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Concrete Sidewalk Cost in Kansas City, MO

Homeowner estimates · Updated 2026-03-30

Homeowners in Kansas City, MO typically pay $5.2–$9.72 per sq ft for concrete sidewalk installation. A typical residential sidewalk (100 sq ft) runs $520–$972 total. Pricing is estimated from 18 MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) bid contracts, adjusted for residential market rates.

Kansas City'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 $5.2–$9.72/SF, Kansas City is an above-average cost market for concrete sidewalk, ranking 17th of 30 tracked metros — 1% above the dataset median of $5.14/SF. These figures reflect 2024 MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) data adjusted to 2025 dollars (+7%, BLS concrete products price index).

Kansas City's soils are primarily clay-based, with the expansive Grundy and Putnam clay series common in residential areas — proper subgrade moisture conditioning is important here, and site prep costs run higher than sandy-soil markets. 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. Kansas City's competitive contractor market and lower prevailing wages keep flatwork among the most affordable in the cold-climate portion of the dataset despite challenging soil conditions.

Typical Homeowner Cost

Low

$5.2

per sq ft

Mid

$7

per sq ft

High

$9.72

per sq ft

18 MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) bids (2024)BLS OES wages · SOC 47-2051Commercial overhead adjusted (−27%)Inflation-adjusted to 2025 (+7%)
How this estimate is built

Step 1 — DOT bid data

18 MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) bid contracts (2024) → p25/p75 installed $/sq ft at prevailing wage rates.

Step 2 — Residential adjustment

MO has no state prevailing wage law — MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) bids use open-shop wages (BLS $29.73/hr). Residential estimate applies a 27% commercial overhead discount.

Step 3 — Local indices

Labor index: 11% 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

$7.13

per sq ft

Mid

$10

per sq ft

High

$13.31

per sq ft

Sourced from 18 MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) 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 — MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) (2024)

Cost Breakdown

ComponentEstimated Range
Ready-mix concrete (per yd³)$130–$200
Labor (forming, pouring, finishing)$3.6–$6.02/sq ft
Total installed (materials + labor + site prep)$5.2–$9.72/sq ft

Total reflects typical homeowner pricing, estimated from 18 MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) bid contracts (2024) adjusted for residential market rates. Ready-mix from national rates × local material index. Actual contractor quotes may vary.

Kansas City Market Conditions

Data source

18 DOT bids

MoDOT Bid Letting Results (statewide avg) (2024)

↗ source

residential: −27%

Climate

cold humid

Labor market

11% above avg

Best pour season

May through October

Dataset rank

17 of 30 markets

  • Kansas City is one of the best-value concrete markets in the country for homeowners — a large, competitive non-union contractor base, good ready-mix supply from Missouri River aggregate, and a stable construction market without the tech-sector labor inflation affecting coastal metros.
  • The metro records 80–100 freeze-thaw cycles per year; air-entrained concrete (4–6% air content) is standard practice for outdoor work and the cost premium is modest compared to warmer markets.
  • The underlying soils are predominantly loess (wind-deposited silty clay) in the Kansas City Uplands, with Alluvial sediments near the Missouri and Kansas river bottoms — loess has good bearing capacity when properly compacted but can settle significantly if disturbed and remoistened, making thorough subgrade preparation important for driveway and patio work.
  • The outdoor construction season runs April through November; cold-weather provisions are occasionally needed in early spring or late fall but are not a major cost driver in a typical year.
  • Kansas City's sprawling suburban geography (spread across two states and multiple counties) means contractor supply is well-distributed with no access premium for most suburban locations.
  • Homeowners willing to schedule work in May or September (shoulder season around the June–August peak) consistently report better pricing and shorter lead times than peak summer.
  • Kansas City sits in the lower-cost half of the national dataset — an accessible market for standard residential flatwork.

Concrete vs. Alternatives — Sidewalk Cost Comparison

Material (local estimates)Installed CostLifespanMaintenance
Concrete (this market)$5.2–$9.72/sq ft30–50 yearsSeal every 3–5 yrs
Brick / clay paver$9–$27/sq ft50+ yearsRepoint joints every 5–10 yrs
Asphalt$2–$6/sq ft15–25 yearsSeal-coat every 2–3 yrs
Compacted gravel$1–$2/sq ftOngoingTop-dress and regrade annually

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

Hiring Tips — Kansas City 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.
  • On clay-soil sites — which is most of the metro — ask your contractor whether they're moisture-conditioning the subgrade before pouring; skipping this step is the primary cause of premature cracking and settlement in Kansas City's residential market.
  • Get at least 3 bids and cross-check contractor reviews against local permit records, not just review platforms.
  • 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 Kansas City

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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)
~$319

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)
$407 - $592

74 bags × 80lb

Ready-Mix Concrete
$212 - $426

1.63 cubic yards + delivery

Professional Installation
$432 - $722

120 sq ft × $3.60–$6.02/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 ↓

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