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Mills River, NC

Grading in Mills River.

Broad farm bottomland on the protected Mills River watershed, rising straight into the steepest Pisgah escarpment soils in Henderson County. We grade the lot you actually have — and keep the sediment out of the river. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.

3.7%
Floodplain slope
40.2%
Escarpment slope
0.79
Median lot (ac)
41%
Parcels ≥ 1ac
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
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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 grading in Mills River, NC?

Mills River carries the widest grading split of any town in Henderson County. The valley floor is broad farm bottomland — Dillard floodplain at a typical 3.7% grade and Tate/Tusquitee alluvial benches around 13–16.7% — while a couple of miles away the ground rises onto Porters, Unaka, and Ashe soils at 33.9–40.2%, with the county envelope reaching 95%. The extra constraint nowhere else has: the Mills River is a protected drinking-water source, so riparian erosion control is the defining job, not an afterthought. With a median Henderson County lot of 0.79 acres and over 3,639 new homes since 2020, most grading here is new-build pad, drainage, and sediment control.

Mills River is the valley with two grading jobs

Where Hendersonville’s defining question is the ridge and Fletcher’s is the bottom, Mills River is both at once. It’s the agricultural valley where the Mills River drops out of the Pisgah escarpment, so the bottomland is some of the broadest, flattest farm ground in Henderson County — Dillard floodplain at a typical 3.7% grade in the 0–8% band, with Tate and Tusquitee alluvial benches (13–16.7%) stepping up just above it. On that ground the grading problem isn’t the cut — it’s the water and the wet line.

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

The watershed sets the erosion-control bar

The Mills River is a protected drinking-water source for the region, which raises the sediment-control bar on every job near the channel. Any silt that escapes a graded site can reach the river, so we treat erosion control as the first task, not the last: silt fence and sediment traps in before the dozer moves, disturbed ground stabilized fast, and the riparian buffer left intact. Under NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973), disturbing more than one acre already requires an approved NC Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan — near a water-supply river we plan to that standard even on smaller jobs.

The Pisgah side still needs benching

The same valley rises hard toward the Pisgah National Forest and the North Mills River / Bent Creek edge, onto some of the steepest ground in the county: Porters (33.9% typical), Unaka (37.7%), and Ashe (40.2%, somewhat excessively drained), with the county slope envelope running to 95%. Those lots get a true benched cut-and-fill pad: cut the high side, build compacted fill in lifts on the low side, retain it, and control runoff so it doesn’t cut downslope toward the river.

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. Mills River’s spread of large agricultural tracts — 11.7% of county parcels run five acres or more — means many sites need clearing and real pad prep before a footing goes in.

Permits: where the 1-acre line falls here

Because the median Henderson County lot is 0.79 acres, smaller Mills River residential jobs can stay under North Carolina’s one-acre disturbance trigger (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)). But the large farm tracts here — 41% of county parcels are at least an acre — routinely cross it, requiring an approved E&SC plan filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity at $119/acre. As an incorporated town inside a protected water-supply watershed, Mills River may also apply local rules, so we confirm whether state DEMLR (Asheville office) or a delegated program has jurisdiction before any dirt moves. Detail: Henderson County permits.

Mills River valley soil NC089

Floodplain to forest: Dillard bottomland on the protected watershed, climbing to Ashe on the Pisgah escarpment.

3.7%
Floodplain (Dillard)
40.2%
Escarpment (Ashe)
0.79
Median lot (ac)
11.7%
Parcels ≥ 5 ac
Mills River / Henderson County ground

The soils under your Mills River lot.

Dominant USDA-NRCS series in Henderson County (survey NC089), ordered the way Mills River sits — protected-watershed floodplain first, climbing to the steep Pisgah escarpment — the numbers that decide whether your job is sediment control, 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
Tusquitee 16.7% 2–45% Well drained Standard level & compact
Evard 28.1% 6–70% Well drained Benched cut-and-fill
Porters 33.9% 8–95% Well drained Benched cut-and-fill
Unaka 37.7% 8–95% 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 Mills River floodplain to 95% on the steepest Pisgah escarpment series — Mills River carries lots at both ends.

