
Your driveway takes a beating from Prescott Valley winters, monsoon rains, and desert sun. We build concrete driveways that handle all of it - properly permitted, correctly graded, and built on a base that will not shift.

Concrete driveway building in Prescott Valley involves removing your old surface or prepping raw soil, installing a stable base layer, forming the edges, and pouring a properly mixed slab - most projects take one to three days of active work depending on size.
Most homeowners contact us after a driveway starts cracking, heaving, or holding water after rain. Those problems almost always trace back to poor base preparation - especially in Prescott Valley, where caliche soil layers and temperature swings put constant stress on concrete that was not built with local conditions in mind. If your driveway was installed without accounting for those factors, it will keep deteriorating no matter how many times it gets patched.
If you are also thinking about outdoor living improvements, our concrete patio construction service is a common complement to a new driveway project.
Hairline cracks are normal. But cracks wider than a quarter inch, or cracks that have visibly grown over a single season, mean the slab is failing structurally. In Prescott Valley, the combination of caliche soil movement and temperature swings accelerates this - what starts minor can become serious within a year or two.
If puddles sit in the middle of your driveway after Prescott Valley storms instead of draining toward the street, the slab was poured with poor slope or has settled unevenly. Standing water works its way into cracks, freezes overnight, and makes those cracks larger every winter.
When the top layer peels away in flakes or chunks, the concrete is deteriorating from the inside out. This is often caused by a poor original pour, years of exposure without sealing, or repeated freeze-thaw cycles - all relevant in Prescott Valley. Once spalling starts, it spreads quickly and cannot be patched to perform like new.
If sections of your driveway have risen or dropped relative to each other, creating a lip you can feel when you drive over it, the base underneath has shifted. In Prescott Valley, this is often related to caliche layers that were not properly addressed during the original installation, or to soil movement after heavy rains.
We build standard broom-finished driveways for homeowners who want a clean, durable surface at a straightforward price. For homeowners who want something more distinctive, we also offer decorative options including stamped patterns, exposed aggregate, and colored concrete. Our concrete patio construction and concrete sidewalk building services can be combined with a new driveway to create a cohesive exterior that all gets built and permitted at the same time.
Every project includes a written quote that breaks down what is covered - demolition, hauling, permits, base prep, and the finished pour - so you know what you are paying for before a single tool comes out of the truck.
Clean, textured surface at the best value. Works for any residential driveway and holds up well to Prescott Valley's climate.
For homeowners who want the look of stone, brick, or tile. Adds to the base cost but significantly improves curb appeal.
Whether you need a full replacement or want to widen an existing driveway, we handle demolition, removal, and the complete new pour.
Prescott Valley sits at just over 5,100 feet in elevation, which means temperatures swing from below freezing on winter nights to the mid-90s on summer afternoons. That constant expansion and contraction puts real stress on concrete. A contractor who does not account for local conditions in their mix design, joint spacing, and base preparation is setting you up for a driveway that looks fine for a year and starts failing by year three. We have been working in this area long enough to know what Prescott Valley soil and weather actually require.
Monsoon season scheduling also matters here. Pouring concrete during an active afternoon storm damages the surface and weakens the slab. We schedule pours in the morning during summer months and monitor conditions closely. We serve homeowners throughout Prescott Valley and nearby communities - including Prescott and Chino Valley. If you can see Glassford Hill from your front yard, we serve your neighborhood. The Town of Prescott Valley requires permits for new driveway construction - we handle that process for you.
We come out and look at your property in person - no phone quoting for concrete work. You get a written breakdown covering demolition, hauling, permits, base prep, and the pour. We respond within 1 business day of your first contact.
Once you accept, we apply to the Town of Prescott Valley for the required permit. This typically takes a few business days to a couple of weeks. You do not visit any office - we handle the whole process and confirm approval before scheduling the crew.
The crew removes your old surface, excavates to the right depth, breaks through any caliche layer, and compacts the base. Pour day is usually a single day. We cut control joints into the slab before leaving - those planned grooves prevent random cracking.
Plan to keep vehicles off the driveway for a full seven days. We schedule the final inspection with the town to close out the permit. After full cure - about 28 days - we recommend sealing the surface to protect it from Prescott Valley's UV and temperature swings.
We respond within 1 business day. There is no obligation to move forward after we send your quote. Once you are ready, we handle the permit and schedule a time that works for you - someone from our office will call to set up your free on-site estimate.
(928) 458-7263The Town of Prescott Valley requires a permit for new driveway construction. We handle the application and inspections on every project, so your driveway is fully documented. That matters when you sell - unpermitted work can delay or derail a real estate transaction.
We are a licensed and insured concrete contractor operating in Arizona. That means you have recourse if something goes wrong, and the work is covered by a contractor who stands behind it - not a day laborer crew that disappears after the pour.
Caliche soil, freeze-thaw cycles, and monsoon scheduling are things we deal with on every local project. The Portland Cement Association recommends mix and joint spacing adjustments for high-temperature-swing climates - we apply those standards to every pour.
Every estimate we provide is written and itemized. Demolition, hauling, permits, base work, and the finished pour are all spelled out before you commit. You will not receive an invoice with add-on charges that were not in the original quote.
Prescott Valley homeowners who call us typically say the same thing afterward: the project went the way we said it would. No surprise costs, no missed permit steps, and a finished driveway that looks and drains the way it should. Call us to get started.
Add a concrete patio alongside your new driveway - one permit process, one crew, one project.
Learn MoreConnect your new driveway to your front door with a properly graded concrete walkway.
Learn MorePrescott Valley permits, base prep, and the full pour - call now before the season fills up.