Expansive Soil in Tennessee: County Ratings

None of the 95 rated counties in Tennessee have a dominant shrink-swell rating of High or Very High. Each rating below is the NRCS shrink-swell class covering the largest share of the county's mapped soil acres, computed from USDA SSURGO data. Open a county for the full class breakdown and what it means for a slab foundation.

County Dominant class High + Very High share Survey coverage
Anderson County Low 3% 97%
Bedford County Moderate 22% 99%
Benton County Low 0% 90%
Bledsoe County Low 2% 100%
Blount County Low 0% 96%
Bradley County Low 0% 97%
Campbell County Low 0% 96%
Cannon County Low 21% 100%
Carroll County Low 0% 100%
Carter County Low 1% 98%
Cheatham County Low 0% 97%
Chester County Low 4% 100%
Claiborne County Low 0% 97%
Clay County Low 4% 91%
Cocke County Low 1% 97%
Coffee County Low 4% 98%
Crockett County Low 0% 100%
Cumberland County Low 0% 99%
Davidson County Low 2% 95%
DeKalb County Low 0% 92%
Decatur County Low 5% 97%
Dickson County Low 0% 99%
Dyer County Low 23% 94%
Fayette County Low 0% 91%
Fentress County Low 0% 100%
Franklin County Low 1% 96%
Gibson County Low 0% 99%
Giles County Low 8% 98%
Grainger County Moderate 4% 94%
Greene County Low 2% 98%
Grundy County Low 0% 100%
Hamblen County Moderate 4% 86%
Hamilton County Low 12% 91%
Hancock County Low 0% 99%
Hardeman County Low 8% 96%
Hardin County Low 2% 95%
Hawkins County Low 0% 97%
Haywood County Low 0% 100%
Henderson County Low 0% 99%
Henry County Low 1% 94%
Hickman County Low 2% 99%
Houston County Low 0% 97%
Humphreys County Low 0% 94%
Jackson County Low 25% 97%
Jefferson County Moderate 0% 87%
Johnson County Low 0% 99%
Knox County Moderate 0% 91%
Lake County Low 29% 80%
Lauderdale County Low 19% 92%
Lawrence County Low 0% 100%
Lewis County Low 0% 98%
Lincoln County Low 21% 99%
Loudon County Moderate 0% 89%
Macon County Low 3% 100%
Madison County Low 3% 99%
Marion County Low 0% 97%
Marshall County Moderate 15% 99%
Maury County Low 7% 92%
McMinn County Low 0% 97%
McNairy County Low 5% 98%
Meigs County Low 6% 90%
Monroe County Low 0% 98%
Montgomery County Low 0% 98%
Moore County Low 13% 99%
Morgan County Low 0% 100%
Obion County Low 1% 96%
Overton County Low 2% 100%
Perry County Low 3% 97%
Pickett County Low 1% 93%
Polk County Low 0% 97%
Putnam County Low 2% 99%
Rhea County Low 4% 93%
Roane County Moderate 4% 90%
Robertson County Low 5% 99%
Rutherford County Moderate 13% 98%
Scott County Low 0% 100%
Sequatchie County Low 1% 100%
Sevier County Low 0% 99%
Shelby County Low 6% 92%
Smith County Moderate 30% 96%
Stewart County Low 0% 93%
Sullivan County Low 0% 94%
Sumner County Low 4% 97%
Tipton County Low 8% 96%
Trousdale County Moderate 28% 96%
Unicoi County Low 0% 99%
Union County Low 0% 91%
Van Buren County Low 1% 99%
Warren County Low 0% 99%
Washington County Moderate 1% 96%
Wayne County Low 1% 100%
Weakley County Low 0% 99%
White County Low 2% 99%
Williamson County Low 3% 98%
Wilson County Moderate 11% 98%

How these ratings are computed

Ratings come from USDA NRCS SSURGO soil survey data: for each soil component we take the maximum linear extensibility percent (lep_r) in the top 100 cm, apply the NRCS Handbook Part 618 class limits (Low under 3 percent, Moderate 3 to 6, High 6 to 9, Very High 9 and above), assign map units by plurality of component percent, and roll acres up to the county. Full details on the methodology section of the lookup page. A county rating is not a parcel-level geotechnical assessment.