
A concrete patio gives your backyard a clean, stable surface that handles Arizona monsoons, high-desert sun, and winter freezes without rotting, warping, or turning to mud. We build patios that are properly graded, permitted, and finished to last.

Concrete patio construction in Prescott Valley involves excavating the area, installing a compacted gravel drainage base, pouring and finishing the slab, and cutting control joints - most residential patios take one to two days of active work, with a curing period of about seven days before use.
Prescott Valley homeowners often come to us after a backyard that floods during monsoon season, an old patio surface that is cracking and flaking, or simply a bare dirt yard they have been wanting to improve for years. In all three cases, the solution is the same: a properly graded concrete slab with the right base preparation for local soil conditions. Prescott Valley caliche soil does not drain well, so any contractor who does not excavate and address it is building you a patio that will have problems after the first hard rain.
If you want to upgrade the look beyond plain concrete, our stamped concrete services can give your patio the appearance of stone or tile. For homeowners building an outdoor area around a pool, our concrete pool decks service covers that specific type of work.
If your backyard becomes a muddy mess every time Prescott Valley storms roll through, a concrete patio gives you a stable surface that drains properly. Dirt and gravel areas erode and track inside during monsoon months. A well-sloped slab solves that problem permanently.
If you have an older concrete or paver surface with sections that have shifted, cracked wide enough to catch a toe, or started to flake, patching only delays the inevitable. Prescott Valley freeze-thaw cycles and caliche soil accelerate deterioration in slabs that were not built with local conditions in mind.
If your backyard is bare dirt or gravel and you want a place for a table, grill, or chairs, a concrete patio is one of the most cost-effective ways to create that space. Unlike wood decks, concrete does not rot, warp, or need annual staining in Arizona dry heat.
Standing water collecting against your house after a storm is a drainage problem a properly graded patio can help correct. A patio poured with the right slope directs water away from your foundation. Left unaddressed, that pooling water causes long-term damage - especially with caliche soil that does not absorb moisture well.
We pour standard broom-finished patios for homeowners who want a clean, durable surface at a straightforward price - practical, slip-resistant, and built to drain properly. For those who want something more visually distinctive, we offer stamped concrete in patterns that can resemble stone, brick, or slate, as well as integral coloring and surface staining. These decorative upgrades cost more but can significantly transform how your outdoor space looks and feels.
If your project includes a pool, our separate concrete pool decks service covers the specific needs of that surface - slip resistance, heat management, and drainage around the water line. Every patio quote we provide is written and itemized so you know what is included before you commit.
Clean, textured surface that is slip-resistant and holds up to Prescott Valley heat and cold. The most cost-effective option for most homeowners.
For homeowners who want a patio that looks like stone or tile. Adds to the base cost but dramatically improves the finished appearance.
We handle demolition of old slabs and full new pours on bare ground, including caliche excavation and gravel drainage base installation.
Prescott Valley sits at about 5,100 feet elevation, which means your patio faces real winters with hard freezes and summers that regularly reach the low 90s. That wide temperature range causes concrete to expand and contract more than in a mild climate - which is why control joints are not optional here. A contractor who spaces them too far apart is setting you up for visible cracks within a year or two. Caliche soil layers also mean base prep here takes more work than a contractor coming from the Phoenix Valley might expect.
Monsoon season timing matters too. Pouring concrete during an afternoon storm damages the surface before it can cure. Most of our pours during the summer are scheduled for early morning. We serve homeowners throughout the Prescott Valley area and into neighboring communities, including Prescott and Dewey-Humboldt. If you are in a newer subdivision near the Glassford Hill area or an older neighborhood closer to the town center, we have worked in both.
We visit your property and look at the space before quoting anything. The estimate visit takes about 20 to 30 minutes and gives you a chance to ask questions. You receive a written quote itemizing excavation, permits, base prep, and the finished pour. We respond to first contacts within 1 business day.
Once you accept, we submit the permit application to the Town of Prescott Valley. You do not need to visit any office - we handle it. Permit review typically takes a few days to a couple of weeks. We confirm approval before scheduling the crew, so there are no surprises on your start date.
The crew excavates the patio area, breaks through any caliche layer, and compacts a gravel drainage base. On pour day - typically a single day for most residential patios - we pour the concrete, level it, finish the surface, and cut control joints into the slab before leaving.
Stay off the surface for at least 24 to 48 hours, and keep furniture off for a full week. After the forms are removed, we walk through the finished patio with you and explain basic care. We recommend sealing the surface before your first full summer to protect it from Prescott Valley UV and temperature swings.
We respond within 1 business day. No obligation after we send your quote. Once you are ready, we handle the permit and get you on the schedule - someone from our office will call to set up your free on-site visit.
(928) 458-7263The Town of Prescott Valley requires a permit for most patio projects. We pull the permit before work begins and schedule the inspection at the end. Your project is fully documented - which matters if you ever sell your home and need to show the work was done correctly.
Most Prescott Valley soil has caliche close to the surface. We excavate through it and install a proper gravel drainage base on every project. Skipping this step is the most common reason patios in this area develop drainage problems or settle unevenly - and we do not skip it.
We are a licensed and insured contractor in Arizona. You can verify any Arizona contractor license through the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. That verification takes two minutes and tells you whether the contractor you are hiring is actually accountable to a state licensing body.
Every patio we pour has the correct slope built in from the start so rainwater drains away from your house and off the surface. You can check this yourself by pouring water on the finished slab - it should run toward the yard, not toward your foundation.
Homeowners who call us typically say the project went exactly the way we described it would - the permit got handled, the pour happened on schedule, and the finished patio drains correctly. If you are ready to get started, give us a call.
Upgrade your patio with stamped patterns and color that can look like stone, tile, or brick.
Learn MoreSpecialized concrete flatwork built for the drainage and slip-resistance demands of pool surrounds.
Learn MoreSpring booking slots fill quickly - call now to lock in your start date before summer monsoon season arrives.