Barnes Custom Enterprises, Inc.
2222 E 74th Ave Unit 1 , Thornton, CO 80229-6939
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Property Maintenance, General Contractor, Concrete Contractors ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
Get the best value on best value concrete & driveway in Denver. Compare quotes from 51 licensed contractors side-by-side — price, timeline, warranty, and credentials all in one place.
Typical cost in Denver
$5–$15 / sq ft
51 contractors in Denver
2222 E 74th Ave Unit 1 , Thornton, CO 80229-6939
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Property Maintenance, General Contractor, Concrete Contractors ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
720 S Marshall St , Lakewood, CO 80226-4625
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Landscape Design ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
494 Sheridan Blvd Ste A105 , Lakewood, CO 80226-8106
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Decorative Concrete, Concrete Contractors
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
2196 W Iliff Ave , Englewood, CO 80110-1028
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Decorative Concrete
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
7195 Dahlia St , Commerce City, CO 80022
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Driveway Installation, Concrete Leveling ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
1633 Fillmore St Ste 114 , Denver, CO 80206-1556
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Fence Contractors, Deck Builder ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
1776 Curtis St Apt 1310 , Denver, CO 80202-2548
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Custom Concrete, Decorative Concrete ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
Arvada, CO 80003-7017
BBB Accredited A rated. Protective Coatings, Concrete Contractors
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
922 W 4th Ave , Denver, CO 80223-1138
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Remodeling, Roofing Contractors, General Contractor ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
6655 W Jewell Ave # 117 , Lakewood, CO 80232
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Landscape Contractors, Concrete Contractors, Retaining Wall Contractors ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
6345 Ivanhoe St Unit 203 , Commerce City, CO 80022-3346
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Concrete Leveling, Custom Concrete ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
1910 W Bates Ave , Englewood, CO 80110-1302
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Concrete Contractors, Driveway Installation, Snow Removal Services ...
Serves: 80202, 80203, 80204, 80205 +34 more
For: two-car driveway or 400 sq ft patio in Denver, CO
Denver's driveway and concrete market is defined by two unavoidable forces: freeze-thaw cycles and expansive soils. Denver's climate swings from sub-zero winter temperatures to 100°F+ summer highs, creating more annual freeze-thaw cycles than most U.S. cities — and each cycle stresses concrete that isn't mixed and installed correctly. Denver's Front Range is also underlain in many areas by bentonite clay and swelling shale, soils that expand when wet and contract when dry, causing heave and cracking in improperly prepared concrete flatwork. Here's current Denver concrete and driveway pricing in 2025.
| Service | Scope | Denver Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Concrete driveway (new, standard) | 2-car, ~600 sq ft, 4-inch slab | $8,000 – $16,000 |
| Concrete driveway (new, steep slope) | Hillside/elevated — rebar, forms, pump | $14,000 – $25,000 |
| Concrete driveway replacement | Demo old + pour new, 600 sq ft | $10,000 – $20,000 |
| Concrete patio (standard) | 300 sq ft, broom finish | $3,500 – $8,000 |
| Stamped concrete patio | 300 sq ft, color + pattern | $6,000 – $14,000 |
| Concrete sidewalk (repair/new) | Per linear foot, standard 4 ft wide | $35 – $75/LF |
| Exposed aggregate driveway | 600 sq ft, surface treatment | $10,000 – $18,000 |
| Concrete crack repair (slab) | Routing + sealant, per linear foot | $8 – $20/LF |
| Mudjacking / slab leveling | Per hole, heaved slab raising | $150 – $400/hole |
| Concrete removal only | Demo + haul, per sq ft | $2 – $5/sq ft |
| Decorative concrete (color) | Integral color additive | Add $2 – $5/sq ft |
Standard concrete mix in Denver is not the same as a Sun Belt city. Denver contractors working to best practice specify:
Air-entrained concrete (5–7% air content): Air entrainment creates microscopic air bubbles in the concrete matrix that allow water to expand into air spaces during freezing — dramatically reducing freeze-thaw spalling and surface deterioration. All outdoor Denver concrete should be air-entrained. A contractor proposing standard (non-air-entrained) concrete for a Denver driveway is proposing inadequate product for this climate.
Low water-to-cement ratio (w/c ≤ 0.45): Higher water content increases porosity; porous Denver concrete absorbs de-icing salt and water, accelerating freeze-thaw damage; lower w/c concrete is denser and more durable. Watch out for contractors who add extra water to improve workability at the expense of strength.
Minimum 4,000 PSI compressive strength: Colorado Concrete standards for exterior flatwork in Denver's climate recommend 4,000 PSI minimum; 3,500 PSI (widely marketed as "standard") is inadequate for Denver's exposure in best-practice specifications. Verify the mix design on your concrete batch ticket.
Control joints: Concrete shrinks approximately 1/8 inch per 10 feet of length during curing; Denver's dry climate (10–15% relative humidity) causes faster moisture evaporation from fresh concrete, accelerating shrinkage. Control joints (saw cuts or tooled joints) at regular intervals allow shrinkage cracking to occur in predictable, manageable lines rather than random mid-slab cracks.
Much of the Denver metro — particularly in the Stapleton/Central Park, Aurora, Lakewood, Westminster, Thornton, and Commerce City areas — is underlain by swelling shale and bentonite clay. These soils expand significantly when wet and shrink when dry, applying upward force (heave) to concrete slabs above them.
