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Concrete Driveway Cost in Los Angeles, CA

Homeowner estimates · Updated 2026-03-30

Homeowners in Los Angeles, CA typically pay $3.78–$9.25 per sq ft for concrete driveway installation. A typical two-car driveway (400–600 sq ft) runs $1,512–$5,550 total. Pricing is estimated from 14 Caltrans Contract Cost Database bid contracts, adjusted for residential market rates.

In Los Angeles's mild climate, frost isn't a concern for driveways, but UV exposure, thermal expansion from hot days, and salt-air corrosion on coastal sites are the factors most likely to shorten a driveway's life without proper mix design and periodic sealing. At $3.78–$9.25/SF, Los Angeles is one of the most affordable markets for concrete driveway in this dataset — ranking 1st of 30 tracked metros, below the dataset median of $6.17/SF.

Soil conditions in LA vary dramatically by neighborhood — San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys have expansive clay, hillside lots often have uncompacted fill requiring geotechnical reports, and coastal properties face salt and moisture exposure. Final pricing depends on whether you need a standard 4-inch or thicker 6-inch pour for heavy vehicles, existing pavement removal, and decorative finish — stamped patterns and exposed aggregate add $2–5/sq ft over a plain broom finish. Most contractors include saw-cut control joints; rebar vs. wire mesh reinforcement is the most common bid variable. California's Title 24, SWPPP, and LA's local permit structure add $500–2,500 in project overhead on top of construction costs — best pricing typically comes from scheduling outside the March–September peak.

Typical Homeowner Cost

Low

$3.78

per sq ft

Mid

$7

per sq ft

High

$9.25

per sq ft

14 Caltrans Contract Cost Database bids (2021–25)BLS OES wages · SOC 47-2051Prevailing wage adjusted (−41%)
How this estimate is built

Step 1 — DOT bid data

14 Caltrans Contract Cost Database bid contracts (2021–25) → p25/p75 installed $/sq ft at prevailing wage rates.

Step 2 — Residential adjustment

BLS open-shop wage $34.9/hr ÷ Caltrans Contract Cost Database prevailing wage $57/hr × 50% labor share → homeowner estimate is 59% of contractor rate.

Step 3 — Local indices

Labor index: 31% above national (BLS OES, cement masons). Material index: national average (USGS aggregate prices).

Step 4 — Project type

Driveway complexity multiplier: 0.90×–1.15× applied to base flatwork rate.

Contractor / Professional Rate(government & commercial projects)

Low

$6.42

per sq ft

Mid

$11

per sq ft

High

$15.72

per sq ft

Sourced from 14 Caltrans Contract Cost Database bid contracts (2021–25). These prices reflect government and commercial work where contractors are legally required to pay prevailing wages — typically 20–40% above open-shop residential rates.

DOT Verified — Caltrans Contract Cost Database (2021–25)

Cost Breakdown

ComponentEstimated Range
Ready-mix concrete (per yd³)$130–$200
Labor (forming, pouring, finishing)$2.18–$5.55/sq ft
Total installed (materials + labor + site prep)$3.78–$9.25/sq ft

Total reflects typical homeowner pricing, estimated from 14 Caltrans Contract Cost Database bid contracts (2021–25) adjusted for residential market rates. Ready-mix from national rates × local material index. Actual contractor quotes may vary.

Los Angeles Market Conditions

Data source

14 DOT bids

Caltrans Contract Cost Database (2021–25)

↗ source

residential: −41%

Climate

mediterranean

Labor market

31% above avg

Best pour season

year-round

Dataset rank

1 of 30 markets

  • Los Angeles requires seismic engineering on virtually all concrete work — residential slabs must meet IBC seismic design categories that add rebar requirements, thicker sections, and engineering oversight not required in non-seismic zones, and structural work requires stamped plans and inspections.
  • California's Title 24 energy code, SWPPP (stormwater) requirements, and LA's local permit fee structure add $500–2,500 in project overhead on top of construction costs, making permitting costs here among the highest in the country for residential flatwork.
  • Ready-mix delivery in the LA basin is expensive: distance from aggregate sources, traffic-driven delivery windows, and short-load surcharges are all routine — budget an extra $30–60/yd³ compared to markets with better aggregate proximity.
  • Soil conditions vary dramatically: valley areas (San Fernando, San Gabriel) have expansive clay, hillside lots often have uncompacted fill requiring geotechnical reports, and coastal properties face salt and moisture exposure.
  • The Mediterranean climate is ideal for concrete work year-round from a temperature standpoint; the main scheduling challenge is the rainy season from November through March.
  • Despite the premium costs, LA's large contractor pool keeps competition active, and the best pricing typically comes from scheduling outside the March–September peak.

Concrete vs. Alternatives — Driveway Cost Comparison

Material (local estimates)Installed CostLifespanMaintenance
Concrete (this market)$3.78–$9.25/sq ft30–50 yearsSeal every 3–5 yrs
Asphalt$2–$5/sq ft20–30 yearsSeal every 2–3 yrs
Concrete / brick pavers$6–$20/sq ft30–50 yearsRepoint joints every 5–10 yrs
Gravel$0–$2/sq ftOngoingTop-dress annually

Alternative costs are Los Angeles-market estimates derived from typical cost relationships to local concrete prices.

Hiring Tips — Los Angeles Concrete Driveway

  • Rainy-season pours (November–March) require extra care — protect fresh concrete from direct rain for the first 4–6 hours after finishing.
  • Coastal sites may need epoxy-coated rebar even without direct saltwater exposure — salt-air corrosion is a long-term risk within a few miles of the coast.
  • Budget for seismic engineering overhead on any structural work — residential slabs must meet IBC seismic design categories that add rebar requirements and inspections not required in non-seismic markets, and a contractor who doesn't mention this upfront may be underspecifying.
  • In Los Angeles's high-cost labor market, get at least 3 competing bids — the spread between the lowest and highest quote often exceeds 40%.
  • Confirm the bid includes saw-cut control joints — some contractors price them separately as a line item.

Related Guides

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Feet, inches, yards
Dimensions
ft
ft
in
Add 10% extra for waste, spills, and uneven surfaces
Cost EstimatePrimary Result
Based on state DOT bid data
Ready-Mix Concrete (Recommended)
~$274

Estimated concrete cost (materials + delivery) · For projects over 1 cubic yard, ready-mix is typically more economical and easier to work with.

Bagged Concrete (80lb)
$341 - $496

62 bags × 80lb

Ready-Mix Concrete
$177 - $372

1.36 cubic yards + delivery

Professional Installation
$218 - $555

100 sq ft × $2.18–$5.55/sq ft

Based on 2024 state DOT bid data for this market. Actual contractor quotes may vary.

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