Every fence post needs concrete in the ground to hold it — that part isn't up for debate. What is up for debate is how that concrete gets there. Homeowners researching a DIY fence, and even some other contractors, assume you always mix concrete with water in a wheelbarrow before it goes in the hole. That's one way to do it. It's not the way we do it.
Here's the real difference between dry-set and mixed concrete, and why dry-set is our standard for setting fence posts in Louisville.
Mixed concrete is exactly what it sounds like — dry concrete mix combined with a measured amount of water, stirred to a workable consistency, then shoveled or poured into the post hole. It's the traditional method, and it's what most people picture when they think about setting a post.
Dry-set (sometimes called dry-pour) means pouring the dry concrete mix straight from the bag into the hole around the post, with no separate mixing step. We tamp it as we go to pack it in tight and eliminate air pockets and voids, then wet the hole thoroughly right afterward so the concrete cures quickly and evenly, rather than leaving it to slowly pull moisture from the surrounding soil.
| Category | Dry-Set | Mixed (Wet) |
|---|---|---|
| Prep work | None — pour straight from the bag | Mixing with water on-site required |
| Water ratio risk | None — no water measuring to get wrong | Too much or too little water weakens the mix |
| Speed per post | Fast — no mixing or wheelbarrow trips | Slower — mixing adds time to every hole |
| Job site mess | Minimal | Mixing water and wet concrete on-site |
| Best suited for | Almost any soil — we wet the hole ourselves rather than waiting on the ground to do it | Jobs where a controlled, verified mix ratio is required |
| Consistency across many posts | Very consistent — same process every hole | Depends on the mixer getting the ratio right each batch |
Dry-set wins on the things that actually matter on a real job:
The concrete itself almost never fails, regardless of whether it's dry-set or mixed. When we've pulled old posts that were leaning or loose, the concrete footing was still solid — the actual problem was the post rotting inside it, or the soil around the footing shifting or washing out. Getting the concrete right matters, but it's rarely the reason a fence post fails.
For gate posts specifically — which we already size up from standard line posts since gates take the most stress on a fence — a controlled mix can make sense on the heaviest commercial gates, though residential gate posts hold up fine with a properly packed dry-set.
Both methods produce a solid post if done correctly. Dry-set is our standard because it removes the biggest failure point in the process — a bad water ratio — while also being faster and more consistent across every post on the job. It's part of why we can get a fence installed in days rather than weeks, without cutting corners on how the posts are actually set.
Ruth Fence and Deck installs fences throughout Louisville KY and Southern Indiana. Family-owned, licensed & insured, backed by a 2-year craftsmanship warranty.
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