Proper sub-base preparation in Denver expansive soil zones:
Per BLS Denver-Aurora-Lakewood MSA, construction workers earn $25–$50/hour.
Colorado has no statewide general contractor license requirement — unlike California (CSLB), Texas for certain trades (TDLR), or Washington (L&I). Colorado's Division of Professions and Occupations does not require a GC license for concrete and driveway work.
City of Denver: Denver does not impose a concrete specialty contractor license. However, City of Denver building permits are required for concrete work in certain categories — see below.
Key trade licenses: Concrete and flatwork itself is not separately licensed in Colorado. Electricians and plumbers working in conjunction with concrete projects (conduit embed, utility sleeve installations) require Colorado-licensed trade contractors.
The City and County of Denver (denvergov.org/permits) requires permits for:
Generally permit-exempt: Replacement driveway at the same footprint (like-for-like replacement without curb cut modification); standard residential patios within the property boundary.
Important for Denver curb cuts: If your new driveway changes the width or position of the curb cut (where the driveway meets the street), a City of Denver Public Works permit is required — this is commonly overlooked by contractors unfamiliar with Denver's requirements.
General Liability: Minimum $1 million. Concrete work is inherently risky: heavy trucks, concrete pumps, demolition debris, and significant excavation adjacent to structures. Concrete truck delivery to a residential property in Denver involves equipment damage risk (wet concrete damages landscaping, vehicles, adjacent structures if spillage occurs). Verify GL insurance COI before any Denver concrete project begins.
Workers' Compensation: Colorado requires WC for all employers with one or more employees (CRS 8-40-202). Concrete work is physically demanding with injury potential; WC ensures crew injuries don't create claims against your homeowner's insurance.
This is the most underemphasized concrete durability factor in Denver: De-icing salts — sodium chloride (rock salt), calcium chloride, magnesium chloride (frequently used by Denver Public Works) applied to streets and sidewalks — cause chemical attack on concrete surfaces through a mechanism called "freeze-thaw scaling with chloride attack." The combination of salt-induced freezing at lower temperatures + elevated concrete porosity from freeze-thaw cycles creates surface scaling (flaking of the concrete surface layer) that:
Sealing recommendation: A penetrating concrete sealer (Portland Cement Association recommendations) applied within 28 days of curing and reapplied every 2–3 years significantly extends Denver driveway life by reducing water and salt penetration into the concrete matrix. Cost: $0.25–$0.75/sq ft applied by a professional. Ask your Denver concrete contractor if sealing is included in their scope or available as an add-on.
Denver homeowners replacing a driveway face a concrete vs. asphalt comparison that has specific Denver-climate implications distinct from warmer or more humid markets.
| Factor | Concrete | Asphalt |
|---|---|---|
| Installed cost (600 sq ft) | $8,000 – $16,000 | $3,600 – $7,200 |
| Lifespan in Denver | 30–50 years with proper maintenance | 15–25 years |
| Freeze-thaw performance | Excellent if air-entrained + sealed | Good if sealcoated annually |
| De-icing salt damage | Moderate risk — sealing mitigates | Low — salt not a chemical attack risk on asphalt |
| Heat damage (100°F+ Denver days) | None | Softening, tracking in peak summer |
| Snow visibility and plowing | Light surface — snow visible | Dark surface — absorbs solar heat, melts faster |
| Repair ease | Limited — patches are visible | Easy — asphalt patches blend over time |
| Expansion joint requirement | Yes — control joints every 10–12 ft | No joints — flexible material accommodates movement |
| Denver curb appeal | Higher — preferred in many Denver neighborhoods | Lower — more utilitarian appearance |
| HOA compatibility | Usually acceptable | HOA restrictions common in newer Denver neighborhoods |
| Sealcoating required | Every 2–3 years (penetrating sealer) | Every 2–3 years (surface sealcoat) |
| Best for Denver | Primary recommendation for longevity | Budget option; better for expansive soil areas |
One important nuance: asphalt's flexibility gives it a moderate advantage over concrete in Denver's most problematic expansive soil zones. In areas like Stapleton, Parts of Aurora, and Commerce City where soil heave is most significant, asphalt's flexibility allows it to absorb some heave movement without cracking as severely as rigid concrete. However, this advantage is limited: significant soil heave damages both materials; proper sub-base preparation is the correct solution, not material selection.
Denver's outdoor living culture drives significant demand for decorative concrete patios. Stamped concrete (embedded pattern + integral color) provides:
Denver stamped concrete considerations:
Stamped vs. pavers (concrete or natural stone): Pavers ($15–$30/sq ft installed) compete with stamped concrete in Denver's market. Pavers allow individual unit replacement; heaved sections can be re-leveled by relaying units without full tear-out. Stamped concrete cannot be selectively repaired — damage requires section pour with visible joint. For Denver's soil heave environment, pavers have a long-term maintenance advantage even at higher initial cost.
Best installation window: May–October in Denver. Fresh concrete should not be poured when overnight temperatures are below 40°F or expected to drop below freezing within 7 days — cold weather concrete requires additional blanket insulation, accelerated curing additives (at extra cost), and careful temperature monitoring. Denver's April and October can have surprise freeze events — responsible Denver contractors watch the forecast carefully.
Cure time before use: New Denver concrete should be kept vehicle-free for 7 days minimum; 28 days to full design strength. Never apply de-icing products in the first winter on new Denver concrete. Sand over the new driveway for winter traction if ice forms; salt and chemical de-icers at full strength before concrete has fully hardened cause surface scaling.
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