

Action House Leveling is based in Mercedes, just minutes from Edinburg. You get same-day inspections, a crew that knows the local soil profile, and reinforced concrete piers engineered for the ground under your slab.
Edinburg sits on the Hidalgo–Willacy sandy clay loam plain north of McAllen, on a Pleistocene terrace that's been irrigated for citrus and row crops since the early 1900s.
Soils have moderate plasticity (PI 25–40) — lower than Harlingen or Mercedes — but the north Edinburg areas around Monte Cristo and Trenton Rd transition into deeper clay where citrus irrigation has saturated the upper profile.
The University Drive / UTRGV corridor sits on filled-in irrigation ditches and old citrus rows, which leave buried organic layers that lift slab interiors after construction.
Newer Edinburg subdivisions north of Trenton use post-tension slabs that we repair without damaging the cables.
Slabs poured over former citrus rows lift in the center as the buried organic layer rehydrates after irrigation changes.
The transition from sandy upland to deeper clay along Trenton Rd produces classic differential movement across slab footprints.
North Edinburg's newer subdivisions are full of post-tension slabs — we lift them safely without compromising the cables.
1960s–80s downtown Edinburg ranches were poured shallow with minimal steel; corners crack first.
Yes — Edinburg is one of our most-served cities. Same-day inspections from our Mercedes yard.
All of 78539, 78541, and 78542 — downtown, UTRGV, Monte Cristo, and out Trenton.
Yes. We have the engineering and equipment to lift them without damaging the cables.
Yes. Elevation gear, walk-through, written report — no charge.