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Jaekwan Lee
Pro Member
4
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Anyone experienced sagging floor fix?

Jaekwan Lee
Pro Member
Posted Jul 21 2024, 21:03

Hi, I just got into a fourplex property and found living room has a sagging floor. I am not confident how much it would cost and wonder if it is wise to pass this property to fix if I am not familiar with this issue. What do you think?

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Steve K.
  • Realtor
  • Boulder, CO
4,637
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Steve K.
  • Realtor
  • Boulder, CO
Replied Jul 21 2024, 21:49

I have a triplex built in 1910 that came with saggy floors. I jacked it up with a bottle jack, sistered up the old 2x6 floor joists with new 2x8's and problem solved for a few hundred bucks. It could be an easy fix like this or a bigger problem depending on the factors at play (are the joists accessible, will it mess anything else up if you just jack it up and reinforce, is there water damage or structural damage to the foundation causing the sag instead of just old joists, anything else going on like a supporting wall or posts under the floor, wiring or plumbing runs involved etc.). If you don't know what you're looking at, have a competent contractor or even better a competent structural engineer take a look at it for you. 

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Wesley I.
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
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Wesley I.
  • Investor
  • San Diego, CA
Replied Jul 21 2024, 23:10

@Jaekwan Lee

You wont really know until you open the floors up.

It could be as simple as bottle jacking a support or as involved as replacing multiple rotted beams and subfloor.

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Jaekwan Lee
Pro Member
4
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Jaekwan Lee
Pro Member
Replied Jul 22 2024, 09:39
Quote from @Steve K.:

I have a triplex built in 1910 that came with saggy floors. I jacked it up with a bottle jack, sistered up the old 2x6 floor joists with new 2x8's and problem solved for a few hundred bucks. It could be an easy fix like this or a bigger problem depending on the factors at play (are the joists accessible, will it mess anything else up if you just jack it up and reinforce, is there water damage or structural damage to the foundation causing the sag instead of just old joists, anything else going on like a supporting wall or posts under the floor, wiring or plumbing runs involved etc.). If you don't know what you're looking at, have a competent contractor or even better a competent structural engineer take a look at it for you. 


 This is what I was guessing. I think the listing price isn't competitive enough to put the risk factor that might cost big or small. I guess I should pass this. Thanks!