Skip to content

PROTECTING YOUR WORLD

Foundation Waterproofing: The Ultimate 2026 Guide to Polyurea Protection

    ✍️ Tyler Gleckler, Coatings Specialist ⏱️ 22 min read 📅 Updated May 13, 2026 🏗️ Covers All Foundation Types

    Every year, water damage costs U.S. homeowners and commercial property owners more than $13 billion. Of that, the majority traces back to a single failure point: an inadequate foundation waterproofing system. Whether you’re protecting a suburban basement, a commercial below-grade structure, or a civil infrastructure project, the material you choose to seal your foundation will determine whether you’re dry for decades — or spending tens of thousands on remediation. This is the definitive 2026 guide to foundation waterproofing, and specifically to why ArmorThane HighLine 510h pure polyurea stands alone at the top of every performance metric that matters.

    98%
    Polyurea waterproofing success rate on tested substrates
    50yr+
    Expected service life vs. 5–15yr for asphalt coatings
    1,000%
    Elongation before rupture — bridges any crack
    3 sec
    Polyurea gel time — walk-on same day

    Why Foundation Waterproofing Matters

    Foundations are the literal interface between a structure and the earth. Below grade, they face a constant, unrelenting assault: hydrostatic pressure from groundwater, soil moisture vapor migrating through concrete pores, freeze-thaw cycling that cracks even well-poured walls, and chemical attack from sulfates and chlorides in aggressive soils. According to the 2023 American Housing Survey, 11.7 million U.S. homes experience water leakage from external sources — and that number grows every year as aging building stock encounters more extreme precipitation events linked to climate change.

    The consequences compound quickly. Water intrusion leads to mold growth (beginning within 24–48 hours of saturation), structural spalling of concrete, corrosion of embedded reinforcing steel, loss of bearing capacity in the soil beneath footings, and catastrophic reductions in property value. The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates that deferred infrastructure maintenance related to moisture damage costs the U.S. economy over $40 billion annually. Getting foundation waterproofing right the first time is not an upgrade — it is the single most important decision in below-grade construction.

    🔑 Key Insight: Studies consistently show that exterior foundation waterproofing delivers 3–5× the ROI of interior drainage mitigation alone, because it stops water at the source rather than managing it after it enters the building envelope.

    Dampproofing vs. Waterproofing: The Critical Distinction

    These two terms are routinely misused — even by experienced contractors — with expensive consequences. Understanding the difference is the first step to specifying the right system.

    Dampproofing is a single or double coat of bituminous (asphalt-based) material designed to resist moisture vapor and incidental water contact. It is emphatically not rated for hydrostatic pressure. Think of dampproofing as a water-resistant jacket: fine for light rain, inadequate in a downpour. IRC Section R406.1 allows dampproofing only where no high water table or severe soil-water conditions exist.

    Waterproofing creates a positive barrier against liquid water under pressure. It spans cracks, bridges construction joints, and withstands the full column of groundwater that may press against a foundation wall during a saturating rain event. IRC Section R406.2 mandates waterproofing whenever “a high water table or other severe soil-water conditions are known to exist.” In practice, forward-thinking builders now specify waterproofing as the baseline for all below-grade work — the cost delta (typically $3,000–$5,000 for a residential foundation) is trivial compared to a $15,000–$40,000 remediation.

    Field Insight — Tyler Gleckler, Coatings Specialist

    On a 2025 residential deep-basement project in the Mid-Atlantic, an ArmorThane HighLine 510h polyurea system was applied over a poured concrete wall showing active seeping at two cold joints. After surface preparation and application at 80 mils, the wall showed zero moisture intrusion through the following winter — including two consecutive 100-year flood events that saturated the site. The same project’s original asphalt dampproofing had failed within 18 months of installation.

    How Water Attacks Your Foundation: The Physics

    To choose the right waterproofing system, you need to understand the three mechanisms by which water destroys foundations:

    1. Hydrostatic Pressure. When the soil surrounding a foundation becomes saturated, water presses against the wall with a force proportional to the depth and the duration of saturation. At just 10 feet of head, this pressure exceeds 4.3 psi — enough to force water through any crack wider than 0.2 mm. Traditional dampproofing, which is essentially a thick paint, cannot withstand sustained hydrostatic pressure at this level.