FAQ

Grading in Mills River — common questions

What's different about grading a lot in Mills River, NC?
Mills River carries the widest grading split of any town in Henderson County. It’s the valley where the Mills River drops out of the Pisgah escarpment, so the bottomland is broad, flat farm ground — Dillard floodplain at a typical 3.7% grade and Tate/Tusquitee alluvial benches around 13–16.7% — while a few miles away the ground rises onto Porters, Unaka, and Ashe forest soils at 33.9–40.2%. The added constraint here is the river itself: the Mills River is a protected drinking-water source, so riparian erosion control is mandatory, not optional. Exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate.
Why does the Mills River watershed change how you grade a lot here?
Because the Mills River supplies drinking water to Asheville and Hendersonville, land-disturbing work in the watershed sits under stricter sediment-control expectations than an ordinary lot. Any sediment that escapes a graded site can reach the river, so on bottomland near the channel we treat erosion control as the first task, not the last: silt fence and sediment traps go in before the dozer moves, the Dillard floodplain pad is built up in compacted lifts above the seasonal wet line, and the disturbed area is stabilized fast. Under NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973), disturbing more than one acre already triggers an approved NC Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan; near a protected water-supply river we plan to that standard even on smaller jobs. We confirm the watershed and floodplain status of your specific parcel before any dirt moves.
Can I build on the Mills River floodplain bottomland?
Often yes, but the floodplain decides the whole approach. The valley-floor soil, Dillard, is nearly flat (3.7%) and only moderately well drained — it sits in the 0–8% band along the river where water collects and the table runs high. On that ground the grading job isn’t a cut, it’s a pad: strip topsoil, build engineered fill in compacted lifts above the wet line and any mapped flood elevation, slope positively away from the foundation, and tie into curtain or French drains where the soil stays damp. Lots on the Tate and Tusquitee benches just above the floodplain sit a little higher and drier and grade more easily. We read the floodplain map and the drainage class together before recommending anything.
How do you grade the steep Mills River lots that climb toward Pisgah?
The same valley that holds the flat farm bottoms rises hard toward the Pisgah National Forest and the Bent Creek / North Mills River side, onto some of the steepest ground in Henderson County. There the soils are Porters (typical 33.9%), Unaka (37.7%), and Ashe (40.2%, somewhat excessively drained), with the county envelope running all the way to 95%. Those lots need a true benched cut-and-fill pad: cut into the high side, build compacted fill in lifts on the low side, retain it, and control runoff so it doesn’t cut downslope toward the river. Mills River is unusual for putting flat floodplain leveling and steep escarpment benching within a couple of miles — we grade the lot you actually have.
Will I need a grading permit in Mills River 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 requires 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 — and 11.7% at five acres or more, common on Mills River’s farm tracts — many lots cross the one-acre line. Mills River is also an incorporated town inside a protected water-supply watershed, so we confirm whether the state DEMLR Asheville office or a local/watershed program has jurisdiction for your address. See our Henderson County permit guide.
Can you prepare a building pad for a new home in Mills River?
Yes — pad prep is steady work along the Mills River corridor. Henderson County has added roughly 3,639 homes since 2020 (about 6,175 since 2015), and Mills River’s spread of large agricultural tracts keeps it a busy split-lot market. On the flat Dillard bottomlands we build the pad up in compacted lifts above the wet line and the flood elevation, then shape positive drainage; on the Tate benches and the steeper Evard/Porters lots climbing toward Pisgah, 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 Mills River lots?
We do, and Mills River drives split the same way the lots do. On the flat valley bottoms the issue is a culvert and a crowned, well-shedding base so the drive doesn’t hold water across the Dillard floodplain. On the lots climbing onto Porters and Ashe ground toward Pisgah, it’s pitch, crowning, and culverts placed where runoff concentrates — placed badly, a steep Mills River drive cuts ruts and sheds sediment toward the river in the first big summer storm. A new connection to a state-maintained road such as NC 191 (Haywood Road) also needs an NCDOT driveway encroachment permit, separate from any E&SC plan. See driveway grading.
Which areas around Mills River do you serve?
All of the Mills River valley and the towns around it — Mills River, North Mills River, Etowah, Fletcher, Hendersonville, Horse Shoe, and the Pisgah/Bent Creek edge — plus neighboring Asheville just north and Brevard over the Transylvania line. We’re a Henderson County–based crew (Hendersonville, NC), so most Mills River jobs get a same-week site walk and a callback within 24hr.
Free estimate

Grading a lot in or around Mills River?

Floodplain pad on the watershed or a benched Pisgah-side lot — 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 →