8 Questions to Ask Before Hiring a Crawl Space Contractor
Crawl space work is a significant investment, and the quality of the contractor matters as much as the quality of the materials. These eight questions help you separate experienced professionals from companies that cut corners.
1. What Is Your Approach to Drainage?
This question reveals how a contractor thinks about water management. A good contractor starts by assessing whether water enters the crawl space and addresses it before encapsulating. If they skip drainage and jump straight to a vapor barrier over wet soil, the system will fail.
Listen for specifics: interior French drain, sump pump placement, grading corrections, or gutter downspout extensions. If the answer is vague, move on.
2. What Vapor Barrier Are You Installing?
Thickness and material matter. Ask for the specific product name, mil thickness, and whether it is reinforced.
A minimum of 12-mil reinforced polyethylene is standard for encapsulation. Budget contractors sometimes use 6-mil sheeting, which tears easily, does not hold up to foot traffic, and has a shorter lifespan. Premium liners are 20-mil and designed for decades of service. Know what you are paying for.
3. What Does Your Warranty Cover?
Warranties vary wildly in this industry. Ask for the specific terms in writing before signing.
Key questions: Does the warranty cover materials, labor, or both? How long does it last? Is it transferable if you sell the home? What voids the warranty? Does it require annual maintenance or inspections?
A lifetime warranty on materials but only one year on labor is common but not ideal. Push for at least five years on labor.
4. Are You Licensed and Insured?
This is non-negotiable. Verify the contractor has a current state contractor’s license (requirements vary by state), general liability insurance ($1 million minimum), and workers’ compensation insurance.
Ask for certificates of insurance and verify them with the insurance provider. If a worker is injured in your crawl space and the contractor lacks workers’ comp, you could be liable.
5. What Certifications Do Your Technicians Hold?
Crawl space work intersects with water management, mold remediation, and structural repair. Relevant certifications include Basement Health Association (BHA) certification, IICRC Water Damage Restoration (WRT), IICRC Mold Remediation (AMRT), and manufacturer-specific training for dehumidifier brands.
Certifications are not everything, but they indicate a commitment to proper methods.
6. Is a Dehumidifier Included in the Quote?
Some contractors quote encapsulation without a dehumidifier, making their price look lower. In most climates, sealing the crawl space without mechanical dehumidification defeats the purpose.
Ask whether the dehumidifier is included, what brand and model is specified, what capacity it provides, and whether installation and drainage setup are part of the quote.
7. Can You Show Before and After Photos of Similar Projects?
Experienced contractors have a portfolio of completed work. Ask to see projects similar to yours in scope, especially in homes of similar age and construction.
Photos should show the crawl space before work began, during installation, and the finished product. Look for clean seams, proper wall attachment, sealed penetrations, and a professional-looking result.
If a contractor cannot show previous work, that is a concern.
8. Will You Use Subcontractors?
Some companies subcontract the installation to independent crews. This is not automatically a problem, but it changes the accountability picture.
Ask who will be in your crawl space doing the work. If it is a subcontractor, find out whether they carry their own insurance, whether they are trained on the specific system being installed, and who you contact if there is a warranty issue.
Red Flags to Watch For
Be cautious if a contractor pressures you to sign immediately or offers a one-day-only discount, cannot provide references from recent local projects, quotes the job without inspecting the crawl space in person, has no physical business address, or gives a verbal quote without written documentation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many quotes should I get? Three is the standard recommendation. It gives you a range of pricing and approaches without becoming overwhelming. Make sure each contractor inspects the crawl space before quoting.
Should I always choose the lowest bid? No. The lowest bid often reflects thinner materials, no dehumidifier, shorter warranties, or less experienced labor. Compare the scope of work, not just the bottom line.
What if contractors recommend different solutions? This is common. One may recommend full encapsulation while another suggests a vapor barrier. Ask each contractor to explain why they recommend their approach for your specific conditions.
How long should the work take? Most encapsulation projects take 1-3 days. Structural repairs or drainage work may extend the timeline. Get a projected schedule in writing.
Compare Contractors with Confidence
Asking the right questions is the first step. CrawlLocal helps you find and compare crawl space contractors in your area, making it easier to evaluate your options and choose a contractor who meets these standards.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is crawl space encapsulation worth the cost?
For most homeowners with moisture issues, yes. Encapsulation prevents mold growth, structural wood rot, and pest infestations that can cost $10,000-$30,000+ to repair. It also reduces humidity in your home, improves air quality, and can lower energy bills by 15-20%. Most systems last 20+ years with minimal maintenance.
What is the difference between a vapor barrier and full encapsulation?
A vapor barrier is a plastic sheet laid over the crawl space floor to reduce ground moisture — typically costing $1,500-$4,000. Full encapsulation seals the entire space including walls, installs a dehumidifier, and closes all vents for complete moisture control — typically $5,000-$15,000. Full encapsulation provides significantly better protection.
Why does crawl space repair cost vary by city?
The biggest factors are local labor rates, material costs, and crawl space accessibility. Cities with higher cost of living tend to charge more per square foot. Soil conditions, local moisture levels, and whether structural repairs are needed also significantly affect pricing within each market.
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