    2. Capillary Action. Concrete is a porous material. Even without a visible crack, water molecules are drawn through the microscopic pore network by capillary forces. This is why “waterproofing paint” applied to the interior of a basement fails: it’s fighting capillary action from the wrong side of the wall. The solution must be applied on the positive-pressure (exterior) face, or it must be a material dense enough to seal the pore structure from within.

    3. Vapor Migration. Below-grade walls experience a perpetual vapor pressure gradient from wet soil to drier interior air. Over years, this vapor migration carries dissolved minerals that deposit as efflorescence, accelerates carbonation of concrete, and degrades interior finishes. An elastomeric membrane with a low moisture vapor transmission rate (MVTR) — like ArmorThane HighLine 510h polyurea at less than 0.1 perms — arrests this process completely.

    Water Intrusion Mechanism Breakdown in Failed Foundations (Industry Study, 2024)
    Hydrostatic Pressure
    62%
    Capillary Action
    24%
    Vapor Migration
    10%
    Construction Defects
    4%

    Foundation Waterproofing Methods Compared

    The market offers more options for foundation waterproofing than at any point in history. Here is a comprehensive evaluation of every major category — with ArmorThane HighLine 510h polyurea benchmarked against each.

    Asphalt / Bituminous Coatings

    The original “black stuff” — solvent- or emulsion-based asphalt coatings have dominated the foundation market since the 1950s due to their low material cost and ease of application with a brush or spray. Performance limitations are severe: asphalt coatings are rigid at low temperatures (cracking during freeze-thaw), soften at elevated temperatures, cannot bridge cracks wider than 0.5 mm, and have no meaningful hydrostatic resistance. Typical service life is 5–10 years before UV and thermal degradation render them porous.

    ⚠️ Important: Asphalt dampproofing is code-minimum in many jurisdictions but is increasingly recognized as inadequate for finished below-grade spaces, high water table sites, or any structure expecting a service life beyond 15 years.

    Peel-and-Stick Rubberized Asphalt Membranes

    Products like Henry Blueskin WP 200 represent a dramatic step up from brush-applied asphalt. These self-adhering rubberized asphalt sheets provide true waterproofing capability, excellent crack-bridging up to 3/16 inch, and hydrostatic resistance to significant depths. Installation is labor-intensive — sheets must be cut, applied, and overlapped precisely — and lap seams remain the primary failure point. Cold-temperature application is challenging, and the product requires protection board before backfilling. Service life: 20–30 years in moderate conditions.

    Cementitious / Crystalline Waterproofing

    Crystalline technology (Kryton, Xypex) is chemically fascinating: reactive chemicals penetrate concrete pores and react with moisture and free lime to form insoluble crystals that block water passage. Crystalline systems are excellent for positive-side interior applications where exterior access is impossible. Their limitation is elongation — zero crack-bridging ability, rigid failure mode under structural movement, and inability to address surface cracks wider than 0.3 mm without supplemental patching. Best used as a supplement to, not a replacement for, an elastomeric membrane.

    Dimple Drain Mat (HDPE)

    High-density polyethylene dimple mats (Delta-MS, Platon) are drainage planes, not waterproofing membranes. They create an air gap between the foundation wall and the backfill, allowing hydrostatic pressure to dissipate and directing water down to the footing drain. They are most effective when combined with a primary waterproofing layer. Used alone, they manage water rather than excluding it — a meaningful but insufficient defense for finished spaces or high water-table sites.

    ArmorThane HighLine 510h Pure Polyurea — The Performance Leader ⭐

    ArmorThane HighLine 510h is a 100% solids, two-component pure polyurea elastomer applied via high-pressure, heated plural-component spray equipment. It cures in 3–5 seconds to a seamless, monolithic membrane with no joints, seams, or laps. Elongation exceeds 1,000%. Tensile strength reaches 3,000–4,500 psi. Moisture vapor transmission rate falls below 0.1 perms. It bonds to concrete, masonry, steel, and wood with pull-off adhesion values of 300–600 psi on properly prepared substrates. Service life exceeds 50 years in most below-grade environments — longer than the typical building occupancy cycle.

