway grading.
Which areas around Fletcher do you serve?
All of the Fletcher and Mills River corridor and the towns around it — Fletcher, Mills River, Hendersonville, Naples, Avery Creek, and Arden — plus neighboring Asheville just north across the Buncombe line. We’re a Henderson County–based crew (Hendersonville, NC), so most Fletcher jobs get a same-week site walk and a callback within 24hr.
Free estimate

Grading a lot in or around Fletcher?

Valley-floor drainage or a benched shoulder pad — tell us where the lot is 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 →