
Prescott Valley Concrete Company serves Sedona, AZ, with stamped concrete, driveways, patios, retaining walls, and foundations built for homes that deserve careful work - we understand Sedona's elevation, freeze-thaw winters, intense UV exposure, and the high standards homeowners here rightly expect. We respond to estimate requests within 1 business day.

Sedona homes are held to a high visual standard by the landscape they sit in, and plain gray flatwork is often the wrong choice for a patio or pool deck when the surroundings are red rock canyon walls. Our stamped concrete services deliver patterns and earth-tone finishes that complement Sedona's Southwest architecture - and are built with the UV-resistant sealers and joint systems required at this elevation.
Many Sedona properties sit on sloped lots that back directly up to desert terrain or canyon edges - retaining walls are not optional on these sites, they are what holds the yard in place. Monsoon runoff on Sedona's rocky soil moves fast and with force, and a properly engineered concrete retaining wall with integrated drainage is the only long-term answer.
Sedona homeowners and vacation rental operators invest significantly in outdoor living space - it is part of what makes a home here worth what it costs. A well-built concrete patio that drains correctly and handles freeze-thaw cycles without cracking pays for itself in reduced maintenance costs and in the impression it makes on guests and buyers alike.
Pool decks in Sedona face a demanding combination of intense UV exposure, regular water contact, and winter freeze-thaw stress. A pool deck poured without the right surface finish, proper joint placement, and a sealant rated for the local temperature range will show surface deterioration noticeably faster than one built to the conditions here.
Most Sedona homes were built in the 1970s through 1990s, and original concrete driveways from that era are at or past their expected lifespan. At 4,350 feet elevation, UV degradation and winter freeze cycles shorten surface life compared to lower-elevation desert cities - a replacement driveway built correctly will outlast the original significantly.
Sedona's rocky terrain and proximity to Coconino National Forest mean foundation work requires careful attention to drainage and soil variability from lot to lot. Whether you are building new or replacing a failing foundation, proper engineering for this elevation and soil type prevents the settling and moisture intrusion problems common in improperly built foundations across northern Arizona.
Sedona sits at about 4,350 feet, which puts it in a very different climate category than most of Arizona. UV radiation at this elevation is significantly more intense than at sea level, and exterior materials - concrete sealers, caulk, paint, and surface finishes - degrade faster than manufacturer estimates that were calibrated for lower elevations. If you can see Cathedral Rock from your backyard, you already know what the sun does out here. Concrete surfaces that are not sealed with UV-rated products and resealed on a regular schedule will show surface breakdown within a few years.
Winter brings another challenge that catches Sedona homeowners off guard. Overnight lows regularly drop below freezing from November through March, and the daytime-to-nighttime temperature swing creates repeated freeze-thaw cycles throughout the winter season. These cycles crack any concrete flatwork that was poured without adequate joint spacing or a properly compacted base. Monsoon season adds a third variable - Sedona can receive more than an inch of rain in an hour during peak storms, and that runoff moves through the red rock terrain quickly. Properties near washes or canyon edges need concrete drainage designed specifically for those conditions, not just standard residential flatwork specifications.
Our crew works throughout Sedona regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits through the City of Sedona Community Development Department for every job that requires one - Sedona has specific design standards that apply to certain exterior work, and a contractor who is not familiar with those requirements can create permit and inspection complications that delay your project.
Sedona is not one neighborhood - it is several distinct areas with different characters. Uptown Sedona is more commercial, West Sedona is the main residential core, and the Village of Oak Creek, about 6 miles south, has a quieter, more suburban feel with newer homes on larger lots. We work on properties across all of these areas. Whether your home sits near Tlaquepaque on the south end of the city or out in the Village of Oak Creek near the Oak Creek Canyon corridor, the site conditions vary lot by lot, and we assess each job with that in mind.
We also regularly work in the communities south and west of Sedona, including Cottonwood in the Verde Valley below, where similar climate patterns and building stock mean the same careful approach applies. Homeowners in both areas often manage second homes or vacation rentals and need a contractor they can count on to communicate clearly and complete work on schedule without requiring daily on-site oversight.
We respond within 1 business day. Almost every Sedona concrete job requires a site visit before we can quote it accurately - lot access, slope, soil type, and design requirements all vary too much to estimate by phone alone.
We visit your property, evaluate the site conditions, check drainage patterns, and review any city design standards that apply to your project. You receive a written quote that itemizes each cost - no vague totals, no surprise add-ons after work starts.
We apply for all required City of Sedona permits before work begins. We schedule around monsoon season and winter freeze windows - protecting fresh concrete from frost and avoiding afternoon storm pours are standard practice here.
We finish the job exactly as quoted, coordinate any required inspections, and leave your property clean. Many Sedona clients are not on-site full time, so we maintain clear communication throughout and send updates when needed.
We serve Sedona and the surrounding red rock country communities. Free written estimates, permits handled, and work built for the local elevation and climate.
(928) 458-7263Sedona is a small city of about 9,600 people in Yavapai and Coconino counties, set among the red sandstone formations and canyon terrain of northern Arizona at roughly 4,350 feet elevation. The city draws more than 3 million visitors a year, but it is also a full-time community with a high homeownership rate and a median age in the mid-50s - most residents are established homeowners who have lived here for years and are invested in their properties. The city includes Uptown Sedona, which faces the main tourist corridor along Highway 89A; West Sedona, the primary residential area; and the Village of Oak Creek, a quieter community about 6 miles south with newer single-family homes on larger lots.
Most of Sedona's housing stock was built between the 1970s and early 2000s, predominantly in Southwest and Spanish Colonial styles with stucco exteriors, tile roofs, and earth-tone finishes that blend with the landscape. Many properties sit on moderate to large lots with significant outdoor space, and a considerable share of homes are used as short-term vacation rentals or second homes by owners who split time between Sedona and other locations. The combination of high home values, demanding climate conditions, and a significant vacation rental market means homeowners here generally expect contractors to communicate well, work on schedule, and produce work that holds up over time. We also serve homeowners in the Verde Valley below Sedona, including Cottonwood, where similar conditions and building stock make the same quality standards apply.
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Learn MoreCall us or send an estimate request today - we respond within 1 business day and serve Sedona, the Village of Oak Creek, and the surrounding region.