Sacramento sits on a deep alluvial basin where the Sacramento and American Rivers have deposited layers of silts, sands, and soft clays over millennia. Groundwater in the downtown area often sits just 8 to 12 feet below the surface, a critical parameter that directly governs lateral earth pressures behind any retaining structure. When you add the seismic requirements of ASCE 7 for a city within 50 miles of the Bear Mountains fault zone, a simple gravity wall becomes an exercise in hydrostatic management and dynamic load analysis. Our team approaches retaining wall design by first characterizing the backfill material with index tests and then modeling the interaction between the stem, the base, and the often-compressible native Sacramento soil. Before excavation begins, we often correlate near-surface data with deeper profiles using a CPT test to catch any hidden peat lenses that could trigger differential settlement behind the wall face.
A retaining wall in Sacramento is fundamentally a water management system; if the drain fails, the wall fails, regardless of how much steel you put in the stem.
Scope of work in Sacramento

Risks and considerations in Sacramento
ASCE 7-22 Section 11.8.3 mandates a site-specific geotechnical investigation for retaining walls assigned to Seismic Design Category D, which covers most of Sacramento County. The primary risk in our area is not just structural yielding; it is a serviceability failure where the wall tilts 2 to 4 degrees under a combination of saturated backfill and moderate shaking, cracking the pavement above and shearing utility conduits. A less obvious but equally dangerous failure mode is global slope instability: if the wall sits near the crest of the American River Parkway levee or an irrigation canal, the failure surface can pass beneath the footing, rendering the wall irrelevant. We run Spencer’s method limit equilibrium analyses to check the factor of safety against deep-seated failure, targeting a minimum of 1.5 under static conditions and 1.1 under seismic conditions. Ignoring the phreatic surface in the backfill calculation is the single most common cause of under-design in Sacramento.
Our services
Our retaining wall scope covers the full lifecycle from the initial soil boring to the final compaction test behind the wall. We tailor each phase to Sacramento’s specific regulatory environment, ensuring the City of Sacramento or County building official receives a clear, defensible submittal packet.
Cantilever and Gravity Wall Design
Full structural and geotechnical design of reinforced concrete cantilever walls, segmental block gravity walls, and soldier pile systems. We optimize heel and toe proportions to minimize excavation in Sacramento’s tight urban lots.
Drainage and Waterproofing Plans
Detailed drainage design showing aggregate gradation, filter fabric placement, and outlet spacing. We address the seasonal high groundwater table with underdrain systems that prevent hydrostatic pressure from exceeding the design assumption.
Construction Observation and Field Testing
Our engineers observe key construction stages: subgrade inspection, footing reinforcement placement, backfill lift compaction testing, and drain installation. We use nuclear gauge testing to verify 95% relative compaction relative to ASTM D1557.
Quick answers
What building permit triggers a retaining wall design review in Sacramento?
The City of Sacramento requires a building permit for any retaining wall over 4 feet in height measured from the bottom of the footing to the top of the wall, or any wall supporting a surcharge load such as a driveway or building foundation. Walls under 4 feet and not supporting a surcharge are generally exempt from a building permit but must still comply with property line setback requirements.
How much does a typical retaining wall design package cost for a Sacramento residential lot?
Design fees for a typical residential retaining wall in Sacramento range from US$950 to US$4.540, depending on wall height, proximity to structures, and whether a supplemental geotechnical boring is needed. A 6-foot-tall wall with standard backfill and simple geometry sits at the lower end, while a 12-foot wall requiring a site-specific seismic analysis and City of Sacramento special inspection program falls at the upper end.
Do I need a geotechnical report before you can design the wall?
Yes, a current geotechnical investigation is the starting point. We need the soil profile at the wall location, including the depth to groundwater, the friction angle and cohesion of the foundation soil, and the classification of the backfill material. If you do not have an existing report, we can scope and perform the necessary test borings or CPT soundings to gather the required parameters.
What backfill material do you specify for retaining walls in the Natomas area?
We specify a clean, free-draining granular material classified as SW or SP per ASTM D2487, with less than 5 percent passing the #200 sieve. Using on-site clay from the Natomas formation as backfill is not allowed because it retains water and expands when wet, tripling the lateral pressure against the wall. We typically require imported crushed aggregate or clean river sand from a local aggregate supplier.
Can a retaining wall be designed to resist both earthquake loading and river flooding?
Absolutely. For properties near the Sacramento or American River, we perform a combined loading analysis that superimposes the rapid drawdown condition on the seismic earth pressure increment. The wall must be stable against sliding and overturning with the water level at the design flood elevation, while also resisting the inertial force from the design earthquake. We typically increase the footing width by 15 to 20 percent to satisfy this combined load case.