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Highlands Seawall Construction Cost Guide

Insured 20+ years on the San Jacinto River USACE Section 10 / TCEQ permits handled

Last Updated: June 2026 β€” pricing reflects current Highlands-area seawall construction conditions.

Highlands seawalls cost $150–$1000+ per linear foot installed, depending on material, wall height, embedment depth, and the San Jacinto River access. A typical 100-foot residential vinyl replacement runs $35,000–$80,000 fully installed; concrete and steel projects scale higher.

Seawall cost in Highlands, TX: Most projects range from $150 to $1000+ per linear foot, depending on material, ship-wake and wave-energy exposure, embedment depth, and installation access.
A typical 100-foot residential vinyl replacement runs $35,000–$80,000 fully installed (concrete and steel projects scale higher).
This guide is designed for waterfront property owners, investors, and coastal landowners planning seawall construction, repair, or replacement projects along the San Jacinto River and Harris County bay-margin shorelines. Local Harris County estimating experience covering San Jacinto River ship-wake energy, hurricane storm surge exposure, saltwater corrosion conditions over Beaumont clay, barge access from the San Jacinto River industrial corridor and Lynchburg Reservoir, demolition requirements, and material-based seawall pricing.

Cost: $150–$1000+ per linear foot

Material Cost per linear foot Typical Use
CCA Timber
$150–$450
Lynchburg Reservoir coves and Old River back inlets with limited wave exposure
Marine-Grade Vinyl
$200–$800
Moderate-energy San Jacinto River tributaries and bay frontage requiring saltwater corrosion resistance
Steel Sheet Pile
$300–$900
San Jacinto River industrial-adjacent commercial waterfront and high-load coastal structures with coated and anode-protected systems
Cast-in-Place Concrete
$300–$1000+
High-energy open San Jacinto River and hurricane storm surge-exposed shorelines requiring maximum mass and lifespan
Riprap Rock Armor
$150–$500
Naturalized shoreline protection along gradual coastal slopes and storm-overflow zones near the Lynchburg Reservoir and bayou mouths
$0 $500 $1000/LF

Typical 100-foot Highlands residential replacement: $35,000–$80,000 fully installed (vinyl with concrete cap, includes existing wall demolition, toe protection, and tie-back system). Concrete and steel projects scale higher; San Jacinto River industrial-adjacent commercial waterfront higher still.

Actual pricing depends on ship-wake and wave-energy exposure, embedment depth required for Beaumont clay and coastal lowland soils, tidal-window scheduling around hurricane season, barge or equipment access from the Ship Channel, existing wall demolition, voids behind the structure, permitting through the USACE Galveston District, and whether the project integrates with an existing dock, boat lift, or pier. For an exact written estimate, call 281-501-7940 or request a free site evaluation.

Wood Seawalls

Cost Start at
$150 per linear foot
labor and materials
Cross-section view of a seawall: sheet panels, cap beam, anchor tie-rods, and buried deadman for shoreline retention. Cost-effective wood seawalls for freshwater shoreline erosion control. High-quality timber seawall construction.

Vinyl Seawalls

Cost Start at
$200 per linear foot
labor and materials
Superior vinyl seawall solutions for freshwater and coastal erosion control. Expert vinyl seawall installation.

Steel Seawalls

Cost Start at
$300 per linear foot
labor and materials
Steel seawalls offer maximum strength for heavy commercial and industrial marine construction. Seawall durability.

Concrete Seawalls

Cost Start at
$300 per linear foot
labor and materials
Max-life concrete seawalls for superior shore protection. Concrete seawall for hurricane-prone areas.

Riprap Rock
Boulder Seawalls

Cost Start at
$150 per linear foot
labor and materials
Riprap rock and boulder seawalls offer natural protection and effective wave energy dissipation. Excellent for waterfront erosion control.

Rip Rap Scrim Bags Seawalls

Cost Start at
$140 per linear foot
labor and materials
Rip Rap Scrim Bags seawalls conform to irregular shorelines with low-impact placement, heavy hard-armor systems.

Seawall Replacement
Cost

Cost Start at
$150 per linear foot
labor and materials
Replacement pricing depends on demolition, disposal of old materials, tie-rod replacement, deadman anchors, cap boards.

Seawall Repair
Cost

Cost Start at
$120 per linear foot
labor and materials
Repair pricing depends on leaning walls, failed tie-rods, cap board damage, soil washout, cracked panels.

Highlands Seawall Cost & Pricing FAQ

This FAQ covers real seawall construction costs for Harris County waterfront properties along the San Jacinto River and upper Galveston Bay tributaries β€” repair pricing, replacement cost, vinyl vs concrete comparisons, USACE Section 10 and TCEQ permitting through the Galveston District, installation timelines around hurricane season, barge access from the Port of Highlands, cheapest material options, and Shore Protect's workmanship warranty. Property owners in Baytown, Channelview, Crosby, Mont Belvieu, Sheldon, Lynchburg and surrounding Harris County areas can use this guide to better understand high-energy shoreline protection costs before requesting a written estimate.

