Grading & excavation for mountain ground.
Cut-and-fill, slope work, and excavation across Buncombe, Henderson, Transylvania and Haywood — priced off the slope and rock on your lot, not a national calculator.
Grading in WNC is priced by the cut — how much earth has to move, how steep the ground is, and how much rock is in it — not by a flat per-acre rate. Buncombe’s dominant Evard soils sit on a typical 34.8% slope, and Henderson’s ridge Ashe soils typify 40.2%, so most building sites need benched cut-and-fill plus erosion control. Jobs disturbing more than one acre also need an NC E&SC plan with a $119/acre fee. We give an exact number after a free site walk.
Why mountain grading is its own trade
Flatland grading is volume and elevation. WNC grading is volume, elevation, slope, rock, and water — all at once. The soils that dominate our ridges (Evard, Cowee, Edneyville in Buncombe and Transylvania; Ashe, Porters, Unaka in Henderson) are well-drained but steep, sitting over weathered saprolite that rips in some spots and turns to rock in others. Move dirt without reading that, and you get settlement, washout, or a pad that won’t pass inspection.
Cut-and-fill, done so it holds
Nearly every building site on a WNC ridge needs benching — cutting the high side and building a compacted fill bench on the low side. The difference between a bench that lasts 30 years and one that cracks the foundation is whether fill went in in lifts, compacted, and keyed into firm ground. We compact to spec and can document it for the engineer of record.
The 1-acre line, and why it matters before you dig
North Carolina’s Sedimentation Pollution Control Act (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)) draws a hard line at one acre of disturbance. Over it, you need an approved Erosion & Sedimentation Control plan filed 30 or more days prior to initiating the activity, at $119 per acre (2025-07-01). Under it, a state plan generally isn’t required — but sediment control is still best practice and a delegated county program may have its own rule. We sort jurisdiction first. Full detail lives in our NC land grading permits guide and the per-county Buncombe and Henderson permit pages.
What drives your price
Three things move the number more than anything else: how steep the lot is, how much rock is in the cut, and how hard the site is to get equipment onto. A flat valley pad on Tate or Hayesville soil is straightforward; a benched ridge site on 40% Ashe with saprolite is a different job. Photos and real dollar ranges come from your on-site estimate — we don’t publish invented tables, because they’re wrong for mountain ground.
Dominant well-drained Evard series — the soil under most Asheville-area ridge lots.
What the slope actually is, by county.
Dominant USDA-NRCS soil series and slope for each county we serve — 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.
| County | Survey | Dominant series | Typical slope | Slope range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buncombe | NC021 | Clifton | 16% | 2–95% |
| Henderson | NC089 | Ashe | 40.2% | 0–95% |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Unaka | 37.6% | 2–95% |
| Haywood | NC606 | Wayah | 27.8% | 2–95% |
What grading actually costs on a WNC ridge
Grading here is sold by the cut, so the number tracks how much earth has to move and how much of it is rock. On Buncombe’s dominant Evard soils — typical 34.8% slope, as steep as 95% — or Henderson’s ridge-line Ashe at 40.2%, a benched cut-and-fill pad moves far more cubic yards than a flat Tate or Hayesville valley lot, which is why the same lot size lands at opposite ends of the volume-moved range below. Weathered saprolite rips and grades at the low end of the per-yard figure; once the cut hits hard rock it sits at the high end and may add a hydraulic hammer — the variable we flag earliest on the site walk.
What grading & excavation costs in WNC
These are typical Western North Carolina market ranges, not a Ridgeline quote. North Carolina construction runs about 12% below the national average, but our mountain terrain — 15–40%+ slopes, weathered bedrock and saprolite, clay, and tight access — pushes most jobs toward the high end of every range. A flat infill lot sits low; a steep escarpment lot sits at or above the top. Your exact price comes from a free on-site estimate.
| Item | Typical WNC range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Equipment + operator | $125–$200/hour | excavator or dozer w/ operator; mini-excavator work ~$85/hr |
| By volume moved | $44–$176/cubic yard | NC 2026; rock/saprolite at the high end |
| Grade & level (project) | $400–$6,500 | small yard-grade to mid-size lot; steep/rock lots higher |
What drives it: cut/fill volume, slope, rock vs rippable saprolite, haul-off vs on-site balance, access.
Source: published WNC/NC market ranges via homeguide.com and angi.com . Exact pricing on your lot comes from a free on-site estimate — call (828) 944-9618.
Four steps, no surprises.
Walk the site
We read the slope, soil, and rock, and talk through what you’re building.
Stake & estimate
A written scope — cut volume, access, and what drives the price on your ground.
Clear & grade
Erosion control in, then cut, fill in compacted lifts, and shape to plan.
Final grade
Fine grade to elevation, drainage checked, site left clean and ready to build.
Grading & excavation — common questions
Do I need a permit to grade my property in Western North Carolina?
Why does grading cost more on a steep WNC lot than a flat one?
What is cut-and-fill, and when does my site need it?
Can you grade around rock and saprolite?
How long does a typical grading job take in the mountains?
What erosion control do you install while grading?
Do you handle the whole site, or just the rough grade?
Get your WNC site graded right the first time.
Tell us about the lot — slope, access, what you're building. We'll walk it and put a real number in writing, free.