Soil types for grading in Western North Carolina.
A working reference to the soils under WNC building lots — the dominant USDA-NRCS series in Buncombe, Henderson, Transylvania, Haywood, their real slope and drainage, and the grading method each one needs. Built from the soil survey, not a national template.
Western North Carolina grading is governed by deep, well-drained mountain soils weathered over gneiss, schist, and granite — not the clay flatland soils national guides describe. Across the four counties mapped here, the recurring building series include Tate, Evard, Burton, Cullasaja and others, spanning 22 distinct series. What decides the grading job is the slope the soil sits on: ridge soils like Ashe (40.2%) and Evard (34.8%) need benched cut-and-fill, while moderately well drained valley soils like Dillard (3.7%) need leveling and drainage. The table below maps every dominant series to its slope, drainage class, and the method it implies.
WNC soil is the opposite of what most grading guides assume
National grading content is written for the flat clay soils of the Piedmont and the coastal plain — soils where the problems are compaction, expansion, and drainage on level ground. Western North Carolina is the reverse. Our building soils are mostly deep and well drained, weathered in place over gneiss, schist, and granite into the soft saprolite that grades easily until it doesn’t. The soil itself is rarely the problem. The slope it sits on — and the rock a few feet under it — is the whole game.
That’s why a soil series name alone never tells you the job. The USDA-NRCS soil survey maps each series across a full slope band, and the same series can be near-flat in a cove and 95% on a ridge. Henderson County’s dominant Ashe series, for example, is mapped from 8% all the way to 95%, with a typical 40.2%. We always report slope as a range, then confirm the actual grade on the site walk.
The two jobs every WNC lot falls into
Ridge and shoulder lots sit on well-drained, steep series — Evard, Ashe, Unaka, Wayah, Porters, Cullasaja, Burton — that typify 27.8–40.8% slope and run far steeper in spots. These need a benched cut-and-fill pad: cut the high side, build compacted fill on the low side in lifts, key it into firm ground, and hold it with retaining and erosion control. This is the typical WNC building site.
Valley and bottomland lots sit on soils like Dillard — near-flat (3.7%) but only moderately well drained, so they hold water against a foundation. Here the work flips: precise leveling, fill engineered so it won’t sit wet, and surface and subsurface drainage. The cut is easy; keeping the pad dry is the job.
Saprolite: why mountain grading is unpredictable
Under most of these well-drained series you hit saprolite — bedrock decomposed in place into a soft, often rippable material that keeps the structure of the parent stone. Rippable saprolite grades with a dozer or large excavator. But the same cut can hit harder unweathered rock that needs a hydraulic hammer or, rarely, blasting by a licensed sub. Rock and saprolite are invisible from the road and are the cost-and-method variable we flag earliest on a site walk. Detail on how that prices out lives in the Asheville grading cost guide.
Drainage class is the quiet flag
Most WNC ridge soils are well to somewhat excessively drained, so water moves fast and concentrates downslope — the erosion-control problem. The series to watch are the moderately well drained valley soils like Dillard that hold moisture. The reference table flags the drainage class for every series so you can see at a glance whether your lot is a cut-and-fill job or a drainage job.
Steep ridge Ashe at 40.2% vs near-flat valley Dillard at 3.7% — same region, opposite jobs.
Every dominant WNC soil series, by county.
The dominant USDA-NRCS soil series for grading in each county we map, with the real slope band, drainage class, and the grading method it implies. “Typical” is the most-common grade for that series; the range is the full mapped slope band. Survey areas: Buncombe NC021, Henderson NC089, Transylvania NC175, Haywood NC606.