    ✅ The only material that simultaneously satisfies every waterproofing performance criterion: seamless coverage, crack-bridging, hydrostatic resistance, chemical resistance, and durability — in a single application.
    MethodHydrostatic ResistanceCrack BridgingElongationInstall TimeService LifeSeams / Lap RiskCold Temp Install
    ArmorThane HighLine 510h BEST✅ Excellent✅ 1,000%+1,000%+Hours50+ years✅ None — monolithic✅ Down to −40°F
    Peel-and-Stick Membrane✅ Good⚠️ ~3/16″200–400%1–3 days20–30 years⚠️ Lap seams⚠️ 40°F minimum
    Modified Asphalt Spray⚠️ Moderate⚠️ Limited100–300%1–2 days15–25 years✅ Seamless⚠️ 40°F minimum
    Cementitious / Crystalline⚠️ Moderate❌ None<1%2–3 days20–30 years✅ Seamless⚠️ Limited
    Asphalt Dampproofing❌ None❌ Minimal10–30%Hours5–10 years✅ Seamless⚠️ 40°F minimum
    Dimple Mat Alone❌ Drainage onlyN/AN/A1–2 days30+ years (HDPE)⚠️ Panel joints✅ Yes

    Why Polyurea Wins Every Foundation Waterproofing Benchmark

    The technical case for polyurea in foundation waterproofing is overwhelming — but it is the combination of properties, not any single metric, that makes it categorically superior to every alternative.

    Seamless, Monolithic Coverage

    Every other liquid-applied waterproofing system has either a cure window during which it is vulnerable, lap seams where membranes overlap, or a brittleness that develops with age. Pure polyurea has none of these. The spray-applied system conforms perfectly to every irregular surface, penetration, and corner detail, creating a single continuous membrane with no mechanical joints for water to exploit. In a 10,000 sq ft below-grade commercial slab, a polyurea system might have zero seams; a peel-and-stick system on the same substrate could have 500+ lap joints — each a potential failure point.

    Extreme Elongation and Crack Bridging

    Concrete moves. Temperature changes, soil settlement, hydration shrinkage, and seismic activity all cause concrete foundations to crack. The critical question is not whether your foundation will crack — it will — but whether your waterproofing can follow. With elongation exceeding 1,000%, ArmorThane HighLine 510h stretches with cracks rather than failing at them. A 1/4-inch crack that would instantly breach a rigid cementitious coating is completely spanned by an 80-mil polyurea membrane stretched to only a fraction of its failure threshold.

    Chemical and Biological Resistance

    Below-grade environments are chemically aggressive. Sulfate-bearing soils attack concrete and conventional coatings. Chlorides from de-icing salts migrate downward to attack reinforcing steel. Organic acids from decomposing soil matter degrade asphalt-based systems. Microbial communities metabolize some polymer coatings. Pure polyurea is inert to all of these — it passes immersion testing in acids, alkalis, hydrocarbons, and sulfates with no measurable degradation, making it the correct choice wherever chemical soil conditions are unknown or aggressive.

    Speed of Application

    In construction, time is money. A conventional peel-and-stick waterproofing job on a large residential foundation takes 2–4 days, requiring temperature management, primer drying, careful seam overlap, and protection board installation before backfill. ArmorThane HighLine 510h can coat the same foundation in 4–8 hours, with the membrane ready for light backfill contact in under an hour. On commercial projects, this compression of the waterproofing schedule routinely saves 3–5 days of critical-path time.

    98%
    Waterproofing Effectiveness
    95%
    Crack Bridging Score
    97%
    Long-Term Durability

    The ArmorThane HighLine 510h Foundation Waterproofing System

    ArmorThane has spent three decades engineering pure polyurea systems for the world’s most demanding environments — blast mitigation in the Gulf, secondary containment for chemical plants, and extreme-condition infrastructure protection. The same chemistry that stops blast fragmentation and chemical spills is now available as the definitive solution for foundation waterproofing.

    HighLine 510h — The Standard System

    HighLine 510h is optimized for residential foundations, crawl spaces, and light commercial below-grade walls. Applied at 40–80 mils, it delivers a seamless membrane with 900%+ elongation, tensile strength of 2,800 psi, and zero VOC emissions after cure. Its hydrophilic primer chemistry allows application over slightly damp concrete — a critical advantage in the field, where perfectly dry substrates are the exception, not the rule. HighLine 510h is the system of choice for new residential construction and for retrofitting existing foundations without excavation using the negative-side injection variant.

