Jensen Beach Concrete quotes concrete work for homeowners in Jensen Beach, Stuart, and Palm City based on the factors on this page. Homeowners usually want a number before anything else, and that's fair — this page explains what moves the number, why new flatwork can get a phone ballpark while repair can't, and what the final quote is actually built from.
Size is the baseline — concrete is priced substantially by area. Thickness follows use: a driveway carrying vehicles is poured thicker than a patio, which costs more per square foot. Demo applies when old concrete has to come out first, adding breakout labor and haul-away. Access is the quiet variable in Jensen Beach — fenced backyards and tight side yards in established neighborhoods can put the pour site out of a truck's reach, which shifts the job to pumping or wheelbarrow runs. Base condition rounds it out: sandy soil that needs regrading or extra compaction adds prep, and skipping that prep is how driveways end up on the repair page a few years later.
Repair cost is set by how deep the problem goes, and depth isn't visible from the surface. A hairline crack over a sound base is a quick fill; the identical-looking crack over active settlement is a different job entirely. Spalling might be one treatable patch or the visible edge of corrosion running through the whole slab. Quoting repair from a phone description would mean guessing, and a guessed number helps nobody — so repair quotes follow a quick on-site look at the slab. Describing what you're seeing in plain language is all the preparation the call needs.
For driveways, patios, slabs, and walkways: rough dimensions on the first call usually produce a ballpark range, and the final quote follows an on-site measure that confirms access, grade, and demo scope. For repair, spalling, and settlement: the on-site look comes first, and the quote is built from what's actually found. Combining jobs — a driveway with a walkway, a shed slab with a generator pad — prices better than separate visits, because mobilization is shared. No number is final until it's based on the real site.
New pours are measurable — area and thickness are most of the price. Repair depends on what's under the surface, which can't be measured from a description. A phone ballpark for repair would just be a guess dressed up as a number.
It can move when the site holds surprises — old concrete thicker than typical, access tighter than described, or base problems that need correcting. The ballpark's job is to tell you whether the project fits your budget before anyone visits; the on-site measure exists so the final number is real.
Yes, meaningfully. Crew and equipment mobilization is a fixed cost per visit, so a driveway plus walkway in one job beats the same work split across two years. If you have a list, mention all of it on the call even if you only plan to do part now.
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