
Retaining Walls · Bay Area, CA · 9 Counties
We’ve built hundreds of retaining walls across Bay Area hillsides — from garden borders in Willow Glen to engineered boulder walls on Saratoga estates. Every wall permitted, drained, and built to outlast the property. CSLB #1075979.
Walk around any Bay Area hillside neighborhood after a wet winter and you’ll find them — walls that have bowed outward, cracked at the base, or tipped away from the slope they were supposed to hold. The wall material is almost never the problem. The problem is water that had nowhere to go.
“Every retaining wall I’ve ever had to replace failed the same way — the drainage behind it was wrong from day one. Water built up, the soil saturated, the pressure multiplied. No wall survives that indefinitely, no matter what it’s made of.”
— Thiago Souza, Owner · Souza & Son’s Inc · CSLB #1075979Hydrostatic pressure — water pressure building up behind a wall with inadequate drainage — is the leading cause of retaining wall failure throughout the Bay Area. A wall without proper drainage behind it is a wall with a countdown timer. Every system we build includes continuous drainage aggregate, perforated pipe at the base, and geotextile fabric to prevent soil migration into the drainage layer. On hillside projects, we engineer the drainage system to handle Bay Area peak rainfall intensity — not average rainfall.
Kevin L.
“Retaining wall on our hillside Blossom Hill property. Thiago handled the PBCE grading permit, coordinated the geotechnical review, and the wall solved years of erosion problems. Still perfect after the first rainy season.”

Hillside properties in Mission San Jose, Saratoga, Los Gatos, and Marin require walls that stabilize slopes against Bay Area winter rainfall. We engineer these systems for soil type, wall height, and seismic loading.

Converting steep hillside lots into usable terraced yard space. Tiered retaining walls create flat areas for patios, gardens, and outdoor living — transforming unusable slope into the most valuable part of the property.

Low-height garden walls, raised planter borders, and landscape retaining features. Properly drained and engineered even at small scale — a 2-foot wall with poor drainage fails just as reliably as a 6-foot one.

Grade differences at property lines, drainage correction adjacent to structures, and walls that manage water movement across the site. Common in Centerville, Irvington, and Warm Springs flat communities.
The details that separate a 40-year installation from one that needs attention in 10 — and why we don’t cut corners on any of them.
40–75+ — Years of service life when drained correctly
A properly engineered retaining wall with drainage in Bay Area conditions lasts 40–75+ years. The same wall without drainage fails in 10–20. The difference is entirely in what happens behind the wall face — invisible, but everything.
$0 — Hydrostatic pressure with correct drainage
Continuous drainage aggregate and perforated pipe behind the wall face eliminates hydrostatic pressure completely. No pressure buildup means no outward force on the wall. This is the engineering, not the material, that determines longevity.
Geogrid — Reinforcement for walls over 4 feet
Walls over 4 feet require geogrid reinforcement layers at engineered intervals to prevent the soil mass behind the wall from overturning it. We specify geogrid placement based on soil weight, wall height, and surcharge loads — not a generic rule of thumb.
Permitted — Every wall over 3 feet in all Bay Area cities
Bay Area cities require building permits for retaining walls over 3 feet. Hillside walls over 4 feet require geotechnical engineer reports. We manage every permit application and engineer coordination at no additional charge.
Every installation backed by written warranty and full permit documentation
CSLB #1075979 · Bonded & Insured · 500+ Bay Area projectsNo subcontractors. No surprises. Here’s exactly what happens on every retaining walls project.

Thiago assesses the slope gradient, soil type, wall height, surcharge loads, and drainage conditions in person. For walls over 4 feet on significant slopes, we coordinate with a licensed geotechnical engineer for a soils report — a requirement in most Bay Area cities for walls of this scale.

Retaining walls over 3 feet require building permits in every Bay Area city. Hillside walls requiring geotechnical reports add 2–4 weeks to the permit timeline — we identify this at the estimate stage so there are no surprises. We manage every submittal and engineer coordination at no additional charge.
Typical permit timeline: 7–14 days for standard walls, 3–5 weeks for hillside walls requiring geotech reports.

We excavate the wall base to engineered embedment depth — typically 1 foot of burial for every 8 feet of wall height for segmental systems. The footing is graded level and compacted. This step is not negotiable — inadequate embedment depth is the second most common cause of wall failure after drainage.

Wall units are laid in running bond with geogrid reinforcement at engineered intervals. Behind the wall face, we install a continuous 12-inch drainage aggregate column with perforated pipe at the base, wrapped in geotextile fabric. The drainage system is built as the wall goes up — it cannot be retrofitted later.

