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Concrete & Driveway Cost in Dayton, OH

The average concrete project in Dayton, OH costs between $4,500 and $9,550 depending on project type, size, and finish.

Standard Driveway $11/sqft
Stamped Concrete $16/sqft
Patio $12/sqft
Asphalt Driveway $7/sqft

Concrete Cost by Project Size in Dayton

Project Size (sqft) Standard Driveway Stamped Concrete Concrete Patio
200 sq ft$2,300$3,200$2,400
400 sq ft$4,600$6,400$4,800
600 sq ft$6,900$9,550$7,200
800 sq ft$9,150$12,750$9,550
1,000 sq ft$11,450$15,950$11,950

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does concrete work cost in Dayton?

Most Dayton homeowners pay between $4,500 to $9,550 for concrete work, depending on scope, materials, and finish level. With Dayton labor rates near the national median, the cost difference between a budget and premium driveway or patio pour comes down to materials and scope rather than labor premiums.

What drives concrete work pricing in Dayton?

Concrete work in Dayton runs close to the national average. With Dayton labor rates near the national median, the cost difference between a budget and premium driveway or patio pour comes down to materials and scope rather than labor premiums. Homes averaging 50 years in Dayton frequently surface hidden scope during concrete work — old wiring, deteriorated framing, code-gap remediation — that adds 10-25% over the initial estimate. Build contingency into your budget.

How does Dayton's winter climate affect concrete mix and prep selection?

In Dayton's cold-climate market: Standard concrete in Dayton runs $6-10 per square foot for basic flatwork (driveways, walkways). Decorative options (stamped, colored, exposed aggregate) add $4-8 per square foot. The biggest hidden cost is demolition and removal of existing concrete — budget $2-4 per square foot for tearout of old slabs.

What signs of a bad concrete contractor should Dayton homeowners watch for?

Watch for concrete work quotes in Dayton that lack line-item detail. A professional estimate breaks out labor, materials, permits, and cleanup separately. Lump-sum bids hide margin and make change orders impossible to evaluate. Check that any Dayton contractor doing concrete work carries both general liability insurance ($1M minimum) and workers' compensation. Request certificates directly from the insurer, not just copies the contractor provides. For older Dayton homes (average 50 years), beware of concrete work quotes that don't mention code compliance. Modern codes have changed significantly since these homes were built — any work that triggers inspection should be priced with code upgrades included.