Mobile home leveling in Florence County is the quiet repair that fixes the things homeowners actually feel — the door that sticks, the diagonal crack creeping out of a window corner, the bounce in the hallway floor. Florence sits at the heart of South Carolina's Pee Dee, a flat stretch of sandhills, farmland, and river bottom where the ground does not stay still: sandy fill compacts, river-bottom clay near the Great Pee Dee and Lynches swells and shrinks with the season, and a home that was dead level when it was set drifts out a quarter-inch at a time. Mobile Home Mover Pro re-levels single-wides and double-wides across Florence County and the surrounding Pee Dee, bringing the steel chassis back flat to within roughly 1/4 inch with piers and hardwood or steel shims.
What a Florence County re-level actually costs
A standard re-level runs about $400–$1,200 for a single-wide and $700–$1,800 for a double-wide when the existing pier and blocking system is sound and only needs shimming back to spec. The number climbs to roughly $1,500–$3,500 when piers have to be rebuilt, footings have sunk, or a double-wide's marriage line has separated and needs re-mating. We don't post a county-specific flat rate, because three things genuinely move the price: how many of the piers are off, whether the ground under them has to be re-compacted or re-footed, and the access under the home. On the sandy fill and river-bottom soils common across Florence County, sunken footings are the usual culprit — re-shimming a pier that sits on ground still settling just buys you a few months. Our crew crawls the chassis, measures deflection at every pier, and quotes the exact pier count in writing within 24 business hours. The line item maps against a full relocation in our guide on how much it costs to move a mobile home, and SC-specific pricing detail lives on our South Carolina mobile home transport page.
The signs: sticking doors, drywall cracks, soft floors
The home tells you it's out of level before the frame fails. Watch for doors and windows that stick or won't latch, cracks running diagonally from door and window corners, gaps opening between the ceiling and interior walls, soft or bouncy spots in the floor, and on a double-wide a ridge or gap along the marriage line. Outside, look for skirting that's buckling or pulling loose and piers that visibly lean. In the flat Pee Dee — across Florence, Lake City, Johnsonville, Timmonsville, Pamplico, Coward, Olanta, Scranton, and Quinby — a lot of homes sit on sandy or fill ground that compacts unevenly after a wet season, so the first symptom is usually one corner dropping. A home five to ten years on its pad without a re-level has almost always settled somewhere; the only question is how far. Left alone, an out-of-level home overloads the floor joists and chassis and the damage compounds, which is why catching it at the sticking-door stage is far cheaper than waiting for the floor.
Why Florence County soil moves homes: sandhills and river bottom
Leveling here is really a soils problem. The Great Pee Dee and Lynches rivers bound the county, and the ground runs from sandhill sand through farmland fill to river-bottom clay — soils that swell, shrink, and re-compact with the wet-and-dry cycle, which is exactly what drifts a chassis out of plane. The terrain is dead flat, so the issue is never grade; it's what's under the piers. Hurricane Florence in 2018 put large stretches of the lower Pee Dee under water and reshaped how homes get sited in the bottomland: many replacement and relocated units in flood-prone parts of the county now sit on taller pier blocking on elevated pads set above base flood elevation. Taller blocking has more height to shift and more chance to rack, so those homes need a closer eye on the pier-and-shim system. We read the soil and the blocking height before we crawl, re-compact or re-foot piers that have sunk, and level the frame to a 1/4-inch tolerance rather than chasing the low corner.
Leveling after a move or a new set
On-site leveling is the final stage of every move and set we run in the Pee Dee, not a separate trade. After the haul, our crew runs the same close-out: re-block the piers, level the chassis to a 1/4-inch tolerance, bolt up the marriage line on double-wides, and re-anchor. Florence County sits in HUD Wind Zone II, so the tie-down work that pairs with the level follows the federal frame-tie and auger-anchor standard at HUD 24 CFR Part 3280, with the leveling itself measured against the chassis-tolerance and support requirements in HUD 24 CFR Part 3285, the Model Manufactured Home Installation Standards. You should never re-anchor a home that's out of level — the straps fight the frame — so the level always comes first. We break the close-out across setup, leveling, and anchoring so every stage is accounted for in the quote.
How Florence County records a setup, and how we check it
South Carolina records placement and setup work at the county. Florence County runs its permitting through the county's OneStop portal at planning.florenceco.org — a custom system that carries an advanced permit search with filters for permit type, date, and parcel. That public search is how we verify a home's history before we crawl: it tells us how the unit was originally set, whether a placement permit is on file, and what setup work the county recorded at the address. Right now the Florence County permit portal lists more than 1,997 manufactured-home permits on record — 1,767 new-home setups and 50 relocations/moves — so before we quote a re-level we already know how the county coded the install. A plain re-shim of an in-place home generally doesn't trigger the § 31-17-360 county moving permit, because nothing travels a public road; but if your level is part of a fresh setup after a move, we pull the placement paperwork through OneStop so the job stays on record. For the statewide picture, see our South Carolina mobile home moving laws guide.
Storms, FEMA, and why Florence County homes drift out of level
Florence County, SC has been included in 26 federal disaster declarations for storms and flooding since 1989 — among them Hurricane Debby (2024), Hurricane Helene (2024), and Hurricane Ian (2023). Every flood-and-drought cycle works the ground under a manufactured home: saturated bottomland heaves and then settles as it dries, footings sink, and the chassis drifts out of level even when the home never moved an inch. Storm-driven settling is one of the most common reasons we get a leveling call in the Pee Dee — and the elevated pads that flood-prone siting now requires only raise the stakes, because there's more blocking height to keep true. When the water recedes and the doors stop closing, our crew is who you call to re-level a manufactured home in Florence County. (Source: FEMA OpenFEMA disaster-declaration data.)