Seawall construction in Highlands, TX waterfront properties typically runs from $150 to $1000+ per linear foot, driven by material choice, wall height, embedment depth in coastal lowland soils over Beaumont clay, San Jacinto River ship-wake and wave energy, hurricane storm surge exposure, and demolition scope. Properties on open-water frontage or hurricane storm surge-exposed reaches often land toward the higher end due to increased structural demands and marine equipment requirements.

Typical Seawall Cost Per Foot by Material

  • CCA Timber: $150–$450 per LF (sheltered Lynchburg Reservoir coves and Old River back inlets only)
  • Marine-Grade Vinyl: $200–$800 per LF
  • Steel Sheet Pile: $300–$900 per LF
  • Cast-in-Place Concrete: $300–$1000+ per LF
  • Riprap Rock Armor: $150–$500 per LF

Need guidance on repair, replacement, or new seawall construction along the San Jacinto River? Visit our Highlands seawall contractor page for service options, site evaluation details, and local coastal construction guidance, or browse all Texas seawall cities.

Seawall repair along Harris County shorelines typically costs between $120 and $400 per linear foot, depending on the failure mode and the material being repaired. Ship-Wake action along the San Jacinto River, tidal cycling, and saltwater chloride attack accelerate certain failure patterns β€” face spalling on concrete, anode depletion on steel, marine-borer damage on timber β€” that drive the repair scope and price.

  • Minor repairs: cap-beam sealing, joint caulking, surface patching
  • Moderate repairs: tie-back reset, panel-section stabilization, anode replacement on steel walls
  • Major repairs: face spalling on concrete, void grouting behind the wall, cap fracture, tie-back corrosion failure

Common Highlands Repair Scenarios β€” Specific Cost Ranges

  • Cap-beam crack sealing (10–20 LF section): $800–$3,500
  • Tie-back replacement (per failed rod): $2,000–$6,500
  • Face-spall patching and rebar repair: $1,500–$8,000 depending on spall depth and length
  • Structural reinforcement (leaning or undermined wall): $7,500–$20,000+
  • Void grouting and backfill behind wall: $1,000–$4,000 depending on volume and access

When repair costs approach 50% of the full replacement price, full replacement is typically the stronger long-term investment β€” particularly for older concrete or coated steel walls that have weathered multiple hurricane cycles along the San Jacinto River, including Hurricanes Ike (2008) and Harvey (2017).

Seawall repair is typically the right choice in Highlands, TX when damage is limited to surface spalling, cap-beam cracks, joint failure, or isolated tie-back loss β€” and the underlying wall remains plumb with no significant soil loss behind it. Repair usually ranges from $120 to $400 per linear foot, while full replacement runs from $150 to $1000+ per linear foot depending on material, wall height, embedment depth, demolition, and the San Jacinto River access conditions.

  • Repeated repairs after each June–November hurricane season with no lasting result
  • Leaning or undermined sections with visible void behind the wall
  • Advanced corrosion of steel sheet pile or exposed rebar in concrete
  • Widespread face spalling or cap fracturing
  • End of structural lifespan in saltwater service (typically 15–25 years for timber, 30–50 for coated steel)

Full replacement re-engineers the wall for current wave-energy and surge conditions, restores embedment depth, and protects long-term property value. On lower-energy reaches such as Lost Lake tidal frontage or sheltered Lynchburg Reservoir coves and Old River back inlets, a properly designed bulkhead system may also be considered as a more cost-effective alternative depending on shoreline exposure.

In Highlands, TX, marine-grade vinyl offers a lower upfront cost than cast-in-place concrete, but the choice usually depends on wave-energy exposure rather than budget alone. Vinyl resists chloride attack, marine borers, and surface corrosion without coating maintenance; concrete delivers maximum mass and lifespan for the high-energy open San Jacinto River and hurricane storm surge zones.

MaterialCost / LFDesign LifeBest for Highlands conditions
CCA Timber$150–$45015–25 yrSheltered Lynchburg Reservoir coves, Old River back inlets
Marine-Grade Vinyl$200–$80040–50 yrModerate-energy San Jacinto River tributaries, residential frontage
Steel Sheet Pile$300–$90030–50 yrCommercial waterfront, San Jacinto River industrial-adjacent sites
Cast-in-Place Concrete$300–$1000+50+ yrHigh-energy open San Jacinto River, hurricane storm surge-exposed reaches
Riprap Rock Armor$150–$50030+ yrNaturalized shoreline, gradual coastal slopes

Vinyl performs reliably on moderate-energy San Jacinto River tributaries and Lynchburg Reservoir frontage for 40–50+ years with minimal maintenance. Concrete typically exceeds 50 years when reinforcement is properly specified for the chloride environment and is the preferred specification for open San Jacinto River exposure or hurricane storm surge-prone reaches. Need help picking the right material for your site? Discuss material trade-offs with our Highlands seawall contractors.

