Type 1 — vapor/dampness/efflorescence: moisture management. DryLok class paint solves it. Type 2 — slow seepage at the floor-wall joint or hairline cracks: water management. Crack injection + drain tile + interior membrane. Type 3 — active seepage during rain, pooling, mold blooms: exterior excavation, foundation membrane, drain tile, sump. No paint on this list fixes Type 3.
The 5 basement waterproofing products worth buying in 2026 (ranked)
1. Best interior masonry paint — UGL DryLok Extreme
DryLok Extreme stops efflorescence, vapor migration, and the musty-cellar smell. It will NOT stop a foundation actively pushing water through a hairline crack — the 15 PSI rating sounds high until a saturated clay backfill puts 20+ on it. Use it after you've fixed the water source, not instead.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Hydrostatic pressure rating | 15 PSI (ASTM D-7088) |
| Wind-driven rain | Pass (ASTM D-6904) |
| Coverage | 75-100 sq ft/gal (2-coat min) |
| Warranty | 15 years (bare, properly prepped masonry only) |
| Price | ~$50/gal |
- UGL DryLok Extreme on Amazon — ~$50/gal
2. Best active-leak plug — Quikrete Hydraulic Water-Stop #1126
Hydraulic cement expands as it sets and plugs running water in minutes — which is why every facilities engineer keeps a pail in the boiler room. Not, however, a permanent crack repair. It stops the leak so you can drive the actual fix outside: grading, extension, membrane.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Set time | 3-5 minutes |
| Composition | Portland + calcium aluminate + sulfoaluminate |
| Compressive strength | 4,500 PSI @ 28 days |
| Application | Mix 4.5:1, press into chiseled-out crack |
| Price | $28 / 20 lb pail |
- Quikrete #1126 on Amazon — $28/20 lb
3. Best DIY crack injection — Applied Technologies Polyurethane 40' Kit
Polyurethane is flexible (unlike epoxy), so it moves with seasonal foundation flex without re-cracking. The spring-drive guns work. The instructional video is honest. Don't use on a crack wider than 1/8" with offset — that's a structural call, not a DIY one.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Material | Low-viscosity polyurethane (expands on contact with water) |
| Crack size | Hairline to ~1/4" |
| Wall coverage | ~40 linear feet of crack |
| Cure | Foams + cures in 10-15 min |
| Price | ~$280-$320 |
- Applied Technologies Polyurethane Kit on Amazon — $280-$320
4. Best dimple-board membrane — DMX AG
The 5/16" air gap behind the membrane gives water a path down to your drain tile instead of soaking into your studs. Pair with interior drain tile + sump and you have a real water-management system. Without the drain tile, you've just built an air pocket with nowhere to go.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Material | 100% virgin HDPE (interior-safe) |
| Dimple depth | 5/16" air gap |
| Hydrostatic relief | Negative-side, eliminates wall pressure |
| Roll size | 6'6" or 7'3" wide × 65'6" |
| Price | ~$2.50-$3.50/sq ft |
- DMX AG on Amazon — $2.50-$3.50/sq ft
5. Best exterior below-grade coating — Henry 107 Asphalt Emulsion
If you're excavating to fix water at the source, you're applying one of these. Henry 107 is the workhorse dampproofer — what most builders specced in 1985 and still works. Liquid Rubber Foundation Sealant is the upgrade pick at ~$280/5 gal — 900% elongation handles foundation movement that asphalt emulsion can't.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | Asphalt + bentonite + water (cold-applied) |
| Standard | ASTM D-1227-95 Type III, Class I |
| Coverage | 3.0 gal / 100 sq ft / coat |
| Use case | Below-grade dampproofing on exterior foundation |
| Price | ~$45 / 4.75 gal pail |
- Henry 107 Asphalt Emulsion on Amazon — ~$45/4.75 gal
The real fix stack, in order
- Grading — slope soil 6" of fall over 10' away from the foundation. Free. Fixes 60% of basement water problems.
- Downspout extensions — get roof water 6-10 feet from the foundation. ~$30 per downspout. Fixes another 20%.
- Gutter cleaning + sizing — overflowing gutters dump roof water directly against the wall. Most-overlooked failure point.
- Exterior membrane (Henry 107 or Liquid Rubber + dimple board outside) — if grading and gutters didn't do it, excavate and waterproof from the side it's getting wet on.
- Interior drain tile + sump pump — the belt-and-suspenders layer. Catches whatever the exterior system misses.
- Interior dimple board (DMX AG) — finishes the inside wall behind framing.
- Interior paint (DryLok) — last, and only after 1-6 are done.
If you do 7 first and skip 1-6, you've painted a problem and bought yourself one wet winter before it shows back up.
When to call a pro
- Visible foundation cracks wider than 1/8" — especially horizontal or stair-step
- Active seepage you can see flowing during/after rain
- Mold coverage greater than 10 sq ft (EPA threshold for professional remediation)
- Any structural concerns: bowing walls, displaced block, doors/windows out of square
- Standing water deeper than ankle-height after any storm
- Sump pump that runs more than every 5 minutes during normal rain
FAQ
Does DryLok actually work?
For damp-wall use — yes. ASTM-tested at 15 PSI hydrostatic. Does NOT stop active seepage, running water, or saturated-backfill pressure. Finish coat, not water source fix.
Interior vs exterior waterproofing?
Exterior prevents water entry. Interior manages water already getting in. Most homes need both — exterior membrane + interior drain tile as insurance.
Best basement waterproofing paint?
UGL DryLok Extreme (category leader 30 years). KILZ Basement & Masonry for damp-only. RadonSeal for penetrating sealer. Skip Flex Seal-style consumer brands for foundations.
Will a sealer fix a foundation crack?
No. A sealer covers; it doesn't repair. Non-structural <1/4": inject polyurethane. Structural (wider than 1/8" with offset, stair-step, active movement): structural engineer call.
Can I waterproof a basement from inside only?
You can manage water from inside — interior drain tile + dimple-board + sump is complete. You cannot prevent water entry from inside; the soil column outside is still pushing.
The bottom line
If your basement smells musty and the walls show white powder, buy DryLok Extreme and a fan — that's a moisture problem, $50 fixes it. If water actually appears in your basement during rain, no paint on this list will solve it. Walk outside in the next storm, watch where the water goes, and fix it there: grading, downspout extensions, exterior membrane. The building's water management is outside. The paint bucket is the last 5%, not the first.
Affiliate disclosure: Building Talks may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Pricing subject to change.
Editorial standards: Cited authorities include EPA Brief Guide to Mold, Moisture and Your Home (EPA 402-K-02-003); ICRI Guideline 210.1R Concrete Surface Preparation; ASTM C150 Portland Cement; ASTM D-7088 Resistance to Hydrostatic Pressure (DryLok 15 PSI rating); ASTM D-1227 Type III Class I asphalt emulsion (Henry 107). Reviewed by Al, Building Doctor — IUOE Local 39 Stationary Engineer.