    HighLine 510h Pro — Heavy-Duty for Challenging Conditions

    HighLine 510h Pro steps up the performance envelope for applications where hydrostatic head exceeds 20 feet, soils are chemically aggressive, or the structure demands a 50-year-plus rated service life. Applied at 80–150 mils, Pro delivers tensile strength of 4,200 psi, elongation of 1,100%, and chemical resistance to sulfuric acid at pH 2. It is the standard specification for commercial underground parking structures, below-grade data centers, bridge abutments, tunnels, and any infrastructure project where failure is genuinely not an option.

    ⚠️ Critical Specification Note: Not all polyureas are equal. Generic spray polyureas designed for truck bed liners or agricultural tanks may share the same chemistry class but do not deliver the elongation, adhesion, or tested hydrostatic performance of a purpose-engineered foundation waterproofing system like HighLine 510h. Always specify by tested performance — ASTM D412 elongation, ASTM D624 tear strength, and ASTM E96 moisture vapor transmission — not by marketing claims.

    The Negative-Side System: Waterproofing from the Interior

    When exterior excavation is impossible — on a finished urban building, a structure with adjacent utilities, or a heritage property — ArmorThane offers a negative-side polyurea system. Applied to the interior face of the foundation wall, the negative-side system works differently: rather than blocking water before it enters the wall, it captures and manages water in a drainage cavity that routes moisture to a sump. This is the second line of defense — effective, but best combined with exterior HighLine 510h waterproofing for new construction.

    Performance Data & Comparative Charts

    Elongation at Failure by Waterproofing System Type (%)
    ArmorThane HighLine 510h
    1,100%
    Peel-and-Stick Rubberized
    400%
    Modified Asphalt Spray
    300%
    TPO Membrane
    250%
    Asphalt Dampproofing
    20%
    Cementitious Coating
    5%
    Expected Service Life by Waterproofing System (Years)
    ArmorThane HighLine 510h
    50+ years
    Peel-and-Stick
    30 years
    Modified Asphalt Spray
    20 years
    Cementitious
    20 years
    Asphalt Dampproofing
    7 years
    🔶

    Peel-and-Stick Membrane

    Good waterproofing, but lap seams create vulnerability. Sensitive to low-temperature installation.

    🧱

    Cementitious / Crystalline

    Excellent for integral concrete treatment, but zero elongation — cracks are fatal to coverage.

    🟫

    Asphalt Dampproofing

    Code-minimum only. Not a waterproofing system. Fails under hydrostatic pressure and ages rapidly.

    🔷

    HDPE Dimple Mat

    A drainage layer, not a waterproofing membrane. Best used in combination with a primary system.

    🔬

    Polyurethane Liquid

    Good performance but lower elongation and moisture sensitivity during cure vs. pure polyurea.

    The ArmorThane HighLine 510h Installation Process

    Proper installation is as critical as material selection. A world-class polyurea system, applied incorrectly, will underperform a mediocre system applied correctly. Here is the complete, step-by-step process that ArmorThane-certified applicators follow on every foundation waterproofing project.

    1

    Site Assessment & System Specification

    Before a single drop of polyurea is mixed, the project requires a thorough site assessment: soil boring or percolation testing to determine groundwater conditions, analysis of soil chemistry for sulfate and chloride concentrations, review of structural drawings to identify penetrations and cold joints, and selection of the correct HighLine 510h specification based on hydrostatic head, temperature range, and expected service life requirements.

    2

    Surface Preparation

    Surface preparation is 80% of the battle in any coating application, and foundation waterproofing is no exception. Concrete must be clean, sound, and profiled to ICRI CSP 3-5 (typically achieved by shotblasting or mechanical scarification). All laitance, curing compound, form release agent, and existing coating must be removed. Bug holes and honeycombing are filled with ArmorThane’s fast-setting polyurea patch compound. Substrate moisture is measured with a calibrated meter — HighLine 510h tolerates up to 19% surface moisture, but standing water must be removed. Steel substrates are abrasive-blasted to SSPC-SP 6/NACE 3.

    3

    Primer Application

    All concrete substrates receive ArmorThane’s moisture-tolerant, amine-functional primer at 4–6 mils DFT. This primer serves two purposes: it seals residual porosity (reducing the risk of pinholes in the polyurea topcoat) and provides a reactive amine interface that the isocyanate component of the HighLine 510h bonds to chemically — not just mechanically. Pull-off adhesion values on properly primed, prepared concrete consistently exceed 350 psi. Primer must cure to tack-free before polyurea application, typically 30–60 minutes.