Structural backfill is placed and compacted in maximum 8-inch lifts to prevent settlement. On permitted projects, the city building inspector conducts a required inspection to close the permit. You receive the permit closeout documentation and a wall that will still be standing in 50 years.









Kevin L.
“Retaining wall on our hillside Blossom Hill property. Thiago handled the PBCE grading permit, coordinated the geotechnical review, and the wall solved years of erosion problems. Still perfect after the first rainy season.”
Retaining Wall · Blossom HillWilliam C.
“Engineered natural boulder retaining wall on our Saratoga hillside. Thiago coordinated the geotechnical engineer, pulled the CDD permit, and the wall is exceptional — looks like it’s always been part of the landscape.”
Boulder Wall · SaratogaTom R.
“Retaining wall after winter rains caused serious erosion on our Oakland Hills property. Professional from first call to final inspection. The wall is solid and the drainage system he installed solved the water problem completely.”
Retaining Wall · Oakland HillsFree on-site estimates throughout the Bay Area — we come to you, in every county, at no travel charge.
Yes — every Bay Area city requires building permits for retaining walls over 3 feet in height. Walls on slopes exceeding 15% gradient require geotechnical engineer reports and structural calculations. We manage all permit applications and engineering coordination at no additional charge on every project.
Inadequate drainage behind the wall — almost always. Hydrostatic pressure from saturated soil exerts enormous outward force that no wall material can resist indefinitely. The second most common cause is insufficient embedment depth at the base. Both are design and construction decisions, not material failures.
Standard segmental block walls on flat lots run $28–$65 per square face foot installed. Engineered hillside systems with geotechnical reports run $42–$100 per square face foot. Natural boulder walls for premium hillside properties run $65–$150+ per square face foot. Free detailed written quotes after on-site assessment.
Most Bay Area cities allow walls up to 3 feet without a building permit, provided the wall is not on a significant slope and has no surcharge loads above it. Walls over 3 feet require permits, and walls over 4 feet on slopes require geotechnical reports. We assess requirements at the free estimate.
Standard wall projects take 3–7 business days for construction after permits. Hillside projects requiring geotechnical engineering may need 3–5 weeks for permit approval after the soils report is completed. We give you the full timeline at the estimate stage.
Souza & Son’s Inc is a CSLB-licensed retaining wall contractor serving all 9 Bay Area counties. We build segmental block, natural boulder, and gabion retaining wall systems throughout Santa Clara, Alameda, Contra Costa, San Mateo, Marin, San Francisco, Napa, Sonoma, and Solano counties. Every project is personally managed by Thiago — no subcontracting, full permit management included.
Bay Area hillside communities — Mission San Jose in Fremont, Blossom Hill and Almaden Valley in San Jose, Congress Springs and Pierce Road in Saratoga, the Oakland Hills, and Marin’s hillside neighborhoods — create consistent retaining wall demand for slope stabilization and terrace creation. These hillside projects require geotechnical assessment for walls over 4 feet, seismic design consideration per CBC Chapter 18, and drainage systems engineered for Bay Area peak rainfall intensity. We coordinate with licensed geotechnical engineers and manage all permit submittals as part of every hillside project.
Building permits are required for retaining walls over 3 feet in height in all Bay Area cities. Walls on slopes exceeding 15% gradient additionally require geotechnical engineer reports and structural calculations stamped by a licensed civil or geotechnical engineer. Projects near Saratoga Creek, Guadalupe River, Coyote Creek, or other waterways may require additional review from the Santa Clara Valley Water District or similar agencies. Permit processing takes 7–14 business days for standard wall projects and 3–5 weeks for hillside projects requiring geotechnical reports.
Retaining wall pricing varies significantly by wall type, height, soil conditions, and site access. The ranges below reflect completed projects throughout the Bay Area:
| Project Type | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Segmental block wall — flat lot (40 ft × 4 ft) | $11,200 – $26,000 | Drainage, permit included |
| Engineered hillside wall (40 ft × 4 ft) | $16,800 – $40,000 | Geogrid, geotech report, permit |
| Natural boulder wall — hillside (40 ft × 4 ft) | $26,000 – $60,000+ | Saratoga / Marin / Oakland Hills typical |
| Gabion wall (40 ft × 3 ft) | $10,400 – $22,000 | Wire baskets, decorative rock fill |
| Garden / landscape wall (20 ft × 2 ft) | $2,800 – $8,000 | Low-height landscape border |
Pricing varies by site conditions, access, and county. We quote every project after a free on-site assessment — no fabricated numbers.

Free on-site estimate · Thiago visits in person · Written quote within 24 hours