Step-by-step fix
Step 1: Confirm this is the right fix
- Look at where the downspout currently empties during or after rain.
- Check for signs that water is landing too close to the house, such as muddy splash marks, eroded soil, standing water, or a wet strip along the foundation.
- Follow the ground slope with your eyes. You want a path where water can keep moving away from the house instead of turning back toward it.
- Measure the downspout outlet so you can match the extension size and shape.
If it works: You confirmed that roof runoff is discharging too close to the foundation and that an extension is the right next step.
If it doesn’t: If the downspout already discharges well away from the house, look for a different cause such as clogged gutters, poor grading, or water entering through cracks or openings.
Stop if:- The area where you planned to send water slopes back toward the house.
- You see major foundation movement, large wall cracks, or severe settlement that needs a separate evaluation.
- The only available discharge path would send water onto a neighbor's property, a walkway, or another unsafe area.
Step 2: Pick the discharge path and clear the area
- Choose the simplest route from the downspout outlet to a spot that drains naturally away from the house.
- Aim for a discharge point far enough away that water will not soak the foundation area again.
- Remove leaves, mulch, rocks, and debris from the path so the extension can sit flat and keep flowing.
- If the extension will cross a walking path, plan a route that reduces tripping or consider a lower-profile option.
If it works: You have a clear path and a safe discharge point for the water.
If it doesn’t: If you cannot find a route that drains away safely, use a different extension style or rethink the discharge location before installing anything.
Stop if:- The only route requires digging into an area with unknown buried utilities or hidden lines.
- The discharge point stays soggy for long periods and clearly does not drain well.
Step 3: Attach the extension to the downspout outlet
- Set the extension or adapter onto the bottom of the downspout outlet and check that it fits snugly.
- If needed, add the matching elbow or connector so the water turns in the direction of your planned path.
- Secure the connection with downspout screws, clamps, or outdoor-rated ties so it will not separate in a hard rain.
- Keep the opening aligned so water can move through without catching on a crushed edge or sharp bend.
If it works: The extension is attached firmly and points toward the discharge path.
If it doesn’t: If the fit is loose or awkward, remeasure the outlet and switch to a connector or extension that matches the downspout size and shape better.
Stop if:- The downspout outlet is crushed, split, or badly rusted and cannot hold an extension securely.
- The gutter or downspout is loose enough that adding an extension will pull it out of alignment.
Step 4: Lay out and support the extension
- Run the extension along the cleared path toward the discharge point.
- Keep the run as straight as practical, with gentle turns instead of tight kinks that can trap debris.
- Make sure the extension continues slightly downhill away from the house so water does not sit in low spots.
- Trim excess length if needed and secure sections so they stay connected and do not shift into a walkway or planting bed.
If it works: The extension reaches the discharge area and has a clear downhill path away from the foundation.
If it doesn’t: If water would have to travel uphill or through a sag, shorten, reroute, or support the extension until the flow path stays downhill.
Stop if:- You cannot create a downhill run away from the house with the materials and route available.
Step 5: Test the flow with a hose
- Run water from a garden hose into the gutter above the downspout or directly into the top of the downspout if you can do it safely from the ground.
- Watch each connection while water is flowing and look for leaks, separation, or overflow.
- Check the end of the extension to make sure water exits freely and keeps moving away from the house.
- Look back at the foundation area after the test and make sure water is not pooling near the wall.
If it works: Water moves through the extension cleanly and discharges away from the house without backing up near the foundation.
If it doesn’t: If flow is weak or leaking, straighten the run, tighten the joints, and clear any blockage in the gutter or downspout before testing again.
Stop if:- Water backs up out of the gutter or downspout, which points to a clog or undersized drainage path that needs separate attention.
- The test creates immediate pooling against the house even with the extension in place.
Step 6: Verify it holds up in real weather
- Check the extension during the next steady rain, not just a light sprinkle.
- Make sure the connection stays attached, the extension stays in place, and the discharge point does not wash out.
- Look at the soil near the foundation a few hours after the rain. It should be noticeably drier than before.
- Adjust the end location or support points if runoff is still creeping back toward the house.
If it works: The extension stays put in real rain and keeps roof runoff away from the foundation area.
If it doesn’t: If the area near the house still gets saturated, extend the discharge farther, improve the ground slope, or address other drainage problems around the foundation.
Stop if:- Heavy rain still causes repeated water entry, major erosion, or foundation-area flooding after the extension is installed.
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FAQ
How far should downspout discharge be from the house?
Far enough that water cannot soak back into the foundation area. In practice, more distance is usually better as long as the discharge point drains well and does not create a hazard.
Can I use a flexible downspout extension?
Yes, if it fits the outlet well and can be laid out with a steady downhill path. Flexible extensions are easy to install, but they can sag or clog if they are kinked or left in a low spot.
Why is water still pooling near the foundation after I added an extension?
The extension may be too short, the ground may slope back toward the house, or the gutter and downspout may still be clogged. Sometimes the real problem is poor grading, not just the discharge point.
Should I bury the extension pipe?
You can, but only if you can maintain a reliable downhill slope and avoid hidden utility lines. A surface extension is simpler to inspect and easier to correct if flow problems show up.
Do I need to secure the extension to the downspout?
Usually yes. A loose connection can pop apart in a heavy storm and send water right back beside the house, which defeats the whole repair.