Foundation care · the wet side

Why French drains fail in North Texas clay — and what "done right" looks like

French drains have a bad reputation in a lot of North Texas yards, and it's mostly earned — but not because the idea is wrong. It's because clay is the hard mode of drainage, and a French drain built the way the internet says to build one quietly fails here within a few years. The failures are predictable. So is what it takes to avoid them. Here's both.

The thesis of this whole page

In North Texas clay, a French drain is a design problem, not a digging problem. Anyone with a trencher can put a pipe in the ground. Whether that pipe is still moving water in five years comes down to choices — fabric, gravel, pipe, slope, and outlet — that don't show once it's buried, which is exactly why they get cut.

Why clay defeats a drain built for sandy soil

Two properties of Blackland Prairie clay work against a drain. First, its percolation rate is extremely low — water moves through it slowly, so a drain meant to pull water out of the soil mass is working against a material that doesn't want to give it up. Second, clay is full of fine particles that travel with what little water does move, and those fines love to migrate into a drain and pack the gaps in the gravel and the perforations in the pipe until nothing flows.

A French drain designed for the sandy or loamy soil in a generic how-to video assumes water arrives fast and the soil stays clean. Neither is true here. Drop that same design into clay and it fills faster than it empties during the one storm you needed it for, and silts shut over the seasons you weren't watching. That's not a fluke. That's the default outcome when the design ignores the soil.

The five ways they fail — every time, the same list

1. Thin big-box corrugated pipe
Saturated clay is heavy. Cheap corrugated pipe compresses under it and flattens from a round pipe into a closed oval. Once it ovals, flow stops, and you've buried a problem instead of solving it. Heavier-wall or rigid pipe holds its shape under load.
2. The wrong filter fabric
Too tight and water can't get into the drain fast enough during the downpour that matters. Too loose and clay silt washes straight in and clogs the pipe within a season or two. Clay wants a non-woven geotextile matched to the soil — not whatever fabric was on the shelf, and not skipping the fabric to "save money," which guarantees the clog.
3. Too little gravel, or dirty gravel
The clean stone around the pipe is the reservoir that lets water reach it and the buffer that keeps fines out. Skimp on it, or use stone with fines already in it, and the system clogs from the inside before it ever gets a fair test.
4. Backfilled with the clay you just dug out
Cap the trench with the same impervious clay and surface water can't even reach the drain — it runs over the top of a buried system that's now doing nothing. What goes back on top matters as much as what goes in the bottom.
5. An outlet that doesn't actually go downhill
This is the big one. A drain only works if water has a real exit by gravity — a street, a swale, a dry well, daylight. A "French drain" with no genuine fall is a gravel-filled bathtub: it fills, and then it stays full. More drains fail here than for any other single reason.

What a clay-appropriate French drain actually requires

Flip every one of those failures around and you have the spec. None of it is exotic — it's just not optional in clay:

A real, surveyed fall from the collection point all the way to a lower outlet — established first, before anything else is decided.

Pipe that holds its shape under saturated soil, not the thinnest corrugated option on the shelf.

A non-woven geotextile chosen for clay, fully wrapping the gravel — the "burrito" done right.

Enough clean, washed stone to act as a reservoir, never dumped dirty.

A permeable cap — not a clay lid — so water can actually get down to the drain.

Catch basins at the low points where surface water collects, tied into solid pipe to carry the volume.

Notice what's missing from that list: depth. Everyone's first question is "how deep does the pipe go," and it's the least important variable. A perfectly deep drain with no outlet does nothing; a shallower one with real fall and clean materials works. The contractor who leads with trench depth and a flat price is giving you a generic system — and generic systems are the ones being dug up and redone a few years later.

Sometimes the honest answer isn't a French drain at all

Here's the part most drainage companies won't put in writing, because it sells less work. In pure, heavy clay, water moves so slowly through the soil that a classic French drain meant to pull moisture out of the soil mass can barely earn its cost. What actually fixes the yard is often a catch basin at the low spot tied to solid pipe — collecting the surface water before it ponds — and getting the grading and downspouts right so less water arrives in the first place.

In other words: in clay, the surface fixes and the right collection points frequently do the heavy lifting, and the buried perforated drain is a supporting player — or unnecessary. That's not a knock on French drains. It's the reason diagnosis has to come before a quote. Anyone who recommends the same buried drain for every wet yard isn't reading your yard.

Think your French drain is already failing?

You don't have to dig to find out. During the next hard rain, find the outlet — water should be running out of it. If your yard is flooding and the outlet is dry, it's clogged or has no fall. Walk the trench line for soft spots or small blowouts where water is forcing its way up instead of through the pipe. And notice whether the ground above still stays soggy for days the way it did before the drain went in. Any of those, and the system isn't doing its job.

If that's where you are, I'm happy to come look and tell you straight whether it's a fixable outlet or a rebuild — and whether a French drain was even the right tool for your soil to begin with. No charge for the look, and no interest in selling you the same thing that already failed.

Straight answers

French drains in clay, answered

Clay drains very slowly and sheds fine particles that migrate into a drain and silt it shut. A French drain designed for fast-draining sandy soil underperforms in clay. The whole system has to be designed for clay — fabric, gravel, pipe, slope, and outlet all chosen for how this soil behaves — or it fills faster than it empties and does almost nothing in the storm that matters.

An outlet that doesn't actually run downhill to somewhere lower. A drain only moves water if it has a real exit by gravity — a street, a swale, a dry well, or daylight. A "French drain" with no genuine fall is just a gravel-filled bathtub that fills and stays full.

Yes. Too tight and water can't get in fast enough during a downpour; too loose and clay silt washes into the pipe and clogs it within a season or two. In clay you want a non-woven geotextile matched to the soil, not whatever was on the shelf. The wrong fabric is one of the quiet killers of clay-soil drains.

It's risky under saturated clay. Thin big-box corrugated pipe can compress under wet soil and flatten from round into a closed oval, and then flow stops. Heavier-wall or rigid pipe holds its shape. The pipe choice is part of the design, not an afterthought.

It can be, for the wrong problem. Pure clay moves water so slowly that a French drain meant to pull water out of the soil mass may barely help, while a catch basin tied to solid pipe — collecting surface water at a low point — does the real work. That's why diagnosis comes first: in clay, the honest answer is sometimes a different solution than a classic French drain.

It depends on what failed. A clogged or buried outlet can sometimes be cleared or re-established. But a crushed pipe, the wrong fabric, or no real fall usually means excavating and rebuilding — which is why getting the design right the first time is so much cheaper than the do-over.

Where to next

Keep following the water