Footing seated in stable ground
Steps begin on a real footing set into steady subgrade, never bare Blackland clay, so the wet-dry swings that push our soil around can't heave or lean them off the house the way they walked the old set out of square.
On Plano's settled lots the entry steps are often the first thing to drift off the porch. We rebuild them with even, code-built risers on footings seated in stable ground so Blackland clay can't tip them loose, then knit them back into the house clean.
Credibility comes from how it's built, not from promises. Here's the order of operations on every concrete steps & stairs job.
Steps begin on a real footing set into steady subgrade, never bare Blackland clay, so the wet-dry swings that push our soil around can't heave or lean them off the house the way they walked the old set out of square.
Riser heights stay uniform and within code, so the climb feels right and stays safe underfoot.
Steel in the pour lets the steps keep their edges and corners through year after year of soil movement.
A broom or textured surface gives grip in the rain, and we can fold in extra grit wherever it earns it.
The new steps are joined neatly into the existing porch, slab, or walkway so the whole entry reads as one piece.
Most contractors vanish after the deposit. We pick up the phone, show up when we say, and stand behind the work after the truck leaves. The follow-through is the difference.
A foreman we know runs your job and a vetted crew does the work, managed by Lucky's, one company accountable from the first call to the final walkthrough.
COI and lien waivers on file before we break ground. The documentation that lets commercial clients pay and gives homeowners peace of mind.
Prepped subgrade, reinforced and mixed to spec for the job, and proper curing. We build credibility through the process, not promises. On concrete steps & stairs, that starts with footing seated in stable ground.

A set of steps is normally priced as one unit rather than by the square foot, set by the riser count, the footing work, and how the run ties into the house. As a starting point, plan on roughly $300 to $500 per step. We hand you the firm number after we have measured the entry in person.
Almost always a footing dropped straight onto raw clay, which swelled and drew back across years of wet and dry spells and edged the steps off the porch a little at a time. We reseat the new footing in steady subgrade so the ground can't carry the steps along with it again.
Risers stay uniform and within local code so each tread meets your foot the same way, since an odd step in a flight is both jarring and a fall waiting to happen, more so once it is wet.
It rides on the damage. Minor surface flaking will sometimes take a patch, but steps that have tilted on shifting clay or split through a riser have usually run out their repair life and call for a full rebuild. We give you a straight answer on which case you are in.
We form and finish the steps and set railing anchors into the pour, then line up the railing install so the finished entry meets the access and safety you need.
Plan on staying off the new steps for a few days while the concrete keeps gaining strength. We give you the exact timeline for your set ahead of the pour, with that week's heat factored in.
You'll hear back from a real person, usually the same day. No call center, no runaround, no chasing us down.
Booking up fast this season. Or call (214) 972-1267