Stand on a sloped lot in Signal Mountain or Ooltewah, hold the architect's drawings up, and you'll see the problem in one glance: the land doesn't match the plan. The driveway needs to land at a specific elevation, the pad needs to be flat, and the lot is anything but. Cut and fill is how excavators reconcile those two realities. Done right, dirt moves once. Done wrong, the same yard of soil gets handled three times and you pay for every pass.
A cut is soil removed from a high spot. A fill is soil placed in a low spot to bring it up to design elevation. Every site has a desired finished grade — pad elevations, driveway slope, drainage swales — and every site has existing topography. The difference between those two surfaces, calculated in cubic yards, is what gets moved.
Most projects aim for a balanced site where cut volume roughly equals fill volume. When that happens, the contractor reuses what's already on the lot and avoids importing or hauling away material. When a site is cut-heavy, spoils need a home (hauling fees). When it's fill-heavy, dirt has to be imported (delivery plus material cost).
For residential work in Greater Chattanooga, the workflow looks like this:
That last step is where rough estimates go wrong. A homeowner counting "ten yards of dirt" doesn't realize that ten yards in the ground might be thirteen yards loose in a dump truck and back to ten when re-compacted in a fill area.
The Greater Chattanooga area throws a few specific challenges at cut-and-fill planning:
Sometimes balancing isn't possible or smart. Reasons to export spoils:
Reasons to import fill:
For larger builds in Hixson or Ringgold, a quick conversation about a building pad scope often surfaces whether the project should import a few hundred yards of stone or rework existing soil.
Good upstream planning catches all of these before the first track sets down. That's also why drainage planning belongs in the earthwork conversation, not after.
Cost depends on volume, soil type, access, and whether material is balanced on site. A small residential cut/fill might be a few thousand dollars; a sloped lot with rock and export hauling can run substantially higher.
For small landscape grading, yes. For anything that supports a structure, a pad, or a driveway base, you need proper compaction in lifts and a survey-grade finish — that's contractor territory.
A lift is a thin layer of fill (often 6–12 inches) placed and compacted before the next layer goes on. Skipping lifts is the #1 reason fills settle later.
Usually we strip topsoil first, stockpile it, then put it back at final grade for landscaping. Topsoil isn't used as structural fill.