A Cost & Consequence Calculator
Jan 16, 2026
That crack is staring at you. Do you spend $150 on a kit and a Saturday, or $1,500 on a pro? It's not a simple choice. The right answer isn't about skill; it's about risk assessment. Let's break down the real math, including the hidden costs most people forget.
The True DIY Cost (It's More Than the Kit)
-
Kit & Tools: $100 - $300
-
Your Time (at $?/hour): 4-8 hours of labor (prep, work, cleanup).
-
The "Oops" Factor: Material waste from mistakes, potential need for a second kit.
-
The Unseen Whopper: Failure Cost. If your DIY fix fails in 6 months, you now have: a) Wasted the initial kit cost. b) Hardened, misplaced grout a pro must now drill out, increasing their labor quote by 30-50%. c) Incurred more water damage in the interim.
The Professional Investment (What You're Actually Buying)
The Tipping Point Calculator: Ask These Questions
If you answer YES to any of these, lean HEAVILY toward a PRO:
-
Is the crack actively dripping water right now? (DIY kits struggle with active flow).
-
Is the crack wider than a quarter-inch? (Indicates serious movement).
-
Are there multiple cracks in a star or ladder pattern? (Sign of structural stress).
-
Is the leak in a critical area (under machinery, near electrical)?
-
Do you need a formal warranty for insurance or resale purposes?
DIY can be a great option if:
-
The crack is hairline and completely dry/dormant.
-
It's in a low-risk, non-critical area (garden shed, edge of driveway).
-
You value the learning experience and are comfortable with potential re-dos.
-
The budgetary constraint is absolute and immediate.