Yes. In Harris County, seawall projects along the San Jacinto River typically require permits from Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) and USACE coordination through the Galveston District β€” most commonly under Section 10 for work in navigable waters, with Section 404 review when fill is placed in waters of the US. Permit review timelines and compliance requirements affect both project scheduling and total cost.

Typical permit cost and timing: permit preparation (USACE Section 10 + TCEQ + GLO coordination) adds roughly $2,000–$5,000 and 6–14 weeks to a Highlands seawall project. Barge-dependent sites along the San Jacinto River add another $5,000–$15,000 in mobilization.

Saltwater shorelines may also require state tideland or coastal-zone authorization (such as Texas GLO for state-owned tidelands or a Coastal Management Program consistency review on the Gulf Coast). Waterfront properties in managed communities like Highlands Reservoir, Lynchburg, and San Jacinto Estates may add HOA design review, cap-height coordination with neighboring walls, or material restrictions that push the project toward the higher end of the cost range. See our Highlands seawall contractor page for full USACE / TCEQ permit support details.

Most residential seawall installations in Highlands, TX take between 2 and 5 weeks, depending on wall length, the San Jacinto River access conditions, demolition requirements, and tidal/weather windows. Highlands-area saltwater sites schedule pile driving around tidal cycles and approaching tropical-storm systems during the June–November hurricane season, which can stretch the working calendar even when the wall itself is moving fast.

  • Small repair projects: a few days
  • Standard replacement projects: 2–3 weeks
  • Concrete pours or large custom projects with barge work: 3–6+ weeks

Seawall pricing in Highlands, TX can increase depending on waterfront access, marine-equipment delivery, and community restrictions along the San Jacinto River. Properties in managed communities or subdivisions with HOA oversight β€” Highlands Reservoir, Lynchburg, San Jacinto Estates, Crosby Riverfront β€” may require specific materials, cap finishes coordinated with neighboring walls, and full design review before work can begin.

  • HOA approvals: design review, cap-finish specifications, coordinated cap heights with adjacent properties
  • Limited access: tight lots or restricted shoreline may require barge-supported installation from the San Jacinto River
  • Material upgrades: vinyl over timber, concrete cap with integrated stairs/walkway, sacrificial anodes on steel

In access-limited or barge-only areas β€” narrow easements, no land-side staging, or properties separated from the road by other buildings β€” pricing typically falls toward the higher end of the cost range. A site evaluation is the most accurate way to determine scope and total project cost for your Harris County waterfront property.

Seawall construction cost in Highlands, TX varies based on several interconnected factors that affect both material selection and installation method along the San Jacinto River and the Lynchburg Reservoir waterfront properties:

  • Material type: timber, vinyl, steel, concrete, or riprap
  • Wave energy and surge exposure: open San Jacinto River frontage drives material spec and embedment depth
  • Wall height and embedment depth: taller walls and softer coastal lowland soils both increase cost
  • Existing seawall demolition: removal of failed concrete or timber walls adds equipment time
  • Permits and access: USACE Section 10 (Galveston District), TCEQ, Texas GLO/coastal-zone review, and barge access from the San Jacinto River industrial corridor and Lynchburg Reservoir all factor in

These variables explain why seawall pricing can differ significantly between adjacent Harris County properties on the same shoreline, even when overall project scale appears similar.

The cheapest option in Harris County depends on the actual wave-energy and storm-surge exposure your shoreline faces:

  • Riprap with geotextile scrim: $140–$290/LF β€” low-energy shoreline stabilization, no vertical wall
  • CCA-treated timber: $150–$450/LF β€” most economical sheet-pile option for sheltered Lynchburg Reservoir coves and Old River back inlets only
  • Riprap rock armor: $150–$500/LF β€” naturalized protection along gradual coastal slopes
  • Marine-grade vinyl: $200–$800/LF β€” mid-tier upfront, much longer service life on moderate-energy San Jacinto River frontage

Under-spec'd material on high-energy San Jacinto River frontage commonly fails in a single hurricane or storm-surge event β€” Hurricanes Ike (2008) and Harvey (2017) both produced multi-foot surge along this stretch of the Texas coast β€” so the cheapest option that matches actual site conditions is the right call, not the cheapest line item.

Yes. Shore Protect Construction backs every Highlands seawall project with a workmanship warranty β€” we stand behind installation quality and address issues that arise within the warranty period.

  • Workmanship: covered by Shore Protect's installation warranty
  • Material durability: manufacturer-driven β€” marine-grade vinyl 40–50+ yrs, cast-in-place concrete 50+ yrs, coated steel sheet pile 30–50 yrs, CCA timber 15–25 yrs in saltwater service on Harris County shoreline sites

Specific warranty terms and duration are confirmed in writing at quote review and contract signing for your Harris County waterfront property.

Bulkhead & Seawall projects

View completed bulkhead, seawall, riprap, and shoreline protection projects across our service areas β€” including bank stabilization, vinyl sheet pile installations, and timber bulkhead replacements.

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