Quick Answer
- Most Central MN concrete driveways: $8–$15 per square foot installed
- A typical two-car driveway (20×30, 600 sq ft) runs roughly $4,800–$9,000
- Tearing out an old driveway first adds roughly $1–$3 per square foot
- Decorative finishes (stamped, colored, exposed aggregate) add $2–$6+ per square foot
Want your number now? Try the free concrete cost calculator — instant ballpark, no email needed.
The spread between $8 and $15 isn't random — it's the difference between a thin slab on whatever dirt was there, and a driveway built to survive thirty Minnesota winters. Here's where the money actually goes.
What's in a Driveway That Lasts
- Tear-out and removal. Old cracked concrete has to come out and get hauled away — we do it with our own equipment and dump trailer.
- Base prep. 4–6 inches of compacted Class-5 gravel. This is the part you'll never see and the part that decides whether your driveway heaves. It is not optional in Central Minnesota.
- Thickness. 4 inches is standard for cars; 5–6 inches where trucks, campers, or equipment will sit. The price difference is small compared to the cost of a slab that wasn't thick enough.
- Reinforcement. Rebar or wire mesh, plus properly spaced control joints so the inevitable hairline movement happens where we planned it, not across the middle.
- Finish. Standard broom finish grips in winter. Stamped and decorative finishes look incredible and cost more per foot.
Concrete vs. Asphalt vs. Gravel in Minnesota
| Surface | Installed Cost | Lifespan | Maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete | $8–$15 /sq ft | 30–40 years | Sealing every few years |
| Asphalt | $5–$10 /sq ft | 15–25 years | Sealcoat every 2–4 years |
| Gravel | $1–$3 /sq ft | Indefinite w/ upkeep | Regrading, fresh rock |
Concrete costs the most up front and the least per year of life. And if your gravel driveway just needs help rather than replacement, our skid loader smoothing and regrading service is a fraction of the cost of new pavement.
The Freeze-Thaw Reality
Central Minnesota concrete lives a hard life: saturated in spring, baked in July, and frozen solid by December — through dozens of freeze-thaw swings every year. Air-entrained mix, proper base drainage, correct curing time, and joint placement are what separate a 30-year driveway from a 5-year disappointment. That's the work you're actually paying for.
Frequently Asked Questions
Stay off it with vehicles for at least 7 days; full design strength takes about 28. Foot traffic is fine after 24–48 hours.
April through October. Book in late winter or early spring — pour season fills up fast and you'll get the best scheduling.
Either. Sometimes replacing a failed section or apron buys you years; sometimes full replacement is the honest answer. We'll tell you which during the free estimate.
If looks matter — front entries, patios, visible driveways — it transforms the result. Expect $2–$6+ more per square foot depending on pattern and color.