    4

    Detail Work — Penetrations, Cold Joints & Tie Holes

    Details are where waterproofing systems fail. Every pipe penetration receives a polyurea-compatible sleeve seal or a hand-applied polyurea flashing at a minimum of 6 inches radius. Cold joints receive a polyurea filler bead before the main application. Form tie holes are filled with the patch compound and primed. Corners and changes in plane receive a coved polyurea fillet before the field coat.

    5

    HighLine 510h Application

    HighLine 510h is applied using high-pressure (2,000–3,500 psi), heated (160–175°F) plural-component spray equipment — typically a Graco or Gusmer reactor — by ArmorThane-certified applicators. A single pass at 40 mils is typically followed by a second pass at 40 mils for a total of 80 mils. Critical details receive a third pass. An experienced two-person crew can apply 5,000 sq ft of 80-mil membrane in a single shift. Atmospheric conditions must be monitored — dew point must be at least 5°F below substrate temperature to prevent moisture contamination of the polyurea surface.

    6

    QA/QC Inspection and Testing

    Every ArmorThane foundation waterproofing installation includes mandatory QA: holiday (spark) testing per ASTM D5162 to locate any pinholes or discontinuities, dry film thickness measurement per SSPC-PA 2, and pull-off adhesion testing per ASTM D4541 at a minimum of one test per 2,500 sq ft. All test results are documented in a project completion package provided to the owner. Zero holidays are the acceptance criterion — any detected discontinuity is repaired before the project is certified complete.

    7

    Protection Layer and Backfill

    Where substrate preparation reveals sharp aggregate or where backfill includes fractured rock or angular fill, a protection board (rigid insulation or dedicated protection mat) is mechanically fastened over the cured polyurea before backfilling. Backfill equipment must not directly contact the membrane. On heavy commercial projects, ArmorThane specifies drainage composite (dimple mat with geotextile facing) over the HighLine 510h to manage any residual surface water and reduce long-term hydrostatic pressure on the membrane.

    Foundation Waterproofing Cost & ROI: Interactive Calculator

    The cost of foundation waterproofing varies widely by system, substrate, and project scale. Use the interactive tool below to estimate your material investment and compare it to the cost of water damage remediation.

    Foundation Waterproofing ROI Estimator
    $6,750
    Estimated Material + Installation Cost
    vs. average water damage remediation cost of $22,000 — ROI: 226% over system lifetime
    📊 The Math: ArmorThane HighLine 510h costs approximately $4–$6/sq ft installed on a typical foundation, compared to $0.50–$1.00 for asphalt dampproofing. On a 1,500 sq ft foundation, the premium is roughly $5,000–$8,000. The average interior water damage remediation job in the U.S. costs $22,000 (IICRC, 2024). A single avoided remediation event delivers a 3–5× return on the polyurea investment.

    The Evolution of Foundation Waterproofing Technology

    1950s–1970s

    The Asphalt Era

    Bituminous coatings dominate the market. Code-minimum dampproofing is the industry standard. Water damage is accepted as an inevitable part of building ownership.

    1980s

    Dimple Mats & Drainage Innovation

    HDPE dimple drain mats emerge as a drainage-plane innovation. The concept of actively managing groundwater rather than simply resisting it gains traction.

    1990s

    Self-Adhering Membranes

    Peel-and-stick rubberized asphalt membranes enter the market, offering genuine waterproofing capability for the first time in the residential sector.

    2000s

    Crystalline & Spray-Applied Systems

    Crystalline technology matures. Early polyurethane and polyurea sprays begin appearing on commercial projects. IRC Section R406 codifies dampproofing vs. waterproofing distinction.

    2010s

    Pure Polyurea Enters Foundation Market

    ArmorThane pioneers pure polyurea for foundation waterproofing with HighLine 510h, transferring military-grade blast protection chemistry to civilian infrastructure. The performance gap vs. alternatives becomes undeniable.

    2026

    Polyurea Becomes the Performance Standard

    Pure polyurea now specified on commercial, civil, and high-value residential projects as the baseline performance system. Smart-sensor-embedded membranes and self-healing polyurea hybrids enter specification documents.

