Concrete Driveway Cost by State: 2026 Cost Ranges and Pricing Data

Use this state-by-state concrete driveway cost dataset to compare planning ranges, check contractor quotes, and understand why the same driveway costs more in one state than another. The numbers are CED modelled planning ranges, not verified contractor bid averages.

Plain driveway range$7–$18/sq ftTypical U.S. planning range for standard broom-finished concrete driveways.
600 sq ft driveway$4,800–$10,800Useful benchmark for a common two-car residential driveway.
Best useCompare scopeCheck whether a bid includes size, finish, demolition, base and drainage.
Quick Summary

Concrete driveway cost usually ranges from $7 to $18 per square foot for a plain residential driveway. State, labor cost, ready-mix pricing, access, demolition, drainage, finish type and slab thickness can move the final quote up or down.

How to Use This Data

Start with your state range. Then compare your project scope. A simple 4-inch broom-finished driveway with normal access should sit closer to the state’s typical value. A replacement driveway with demolition, haul-off, base repair, drainage correction or decorative finish should sit closer to the high end.

This dataset supports the Concrete Driveway Cost Calculator. The calculator uses the state benchmark, then adjusts for driveway size, thickness, base depth, finish type, reinforcement, removal, sealing, drainage and ready-mix price.

Use this page for early planning and quote checking. Use a local contractor quote for final pricing.

State Cost Lookup

Select a state to see the CED 2026 planning range. This is a quick article lookup, not a full project calculator.

Lower labor and moderate material cost

Low$6
Typical$10
High$14
EvidenceMedium

Dollar values in the lookup are per square foot.

Cost Patterns at a Glance

These charts show the main cost patterns behind the state ranges.

South
$10.8/sq ft
Midwest
$11.5/sq ft
Mountain/Plains
$12.2/sq ft
Northeast
$14.4/sq ft
West Coast
$14.7/sq ft
Island/remote
$18.0/sq ft
Broom finish
$7.2k
Colored
$9.0k
Exposed aggregate
$9.6k
Stamped
$12.0k
Stamped + border
$13.8k
Demolition
High
Drainage correction
High
Decorative finish
High
Thickness
Medium
Base depth
Medium
Sealing
Low

State Dataset

The full table is collapsed by default to keep the article easy to read. Open it when you need to search, filter or download the 50-state dataset.

StateRegionRange, $/sq ftTypicalEvidenceMain cost driver
AlabamaSouth$6–$14$10MediumLower labor and moderate material cost
AlaskaWest$10–$22$15LowerFreight, short season and remote access
ArizonaWest$8–$16$11MediumHeat, finish timing and market growth
ArkansasSouth$7–$14$10MediumLower labor and moderate demand
CaliforniaWest$10–$24$16MediumLabor, permits, access and disposal
ColoradoMountain/Plains$8–$18$13MediumFreeze-thaw, slope and excavation
ConnecticutNortheast$9–$20$14MediumLabor and tighter job access
DelawareSouth$8–$17$12MediumCoastal drainage and permits
FloridaSouth$8–$16$12MediumDrainage, sandy soils and stormwater
GeorgiaSouth$7–$15$11MediumModerate labor and strong demand
HawaiiWest$12–$28$18LowerFreight, labor and island access
IdahoMountain/Plains$8–$16$11MediumRegional supply and growth
IllinoisMidwest$8–$18$12MediumFreeze-thaw and joint detailing
IndianaMidwest$8–$16$11MediumModerate labor and materials
IowaMidwest$7–$15$11MediumFreeze-thaw and seasonal work
KansasMountain/Plains$7–$15$10MediumWeather timing and market size
KentuckySouth$7–$14$10MediumModerate labor and materials
LouisianaSouth$8–$16$11MediumWet soil and drainage
MaineNortheast$9–$19$13MediumFreeze-thaw and shorter season
MarylandNortheast$9–$20$14MediumLabor and permit variation
MassachusettsNortheast$10–$23$15MediumLabor, access and disposal
MichiganMidwest$8–$18$12MediumFreeze-thaw and driveway specs
MinnesotaMidwest$9–$19$13MediumFreeze-thaw and season
MississippiSouth$7–$14$10MediumLower labor and material pressure
MissouriMidwest$7–$15$11MediumModerate costs
MontanaMountain/Plains$8–$17$12MediumRural access and climate
NebraskaMountain/Plains$7–$15$11MediumModerate costs
NevadaWest$9–$19$13MediumLabor, heat and metro variation
New HampshireNortheast$9–$20$14MediumFreeze-thaw and labor
New JerseyNortheast$10–$22$15MediumLabor, permits and disposal
New MexicoMountain/Plains$8–$16$11MediumRegional access and soil
New YorkNortheast$10–$24$16MediumLabor, permits and disposal
North CarolinaSouth$7–$16$11MediumModerate labor and growth
North DakotaMountain/Plains$8–$18$12MediumClimate and access
OhioMidwest$8–$17$12MediumFreeze-thaw and moderate labor
OklahomaSouth$7–$15$10MediumModerate costs
OregonWest$9–$20$14MediumDrainage and labor
PennsylvaniaNortheast$8–$19$13MediumLabor and freeze-thaw
Rhode IslandNortheast$10–$22$15MediumLabor and small-site access
South CarolinaSouth$7–$15$11MediumModerate labor and drainage
South DakotaMountain/Plains$8–$17$12MediumClimate and access
TennesseeSouth$7–$15$11MediumModerate labor and demand
TexasSouth$8–$17$12MediumHeat and large suburban work
UtahMountain/Plains$8–$17$12MediumSlope and freeze-thaw pockets
VermontNortheast$9–$20$14MediumShort season and labor
VirginiaSouth$8–$18$13MediumLabor and permit variation
WashingtonWest$10–$22$15MediumLabor, drainage and access
West VirginiaSouth$8–$16$11MediumSlope and access
WisconsinMidwest$8–$18$12MediumFreeze-thaw
WyomingMountain/Plains$8–$18$12MediumAccess and climate

