Looking for some real-world advice before I go down the expensive waterproofing route.
I have a detached house in Toronto with a finished basement (vinyl flooring). There’s a floor drain roughly near the middle of the basement, which is also the lowest point of the house.
Issue:
Water is slowly coming up from underneath the concrete slab and showing on top of the vinyl flooring, close to that drain area. It’s not flooding heavily, but the area stays damp/wet consistently.
What’s confusing me:
• This is happening even when it hasn’t rained for a week or more
• The water doesn’t seem to be coming from walls or foundation sides
• It’s not near the exterior walls—it’s closer to the center of the basement
• It appears to be coming up through the floor (hydrostatic pressure maybe?)
Timeline:
• I moved in around January → basement was completely dry
• No signs of water during winter
• Problem started after snow melted + we had \~2 weeks of heavy rain
• Since then, the dampness has been pretty constant
House setup / details:
• Soil is heavy clay (poor drainage)
• One side of the house (one of the long sides) has exterior waterproofing done by previous owner
• The back and other sides are NOT waterproofed
• There is a sump pump installed
• However, the water issue is not near the sump pit or that waterproofed wall
• Instead, it’s near the middle of the basement floor
What I’ve checked:
• Doesn’t seem like a plumbing leak (no obvious pipe nearby)
• No visible cracks (but could be under flooring)
• Grading might not be perfect (still assessing)
Concerns:
• Could this just be groundwater trapped under the slab due to clay soil?
• Is the sump system not catching water under the center of the house?
• Would interior weeping tile be required?
• Is this something exterior waterproofing would even fix, given the location?
• I don’t want to spend $20K–$30K waterproofing everything and still have water coming from below
Questions:
1. Has anyone had water come up from the middle of the basement floor like this?
2. What actually solved it for you?
3. Is this typically:
• hydrostatic pressure issue?
• failed/partial weeping tile system?
• sump pit placement problem?
4. If I open the floor and install interior drainage + connect to sump, is that usually the long-term fix?
Any advice, experience, or even things to check before I start breaking concrete would be really appreciated.