    Foundation Waterproofing by Application Type

    Different below-grade applications have different requirements. Here is how ArmorThane HighLine 510h performs across the full range of foundation types:

    Poured Concrete Foundations

    The most common residential and commercial foundation type. HighLine 510h bonds directly to clean, prepared concrete at 300–600 psi pull-off. Cold joints between pours — the primary failure point in poured concrete foundations — are sealed with a polyurea fillet before the main application. Bug holes and honeycombs are pre-filled. The result is a membrane that performs consistently across the entire foundation, regardless of pour sequence or surface variation.

    Concrete Masonry Unit (CMU) / Block Foundations

    CMU foundations present a specific challenge: the mortar joints are perennially weak points, and the block surface is porous and irregular. IRC R406.1 requires a 3/8-inch Portland cement parging coat before dampproofing on CMU walls. When HighLine 510h is specified, the parging is still applied (filling the block face irregularities), followed by the primer and the main polyurea coat. The result outperforms bare-CMU applications of any other system.

    Insulated Concrete Form (ICF) Foundations

    ICF foundations are increasingly common in high-performance residential and commercial construction. They present a specific challenge for waterproofing: the expanded polystyrene foam insulation is incompatible with solvent-based products, including most asphalt systems. ArmorThane HighLine 510h is 100% solids and solvent-free — it is fully compatible with ICF substrates and bonds to both the exposed concrete and the foam face when ICF faces are not stripped before application.

    Below-Grade Commercial Slabs and Podium Decks

    Horizontal waterproofing for below-grade occupied spaces — parking decks, plaza decks, terraces over occupied space — demands the highest performance. ArmorThane’s traffic-bearing grade HighLine 510h Pro combines the full waterproofing performance with sufficient hardness and abrasion resistance to withstand vehicular traffic without a separate wear coat. This simplifies the specification and eliminates the inter-coat adhesion risks inherent in multi-product systems.

    Tunnels, Underpasses, and Below-Grade Infrastructure

    Civil infrastructure represents the most demanding environment for foundation waterproofing: continuous hydrostatic pressure, vibration from traffic loads, chemical exposure from de-icing salts, and access constraints that make failure remediation extraordinarily expensive. ArmorThane HighLine 510h systems are specified on tunnel bore liners, cut-and-cover tunnels, underpasses, and below-grade transit stations — applications where service life expectations of 50–100 years are standard.

    Technical Note

    ArmorThane HighLine 510h Achieves ASTM D6083 / D412 Certification for Foundation Waterproofing Systems

    HighLine 510h has been independently tested to ASTM D6083, D412, D624, E96, and ASTM C836, with full third-party test packages available to specifying engineers on request. Contact ArmorThane’s technical services team for project-specific documentation.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Foundation Waterproofing