Cost by Driveway Size

Driveway size is the fastest rough budget check. Small jobs often cost more per square foot because mobilization, delivery, forms, crew time and cleanup are spread over fewer square feet.

Driveway typeApprox. areaLowTypicalHighUse this for
Small single-car driveway300 sq ft$2,100$3,600$5,400Small urban or narrow lots
Standard two-car driveway600 sq ft$4,800$7,200$10,800Most suburban homes
Large driveway1,000 sq ft$8,000$12,000$18,000Wide parking pads or longer drives
Long rural driveway1,500 sq ft$12,000$18,000$27,000+Long runs, access issues, more base work

What Changes the Price Most?

Most quote differences come from scope, not from concrete volume alone. One bid may include demolition, base correction, drainage and sealing. Another may price only a basic pour.

Cost can increase when you have

  • Old driveway removal, haul-off and disposal.
  • Weak soil, poor drainage or soft subgrade.
  • Thicker concrete for trucks, RVs or heavier use.
  • Stamped, colored or exposed aggregate finishes.
  • Permit, curb, sidewalk or driveway-apron work.

Check every quote for

  • Concrete thickness and strength.
  • Gravel base depth and compaction.
  • Control joints and isolation joints.
  • Reinforcement type and placement.
  • Curing method, sealing and drainage direction.
A driveway quote should be compared by scope, not only by price. The cheapest bid can become expensive if it excludes base correction, drainage, joints, demolition or curing.

How the CED State Model Was Built

The CED model starts with a national installed-cost baseline for a plain residential concrete driveway. It then adjusts the state range using public price signals, labor signals, construction-demand signals and practical driveway assumptions.

Material-price signals come from BLS/FRED ready-mix concrete Producer Price Index data [1][2][3][4][5][6]. Labor pressure is based on cement masons and concrete finishers because these trades align with forming, placing, finishing, saw cutting and cleanup [7], [8]. Construction demand is informed by Census residential permit data because busy markets can raise lead times and contractor pricing [9], [10]. Broader construction-cost and material-supply context comes from FHWA and USGS data [11][12][12][13][14].

The model also uses practical driveway guidance. ACI and concrete-industry sources support the importance of site preparation, slab workmanship, finishing, curing, joints and driveway construction practice [15][16][17][18]. Joint-spacing references support the treatment of shrinkage cracking, control joints and driveway detailing [16], [19].

The dataset is deliberately rounded. It does not claim that a driveway costs exactly $11.37 per square foot in one state. The goal is to give a defensible state-level planning range that users can compare against real quotes.

What the Data Includes and Excludes

Included

  • Plain residential concrete driveway installation.
  • Typical forming, placing, finishing and jointing.
  • Normal compacted base preparation.
  • State-level labor and material pressure.
  • Regional and climate-related cost adjustment.

Excluded

  • Major grading, retaining walls or culverts.
  • Heated driveways or snow-melt systems.
  • Severe subgrade failure or deep excavation.
  • Premium architectural concrete design.
  • Exact city permit fees and contractor overhead.

For Homeowners

Use the state range before calling contractors. It helps you recognise whether a quote is low, normal or unusually high. A high quote is not always unfair. It may include removal, deeper base, drainage work, better finish quality, sealing, permits or difficult access.

Ask each contractor to list slab thickness, base depth, reinforcement, joint layout, removal scope, drainage scope, finish type, sealing and curing method.

For Contractors and Writers

Contractors can use this dataset as a neutral pricing explainer during estimate discussions. Writers and local publishers can cite the dataset when discussing state-level driveway costs, as long as they describe it as a planning benchmark rather than verified contractor bid data.

Suggested citation: Civil Engineering Daily, “Concrete Driveway Cost by State: 2026 Pricing Data for Homeowners and Contractors,” 2026.

Related CED Tools

Use this dataset with the project-specific calculators below. The state article gives the benchmark. The calculator turns the benchmark into a project estimate.

Limitations and Update Cycle

This page gives planning ranges. It does not capture every city, contractor, permit office, driveway apron rule, disposal fee or access condition. Alaska and Hawaii have lower evidence strength because freight, season, island logistics and local market variation can strongly affect price.

CED should review this dataset at least once per year, or sooner when ready-mix concrete prices, labor costs, fuel, cement supply, construction demand or regional inflation changes sharply.

Sources

The references below match the clickable citation numbers used in the methodology section.

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