There is a myth that frost lines do not matter in the South. We hear it on every other estimate. Then we get the call in February from a homeowner whose front porch has cracked away from the house because the footing sat 4 inches deep on saturated clay. Chattanooga winters are mild compared to Minnesota — but the ground here still freezes, and water in the soil still moves when it does.
The frost line is the depth in the soil at which water will reliably freeze during winter conditions. When water freezes, it expands roughly 9 percent. If that expansion happens under a footing, the footing lifts. When the ice thaws, the footing settles. Over a few seasons, that movement cracks slabs, opens drywall seams, and pulls trim away from corners.
Footings need to sit below the depth where freezing occurs, on soil that does not move with the seasons. That is the entire point of a frost footing.
Local building departments in Hamilton County and the North Georgia counties typically use a frost depth between 6 and 12 inches for residential footings. Most jurisdictions write 12 inches as the practical minimum bearing depth, with deeper requirements driven by structure size and engineer specs.
A few notes for our specific region:
We have repaired foundations in every condition you can imagine. The pattern is the same. Someone took the minimum number, then went under it because the ground looked dry, or the structure was small, or the budget was tight. One winter later, the cracking starts.
A few examples from Greater Chattanooga jobs:
Frost depth is not just an abstract number on a code sheet. It is what keeps the corner of your house in the same place every February as it was in August.
Frost depth is the floor for footing elevation. The actual depth on your project may be deeper because of:
We coordinate footing depth with the engineer of record, the inspector, and the concrete crew so what comes out of the ground matches what is on the plan. Related pillars: basement excavation and concrete forming and pouring.
Local jurisdictions typically use a frost depth between 6 and 12 inches for residential construction, with 12 inches being a common practical minimum. Your engineer or building department will confirm the depth for your specific project.
Yes. Even mild winters in the region produce repeated freeze-thaw cycles that move water in the soil. Shallow footings on saturated clay can heave and crack in any winter where soil temperatures dip below freezing for a few days running.
Frost-protected shallow foundation designs exist and can be engineered for cold climates, but they are uncommon for typical residential work here. Most homes get a conventional footing at or below local frost depth.
North-facing slopes receive less winter sun and stay colder and frozen longer than south-facing slopes. We sometimes dig slightly deeper on the north side of a building footprint when soil and grade make sense.