⚠️ Cracked, Split, or Visibly Deflected Beams, or Sinking Support Posts — Do Not Load Further
If you can see cracked or split framing members, a beam or joist that has visibly bowed downward, or a support post that is tilted, corroded, or sinking into the soil — do not add load to the affected area. Avoid placing heavy furniture, appliances, or additional floor covering over a known compromised span. Contact a licensed structural engineer or foundation specialist for evaluation before any repair is attempted.
📍 Quick Summary
- Dip in the middle of a room, floor plan: beam or girder deflecting at midspan — the most common cause in older homes
- Localized soft spot, isolated to one area: single joist rot, subfloor delamination, or post settlement directly below
- Directional slope across a whole room: foundation settlement, heave, or a bearing wall losing its support
- Bouncy floor with no visible dip: joists are undersized or over-spanned — a stiffness problem, not a failure
- Sistering joists won't fix a sag caused by a sinking post or beam end rot — you have to fix what the joist bears on first
Understanding the Floor Load Path
A floor is not a single component — it's a system of elements transferring load from above down to the soil. A sag develops wherever one element in that chain deflects, weakens, or loses its bearing. The location and shape of the sag reflects which element in the chain has failed.
Read the Sag Pattern: What Shape Is It?
6 Causes of Sagging Floors
Homeowner Diagnostic Process
Severity Classification
What You Can Safely Do vs. When to Call
- Map the sag shape with a 4-foot level — document direction and depth
- Track progression with dated photographs and level readings
- Brief crawlspace inspection: look for visibly bowed framing, post condition, rot signs
- Probe joist ends and sill plate gently for soft wood
- Note whether other symptoms are present: door sticking, diagonal cracks, floor slope
- Identify any recently cut or notched framing during inspection
- Any cracked, split, or visibly deflected beams or joists
- Tilted, corroded, or soil-bearing support posts
- Progressive sag confirmed over 3–6 months of monitoring
- Slope across entire room (foundation evaluation needed)
- Sistering joists, adding or adjusting jack posts
- Any modification to load-bearing framing
- Re-leveling or leveling compound application
Frequently Asked Questions
Key Takeaways
- The shape of the sag tells you which structural component to investigate: bowl at one point = post; valley running one direction = beam or joist; whole-room directional slope = foundation.
- Progressive vs. stable is the most important diagnostic question. A stable sag may be historic. A progressive sag is active structural movement requiring professional evaluation.
- Document current conditions with level readings and dated photographs. Recheck in 3–6 months. The comparison is the diagnostic.
- Sistering joists doesn't fix a sag caused by a sinking post, beam end rot, or foundation settlement. Fix what the joist bears on before reinforcing the joist itself.
- Never cut or notch joists or beams. Never add jack posts without engineering. Never apply leveling compound over active structural movement.