| County | Survey | Soil series | Typical slope | Slope range | Drainage class | Grading method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buncombe | NC021 | Clifton | 16% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Tate | 14.4% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Evard | 34.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Burton | 40.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Unison | 11.4% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Braddock | 11.6% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Cowee | 34.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Wayah | 40.2% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Tusquitee | 19.2% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Buncombe | NC021 | Fannin | 19.2% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Henderson | NC089 | Ashe | 40.2% | 8–95% | Somewhat excessively drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Henderson | NC089 | Evard | 28.1% | 6–70% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Henderson | NC089 | Porters | 33.9% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Henderson | NC089 | Tusquitee | 16.7% | 2–45% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Henderson | NC089 | Unaka | 37.7% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Henderson | NC089 | Cullasaja | 34.4% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Henderson | NC089 | Tate | 13% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Henderson | NC089 | Saunook | 19.8% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Henderson | NC089 | Hayesville | 13% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Henderson | NC089 | Edneyville | 30.7% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Henderson | NC089 | Dillard | 3.7% | 0–8% | Moderately well drained | Level + engineered drainage |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Unaka | 37.6% | 2–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Cullasaja | 31.6% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Burton | 34.1% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Chestnut | 36.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Edneyville | 28.8% | 8–95% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Ashe | 39.3% | 8–95% | Somewhat excessively drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Porters | 34.9% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Tate | 13.3% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Saunook | 19% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Hayesville | 22.2% | 8–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Transylvania | NC175 | Evard | 26.2% | 8–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Haywood | NC606 | Wayah | 27.8% | 2–95% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Haywood | NC606 | Burton | 29.7% | 2–95% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Haywood | NC606 | Tanasee | 21% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Haywood | NC606 | Cullasaja | 32.7% | 15–50% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Haywood | NC606 | Balsam | 22.9% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Haywood | NC606 | Saunook | 17.6% | 2–50% | Well drained | Light benched cut-and-fill |
| Haywood | NC606 | Edneyville | 33.1% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Haywood | NC606 | Hayesville | 14.4% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
| Haywood | NC606 | Plott | 36.5% | 8–95% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill + retaining |
| Haywood | NC606 | Braddock | 12.2% | 2–30% | Well drained | Standard level & compact |
42 county-series rows across 4 counties. Slope is reported as a range because the soil survey maps each series across its full band — a single averaged number would mislead. Source: USDA-NRCS Web Soil Survey (NC021, NC089, NC175, NC606).
What the ground actually is, where you build.
Each county we serve has a different dominant series and slope envelope — the number behind every cut-and-fill quote. Tap through to the town pages for lot-size and new-build detail.
Slope envelope 2–95% across 10 mapped building series. Predominantly well-drained ridge ground — cut-and-fill is the default.
Slope envelope 0–95% across 11 mapped building series. Watch the moderately drained Dillard valley soil — that's a drainage job, not a cut.
Slope envelope 2–95% across 11 mapped building series. Predominantly well-drained ridge ground — cut-and-fill is the default.
Slope envelope 2–95% across 10 mapped building series. Predominantly well-drained ridge ground — cut-and-fill is the default.
The series your lot sits on tells us the drainage and likely depth-to-rock; the slope tells us the job. We confirm both on a free on-site walk — call (828) 510-7217 or use the form above. See the grading & excavation page for how a soil-and-slope read becomes a written scope.
From soil map to a graded pad.
Pull the survey
We read the USDA-NRCS soil map for your address — series, slope band, and drainage class — before we ever walk it.
Walk & confirm
We verify the actual slope, probe for saprolite and rock, and check whether the lot sits on a series transition.
Match the method
Benched cut-and-fill on steep well-drained ridge soils; level-and-drain on moderately drained valley soils.
Scope it in writing
A written scope tied to your real ground, free — usually with a callback inside 24hr.
WNC soil types for grading — common questions
What are the main soil types for grading in Western North Carolina?
How does soil type change what grading my WNC lot needs?
What is saprolite, and why does it matter for grading in the mountains?
Which WNC soil series drain poorly enough to need extra drainage?
Are WNC soils good for building, or is the slope the real problem?
Do soil types affect whether I need a grading permit in WNC?
How do you know what soil is on my WNC lot before you dig?
Why don't you just use a national grading cost calculator for my soil?
Know your lot's soil before you grade it.
Tell us where the lot is and what you're building — we'll read the soil map, walk the slope, flag the rock, and put a written scope in front of you, free.