Concrete Sidewalk Cost in Boston, MA
Homeowner estimates · Updated 2026-03-30
Homeowners in Boston, MA typically pay $5.5–$10.26 per sq ft for concrete sidewalk installation. A typical residential sidewalk (100 sq ft) runs $550–$1,026 total. Pricing is estimated from 6 MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) bid contracts, adjusted for residential market rates.
Boston's freeze-thaw exposure and heavy deicing salt use make sidewalk spec selection consequential — 4,000 psi air-entrained concrete with a penetrating sealer applied after curing is the baseline for a sidewalk that won't scale within five winters. At $5.5–$10.26/SF, Boston is an above-average cost market for concrete sidewalk, ranking 19th of 30 tracked metros — 7% above the dataset median of $5.14/SF. These figures reflect 2024 MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) data adjusted to 2025 dollars (+7%, BLS concrete products price index).
Boston's soils vary substantially by neighborhood — Back Bay and the South End were built on landfill, while Brookline and Newton have rocky glacial till that can create excavation cost overruns; ask your contractor if they've worked in your specific neighborhood. Costs vary by width — standard residential sidewalks are 4 ft; ADA-compliant walks require 5 ft minimum — and by whether existing sections need removal and disposal. Work in public rights-of-way requires permits and may mandate specific mix designs set by the municipality. Boston's union labor market and compact urban logistics push installed costs 20–25% above the national average — permit costs, short-access surcharges, and material delivery in dense neighborhoods add overhead that suburban markets don't see.
Typical Homeowner Cost
Low
$5.5
per sq ft
Mid
$8
per sq ft
High
$10.26
per sq ft
How this estimate is built ▾
Step 1 — DOT bid data
6 MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) bid contracts (2024) → p25/p75 installed $/sq ft at prevailing wage rates.
Step 2 — Residential adjustment
BLS open-shop wage $34.37/hr ÷ MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) prevailing wage $68/hr × 50% labor share → homeowner estimate is 55% of contractor rate.
Step 3 — Local indices
Labor index: 29% above national (BLS OES, cement masons). Material index: national average (USGS aggregate prices).
Step 4 — Project type
Sidewalk complexity multiplier: 0.75×–1.00× applied to base flatwork rate.
Contractor / Professional Rate(government & commercial projects)▾
Low
$10.01
per sq ft
Mid
$14
per sq ft
High
$18.68
per sq ft
Sourced from 6 MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) bid contracts (2024). 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 — MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) (2024)↗Cost Breakdown
| Component | Estimated Range |
|---|---|
| Ready-mix concrete (per yd³) | $130–$200 |
| Labor (forming, pouring, finishing) | $3.9–$6.56/sq ft |
| Total installed (materials + labor + site prep) | $5.5–$10.26/sq ft |
Total reflects typical homeowner pricing, estimated from 6 MassDOT Bid History (calibrated) bid contracts (2024) adjusted for residential market rates. Ready-mix from national rates × local material index. Actual contractor quotes may vary.
Boston Market Conditions
Climate
cold humid
Labor market
29% above avg
Best pour season
May through October
Dataset rank
19 of 30 markets
- —Boston is one of the highest-cost concrete markets in the country, driven by strong union labor representation, Massachusetts prevailing wage requirements on public-adjacent work, and a construction market chronically constrained by a limited licensed contractor supply relative to demand.
- —The frost depth requirement of 48 inches (the deepest in any major US metro) means footing excavation and forming costs are materially higher than mid-Atlantic or Midwest markets; this adds $3–7/SF to structural work compared to a Sun Belt benchmark.
- —Boston's dense urban form — tight lots, limited equipment access, narrow streets with parking restrictions — adds logistics cost to most projects that don't exist in suburban Sun Belt markets.
- —The soil is predominantly glacial till with marine clay in the Back Bay and Seaport areas, where slab-on-grade work requires geotechnical assessment and engineered fill; inland suburbs (Waltham, Newton, Framingham) have more forgiving granular soils.
- —The working season runs May through October; Boston has historically used chloride-based deicers heavily on sidewalks and driveways, making sealed 4,500 psi air-entrained mixes essentially mandatory for exterior work expected to last more than a few winters.
- —Homeowners should budget 30–50% above national median for comparable scope and expect 6–12 week lead times during peak season.
Concrete vs. Alternatives — Sidewalk Cost Comparison
| Material (local estimates) | Installed Cost | Lifespan | Maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete (this market) | $5.5–$10.26/sq ft | 30–50 years | Seal every 3–5 yrs |
| Brick / clay paver | $10–$29/sq ft | 50+ years | Repoint joints every 5–10 yrs |
| Asphalt | $2–$7/sq ft | 15–25 years | Seal-coat every 2–3 yrs |
| Compacted gravel | $1–$2/sq ft | Ongoing | Top-dress and regrade annually |
Alternative costs are Boston-market estimates derived from typical cost relationships to local concrete prices.
Hiring Tips — Boston Concrete Sidewalk
- →Specify air-entrained concrete (5–8% air content) — mandatory for any exterior slab exposed to freeze-thaw cycles.
- →Schedule pours between May and September; cold-weather provisions (heated enclosures, curing blankets) add $1–3/sq ft outside this window.
- →Confirm your contractor holds a valid Massachusetts Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration for any work over $1,000 — unlicensed residential concrete work is a documented issue in the Boston market and creates legal exposure for the property owner.
- →In Boston's high-cost labor market, get at least 3 competing bids — the spread between the lowest and highest quote often exceeds 40%.
- →Work in the public right-of-way usually requires a street use permit — confirm in writing who pulls it and who pays for it.
Related Guides
Estimate Your Sidewalk Cost in Boston
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Estimated concrete cost (materials + delivery) · For projects over 1 cubic yard, ready-mix is typically more economical and easier to work with.
74 bags × 80lb
1.63 cubic yards + delivery
120 sq ft × $3.90–$6.56/sq ft
Based on 2024 state DOT bid data for this market. Actual contractor quotes may vary.
That's typically a professional pour. See volume ↓
4 short emails from Dave: what a fair quote should land at for your slab, the scope changes that swing it ±$500, and whether DIY is actually cheaper at your volume. Reply anytime — he'll review your real quote.
Includes 10% waste factor
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