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Foundation Soil Risk in Franklin County, Kansas

Severe risk  About 74% of Franklin County's soil area is high shrink-swell (expansive) clay — 1.6 times the Kansas average of 45%, and 4.5 times the national average of 17%. That places it #9 of 105 Kansas counties for foundation soil risk.

Share of the county's ~369,427 acres of USDA-mapped soil with linear extensibility ≥ 6% in the top meter (SSURGO).

Franklin County soil breakdown

High shrink-swell (expansive) clay74%
Moderately expansive22%
Low / non-expansive4%
Foundation risk tierSevere
Rank in Kansas#9 of 105 counties
Higher-risk than98% of all U.S. counties

What 74% expansive soil means for a Franklin County foundation

Expansive clay swells as it takes on water and shrinks as it dries, and that repeated movement is what lifts and drops a foundation unevenly — opening stair-step cracks, racking door and window frames, and, left unmanaged, cracking slabs and footings. Franklin County's exposure is extreme. In a county this exposed, water management is the highest-leverage thing a Franklin County homeowner controls: gutters and downspouts that carry roof water well clear of the slab, positive grading away from the house, and — most of all — consistent soil moisture through drought, because it is the wet-to-dry swing that cracks a foundation, not moisture itself.

The expansive soils under Franklin County

Franklin County's shrink-swell risk is concentrated in the Kenoma soil series alongside Woodson and Aliceville — clays the USDA maps as strongly expansive, swelling and shrinking with every wet–dry cycle. Homes built on these series most need the drainage and moisture discipline above; a lot-level soil report (or the county NRCS survey) shows which one sits under a given address.

How Franklin County compares

CountyHigh-risk soil
Higher risk →Morris County74%
This countyFranklin County (#9 of 105)74%
Lower risk →Greenwood County73%

For context, the average Kansas county is 45% high-expansive soil and the average U.S. county is 17%.

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If Franklin County does need repair work

Costs follow the same structure everywhere — from a few hundred dollars for a single crack injection to $8,000–$25,000+ for pier stabilization on a settling home. Because expansive clay drives recurring, moisture-linked movement here, correcting drainage first often heads off a far larger repair later. See the full foundation repair cost guide for method-by-method pricing.

Risk metrics are computed from USDA SSURGO soil survey data (linear extensibility of soil components, area-weighted by county). Soil varies lot to lot — this is county-scale context, not a substitute for a site-specific geotechnical or structural assessment.