Concrete Driveway Cost in 2026: What It Actually Costs Per Square Foot
Concrete driveways cost $6–$15 per sq ft installed. A single-car driveway runs $960–$3,000; a double-car driveway costs $1,920–$6,000.
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Concrete Driveway Cost by Size
| Configuration | Sq Ft | Low | Mid | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single-car (10×20) | 200 | $1,200 | $2,000 | $3,000 | Narrow single lane |
| Single-car (10×40) | 400 | $2,400 | $4,000 | $6,000 | Long single lane |
| Single-car (12×20) | 240 | $1,440 | $2,400 | $3,600 | Standard single width |
| Double-car (20×20) | 400 | $2,400 | $4,000 | $6,400 | Double width, short |
| Double-car (20×40) | 800 | $4,800 | $8,000 | $12,800 | Double width, long |
| Standard (16×40) | 640 | $3,840 | $6,400 | $9,600 | Mid-size residential |
| With turnaround (24×40) | 960 | $5,760 | $9,600 | $14,400 | Includes turnaround |
Includes labour, standard ready-mix, wire mesh reinforcement, forming, and basic broom finish. Excludes excavation of existing driveway ($2–$5/sqft), permits, and tree root removal.
Driveway-Specific Requirements
Thickness & Reinforcement
- 4 inches: Minimum for passenger cars. Standard residential driveway.
- 6 inches: Required for RVs, trucks over 10,000 lbs, or soft/expansive soil.
- Wire mesh: Minimum for all driveways. Helps control cracking from shrinkage.
- Rebar: Recommended for heavy vehicles, expansive soil, or frost-prone areas.
- Expansion joints: Required every 8–10 feet. Included in standard installation.
Width Standards
- Single-car lane: 10–12 ft minimum; 12 ft comfortable
- Double-car: 20–24 ft; 24 ft ideal for easy door opening
- With landscaping setbacks: Add 2 ft on each side for edging/grass
- Apron at street: Standard 4–6 ft deep × full driveway width
- Max slope: 15% grade (roughly 1.8 ft rise per 12 ft run). Steeper requires drainage channel.
Concrete vs Asphalt Driveway
| Factor | Concrete | Asphalt |
|---|---|---|
| Installed cost/sqft | $6–$15 | $3–$7 |
| Lifespan | 30–50 years | 15–25 years |
| Annual maintenance | Minimal; seal every 5–7 yrs | Seal every 3–5 yrs; re-coat every 10–15 yrs |
| Appearance | Light grey, can be stamped/stained | Black; can be chip-sealed |
| Freeze-thaw performance | Good if sealed; spalling risk if not | Good; more flexible |
| Oil staining | Stains visible; sealers help | Oil stains less visible |
| Resale impact | Slightly higher perceived value | Neutral in most markets |
| Best for | Long-term investment, hot climates | Budget-first, cold climates |
Northern States: Frost Heave Consideration
In USDA Hardiness Zones 1–6 (roughly the northern third of the US), frost penetrates soil deeply. Concrete driveways in these areas require a 6–8 inch compacted gravel base (vs 4 inches in warmer climates) to resist frost heave, adding $1–$3/sqft to base costs. Northern-climate driveways also benefit from air-entrained concrete mix, which improves freeze-thaw resistance — specify this when requesting quotes.