When homeowners see standing water or runoff problems, they often hear two possible solutions right away: add drainage or regrade the yard. The truth is that these are not always competing options. Sometimes drainage components solve the problem. Sometimes the real issue is surface shape and elevation. Often the best fix combines both.
This guide explains how to think about the difference.
What drainage solves
Drainage systems help collect, redirect, or move water once it is already flowing or collecting in the wrong area. Channel drains, catch basins, French drains, and downspout routing all fit into this category. Our drainage solutions guide covers those options in more detail.
What regrading solves
Regrading changes the surface so water naturally flows in a better direction. If the shape of the yard sends water toward the house or traps it in low spots, no drain alone may fully solve the issue. Regrading addresses the source geometry of the problem.
When both are needed
Many sites need a combination. A patio edge may need a channel drain, but the surrounding lawn may still need regrading so runoff reaches that drain correctly. A retaining wall project may need both surface re-shaping and drainage management behind the wall.
What homeowners should remember
The right solution depends on why the water is collecting in the first place. Homeowners get better outcomes when contractors explain the water path clearly instead of jumping straight to one product or one fix.

Leave a Reply