Contractors across Central Texas get caught out when they assume the clay on a site will behave like the weathered limestone they encountered on the last job. That gamble unravels quickly once the slab moves. Atterberg limits testing strips the guesswork out of volume-change potential by quantifying the exact moisture boundaries where Austin’s high-plasticity clays—particularly the Eagle Ford formation that blankets much of the eastern metro—transition from semi-solid to plastic to liquid. Without these numbers, a geotechnical report is just a description, not an engineering input. We run the full suite under ASTM D4318 in a NIST-traceable lab, and the results feed directly into the expansive-soil mitigation strategies that the Austin building department expects to see before issuing a foundation permit. When a site sits on the Del Rio Clay or the Taylor Marl, the grain-size analysis often flags the fines fraction, but only the Atterberg test tells you whether that fraction will swell, shrink, or stay put under seasonal moisture swings.
The difference between a liquid limit of 45 and one of 65 is often the difference between a standard slab and a structurally suspended floor.
Methodology and scope
Local considerations
The contrast between the west and east sides of Austin is stark when you look at the plasticity data. On the west side, near the Balcones Fault Zone, you encounter thin residual clays over limestone with liquid limits often below 40 and plasticity indices in the teens—manageable with moderate reinforcement. Cross under I-35 into the Blackland Prairie, however, and the same depth of excavation reveals fat clays with liquid limits pushing 70 and PI values above 35. A foundation designed for the west side will fail on the east side if the Atterberg numbers are not factored into the section. The main risk is differential heave: when one corner of a slab sits on a pocket of high-PI clay while another bears on weathered rock, seasonal moisture cycles produce enough vertical movement to crack masonry, bind doors, and rupture plumbing lines. Austin’s climate amplifies this because the city swings between drought summers and wet autumns, driving moisture fronts deep into the active zone. A plasticity index above 25, combined with more than 30 percent fines passing the No. 200 sieve, is the engineering threshold where we start recommending moisture-conditioned fill replacement or chemical stabilization with lime—decisions that cannot be made without the Atterberg limits in hand.
Regulatory framework
ASTM D4318-17: Standard Test Methods for Liquid Limit, Plastic Limit, and Plasticity Index of Soils, IBC 2021 Section 1803: Geotechnical Investigations (expansive soil classification), PTI DC10.5-19: Standard Requirements for Design and Analysis of Post-Tensioned Foundations on Expansive Soils, and ASCE 7-22 Section 11.4: Site Classification Procedure (referencing plasticity for site response).
Other technical services
Standard Atterberg Limits (LL, PL, PI)
Full ASTM D4318 compliant determination of liquid limit, plastic limit, and plasticity index on the minus No. 40 fraction. Includes moisture content at each point on the flow curve and the computed PI used for USCS classification.
USCS Classification Package
Combines Atterberg limits with particle-size distribution per ASTM D2487 to assign the full Unified Soil Classification System symbol and group name, the format required on all Austin permit-level geotechnical reports.
Expansive Soil Screening with Heave Prediction
Uses the plasticity index together with percent fines and in-situ moisture to estimate potential vertical rise per PTI DC10.5 methodology, providing a quantitative basis for foundation type selection.
Typical parameters
Frequently asked questions
How much does Atterberg limits testing cost for an Austin site?
How many samples should I submit for a residential lot in Austin?
For a single-family lot, we recommend at least two depth intervals per borehole, typically one from the active zone (0 to 3 feet) and one from the bearing stratum (3 to 6 feet), with additional samples if soil color or texture changes with depth. The Austin permitting process generally expects classification data at the foundation bearing elevation.
What is the difference between the liquid limit and the plastic limit in practical terms?
The liquid limit marks the moisture content where the soil transitions from plastic to viscous liquid behavior, while the plastic limit defines the lower bound of plasticity before the soil crumbles. The plasticity index—the numerical difference between the two—correlates directly with the soil’s capacity to absorb water and swell, which is the parameter that drives foundation design in expansive-clay regions like Austin.
How do Atterberg limits relate to the expansive soil reports required by the City of Austin?
The City of Austin requires a geotechnical report for most commercial and multi-family projects, and the Atterberg limits provide the plasticity index that determines whether a soil is classified as having low, moderate, high, or very high expansion potential. This classification triggers specific foundation design requirements under IBC Section 1805 and the PTI slab design standard.
