How Much Water Does Snow Melt Put Around Your Home? (The Numbers May Surprise You)

❄️ This Is How Much Water Will Soak Your Yard

When snow melts, it doesn’t just disappear.

It turns into thousands of gallons of water — fast.

Let’s break it down.

1 Inch of Rain = 0.623 Gallons Per Square Foot

On a 10,000 sq ft property:

1 inch of rain = 6,230 gallons

Now let’s talk snow.

🌨 Snow to Water Conversion

On average:

10 inches of snow = 1 inch of rain

So if we get 12 inches of snow, your yard may be dealing with:

1.2 inches of rain equivalent

On a 10,000 sq ft yard:

7,476 gallons of water

That’s what your drainage system has to handle.

All at once.

💧 Where Does That Water Go?

If your yard has:

  • • Low spots

  • • Clay soil

  • • Poor grading

  • • No French drain

That water will:

  • Pool
  • Push against your foundation
  • Seep into basement walls
  • Overwhelm sump systems

Snowmelt is often worse than rain because:

  • The ground is still frozen
  • Soil absorption is reduced
  • Melt happens quickly during warm spikes

🚨 Signs Your Yard Can’t Handle Snow Melt

  • Standing water after storms
  • Water stains in basement
  • Musty smell
  • Damp crawl space
  • Foundation cracks

If you see water after rain, snowmelt will multiply the issue.

🛠 Here’s How We Can Help

We design drainage systems built for real-world water volume.

Including:

Yard drains

French drains

Catch basins

Downspout extensions

Foundation drainage systems

Instead of guessing, we calculate the water load your yard receives.

Then we build for it.

🏠 Don’t Wait Until It’s Too Late

When temperatures rise, thousands of gallons will hit your yard.

The question is:

Will your drainage system handle it?

Or will it head toward your foundation?

Get your fast, FREE Estimate + 15% off: 800-700-9171

Yard drainage solutions help keep your yard dry, safe, and pest-cree

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