    What is the best method for foundation waterproofing?
    Pure polyurea is the highest-performing foundation waterproofing system available today. It is seamless, bonds to virtually any substrate, achieves over 1,000% elongation (bridging any crack the foundation develops), resists hydrostatic pressure to any reasonable depth, and has a service life exceeding 50 years. ArmorThane’s HighLine 510h system represents the state of the art for both residential and commercial below-grade applications.
    What is the difference between dampproofing and waterproofing?
    Dampproofing resists moisture vapor and incidental water but is not designed for hydrostatic pressure. Waterproofing creates a positive barrier against liquid water under pressure, spanning cracks and withstanding the full column of groundwater that may press against a foundation wall during a saturating rain event. IRC Section R406 requires waterproofing (not just dampproofing) wherever high water tables or severe soil-water conditions are known to exist.
    How much does foundation waterproofing cost?
    Costs vary widely by system and substrate. Asphalt dampproofing costs $0.50–$1.00 per square foot installed. Peel-and-stick waterproofing membranes run $2.00–$3.50/sq ft. ArmorThane HighLine 510h polyurea waterproofing is typically $4.00–$6.50/sq ft installed, depending on substrate condition, project scale, and system specification. On a typical 1,500 sq ft residential foundation, the all-in difference between the cheapest dampproofing and the premium polyurea system is approximately $5,000–$8,000 — a fraction of the $22,000 average water damage remediation cost that an inadequate system risks.
    Does polyurea waterproofing work on existing foundations?
    Yes. Polyurea is an excellent retrofit waterproofing material for existing foundations that have experienced failure or degradation of an older system. On the exterior, existing asphalt or failed peel-and-stick coatings are mechanically removed, the concrete is profiled, and the HighLine 510h is applied directly. ArmorThane also offers injection-port systems for negative-side (interior) waterproofing retrofits on structures where exterior excavation is not practical.
    Can I apply polyurea waterproofing myself?
    Pure polyurea requires high-pressure, heated plural-component spray equipment and trained operators. It is not a DIY material. Improper temperature, pressure, or mixing ratio produces a product that is either under-cured (tacky, weak) or over-cured (brittle, poor adhesion). ArmorThane’s certified applicator network provides access to properly trained and equipped crews for projects of any scale.
    How long does foundation waterproofing last?
    It depends entirely on the system. Asphalt dampproofing: 5–10 years before significant degradation. Peel-and-stick membranes: 20–30 years in moderate conditions, less in aggressive soils. ArmorThane HighLine 510h polyurea: 50+ years, with documented projects exceeding 30 years of service with no measurable degradation in immersion conditions. Polyurea’s resistance to hydrolysis, UV (when topcoated), chemical attack, and microbiological degradation gives it a service life that outlasts virtually any other polymer coating category.
    Do I need foundation waterproofing if I have a sump pump?
    A sump pump manages water that has already entered your structure — it does not prevent water from infiltrating your foundation walls and floor. Relying on a sump pump alone means your foundation concrete is permanently saturated, accelerating carbonation, reinforcing steel corrosion, and structural degradation. The correct approach is to combine exterior waterproofing (keeping water out of the wall mass) with interior drainage (a sump system as backup for any residual moisture). Exterior HighLine 510h polyurea plus an interior sump system is the belt-and-suspenders solution.
    What is polyurea and why is it better for waterproofing than polyurethane?
    Polyurea is formed by the reaction of an isocyanate with an amine resin, producing an elastomer with a 3–5 second gel time and mechanical properties — elongation, tensile strength, tear resistance — that are significantly superior to polyurethane coatings. Polyurethane uses a polyol (alcohol) resin, which results in slower cure times, moisture sensitivity during cure (CO2 off-gassing creates pinholes in humid conditions), and lower elongation. For foundation waterproofing specifically, polyurea’s ability to cure reliably in high-humidity below-grade environments, where polyurethane struggles, is a decisive practical advantage.

    ArmorThane HighLine 510h — In the Field

    Pure polyurea foundation waterproofing applied by certified ArmorThane specialists worldwide.

    ArmorThane certified applicator spraying HighLine 510h polyurea onto a foundation wall — seamless waterproof membrane
    Application

    Spray-Applied Polyurea — Cures in Under 30 Seconds

    HighLine 510h bonds monolithically to concrete — no seams, no joints, no weak points. One coat delivers 60+ mil DFT of seamless waterproof protection.

    Get a Quote
    Residential foundation exterior coated with ArmorThane polyurea — black seamless waterproofing membrane before backfill
    Residential Project

    50+ Year Protection Before Backfill

    Exterior foundation walls coated with ArmorThane pure polyurea — delivering a lifetime waterproof barrier that outlasts the structure itself.

    Talk to an Expert
    01 / 02
    Spray application Application
    Residential Residential
    Pure Polyurea Waterproofing

    Specify ArmorThane HighLine 510h on Your Next Foundation Project

    From residential basements to commercial underground structures, ArmorThane’s pure polyurea waterproofing systems deliver 50+ years of proven protection — with certified applicators across North America and worldwide. Talk to our engineering team about your specific waterproofing needs and project timeline.

    50+Year Lifespan
    100%Seamless Barrier
    30sFull Cure Time
    Contact ArmorThane Today
    Tyler Gleckler - ArmorThane blast mitigation specialist author photo

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    TYLER GLECKLER

    Tyler Gleckler is a coatings specialist with deep field expertise in polyurea, polyaspartic, and high-performance protective systems. His writing appears regularly in Polyurea Magazine, the American Polyurea Organization, ArmorThane’s technical library, and a range of industry publications. He focuses on translating laboratory chemistry into specifications that engineers, owners, and applicators can actually deploy.

    Protective Coating Applications

    Products

    Applicator Opportunities

    Knowledge Center

    Galleries