Brick repointing questions, answered straight.
The same handful of questions come up on most St. Catharines brick assessments. Here are the plain answers.
Questions St. Catharines homeowners ask about brick repointing
These answers apply broadly to brick repointing and masonry repair in St. Catharines and across the Niagara region. Confirm specifics with a licensed local contractor before any work begins.
How do I know if my mortar joints need repointing?
Run a key along the joint. If mortar crumbles out or the key catches more than a few millimetres in, the joint is open enough to admit water. Visible recessing from the brick face, dark staining in the joints after rain, white salt deposits (efflorescence) on the brick face, and interior dampness on an exterior wall are all signs the joints are failing. Hairline surface cracks alone are not necessarily an emergency but are worth watching.
Does the mortar type really matter on an older house?
On pre-1960 soft-fired brick, yes. It is probably the most important decision in the job. Hard Portland cement mortar is stiffer than the brick it is repointing. When the wall expands and contracts through freeze-thaw cycles, the strain goes into the brick face, which spalls. The damage to the brick is generally permanent. The mortar can be replaced again; the brick face cannot. Ask the contractor to confirm the lime versus Portland decision based on your specific brick before any joints are raked. More detail on the historic mortar page.
What happens if I leave crumbling mortar joints alone?
Water gets in and the freeze-thaw cycle does the rest. Each winter the water in the open joint freezes, expands, and widens the gap. On a typical Niagara winter with dozens of freeze-thaw cycles, a joint that is a few millimetres open in October can be significantly worse by April. Eventually the brick face spalls or the wall begins to shift at structural ties. Early repointing is always less expensive than late repointing.
What is the repointing season in Niagara?
April through October is the safe window. Fresh mortar needs temperatures above roughly 5°C to cure properly, and it should be protected from rain for 24 to 48 hours after application. St. Catharines benefits from Lake Ontario moderation, so the shoulder seasons are sometimes workable. The calendar typically fills in May and June as homeowners act on what they noticed over winter, so reaching out early in the season generally gets a better date in the core summer window.
Is the white staining on my brick a problem?
Efflorescence, the white salt deposits on brick faces, means water is moving through the wall. Cleaning the surface addresses the cosmetic problem; finding and closing the path the water is taking addresses the real one. On a house where the mortar joints are deteriorated, the joints are usually the path. A good contractor checks the joints first on every efflorescence call before recommending surface treatment. Treating the surface without fixing the joints is a temporary answer.
How much does repointing cost in St. Catharines?
Full repointing runs illustratively $12 to $22 per square foot of wall face, depending on mortar type, depth of removal, and access. A typical St. Catharines bungalow front face, roughly 200 square feet, illustratively runs $2,800 to $4,400. Chimney work and tuckpointing are priced separately. Ask the contractor for a written range after a site walk-through, before any work starts. Full breakdown on the cost page.
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