
Stamped Concrete vs. Pavers Cost in 2026: Patio & Driveway Comparison
Stamped Concrete vs. Pavers: Cost Comparison for 2026 Stamped concrete costs $8-$28 per square foot installed in 2026, while interlocking pavers run $10-$50/sq ft -- making stamped concrete 20-40% cheaper at the budget end but nearly equal at the mid-range. For a 400 sq ft patio, stamped concrete runs $4,800-$8,000 and pavers cost $6,000-$12,000. The cost gap narrows on larger projects and reverses when you factor in paver's easier repair and longer lifespan. I have installed both materials on dozens of patio and driveway projects across southeastern Pennsylvania, and the comparison I come back to is a pair of patios I built in the same neighborhood in Newtown. One homeowner chose stamped concrete (ashlar slate pattern) at $14/sq ft -- total $5,600 for 400 sq ft. The neighbor chose Belgard pavers at $22/sq ft -- $8,800 for the same area. Three winters later, the stamped concrete had a 6-foot crack...
How Much Does a Paver Patio Cost in 2026? (Materials, Labor & Size)
How Much Does a Paver Patio Cost in 2026? A paver patio costs $12 to $28 per square foot installed in 2026, with total projects ranging from $1,200 for a small 100 sq ft pad to $16,000+ for a large 500 sq ft patio with premium materials. Concrete pavers run $12-$20/sq ft installed, brick pavers cost $14-$25/sq ft, natural stone reaches $20-$50/sq ft, and porcelain pavers fall in the $18-$30/sq ft range. Labor and base preparation account for roughly 60-70% of total project cost. I have laid pavers on everything from sandy Florida lots to clay-heavy Pennsylvania yards, and the number one thing that separates a patio that lasts 25 years from one that buckles in three is the base work nobody wants to pay for. I quoted a 300 sq ft brick paver patio in Bucks County last fall at $7,800 installed. The homeowner said the guy down the...

How Much Does Concrete Work Cost in 2026? (Driveways, Patios & Slabs)
How Much Does Concrete Work Cost in 2026? Concrete work costs $5 to $18 per square foot installed in 2026, with most residential projects landing between $2,000 and $15,000 total. Ready-mix concrete runs $125-$200 per cubic yard delivered, plain slabs and patios cost $5-$8/sq ft installed, stamped concrete runs $12-$18/sq ft, and driveways range from $6-$20/sq ft depending on finish. Concrete prices are up 4-9% from 2024-2025, driven by cement plant energy costs and steady residential demand. I poured 22 residential concrete jobs last year across Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and the question I get more than any other is "why does a flat slab of concrete cost so much?" Here is the honest answer: on a $4,800 patio job I did in Bucks County last October, the concrete itself was $680. The other $4,120 went to excavation, gravel base, forms, rebar, labor, and finishing. The gray stuff is cheap....
Average Paver Patio Cost by State in 2026 (All 50 States Compared)
Average Paver Patio Cost by State in 2026 The national average cost to install a paver patio in 2026 is approximately $12 per square foot, but actual costs range from $6/sq ft in Mississippi to over $22/sq ft in Hawaii. For a standard 300 sq ft patio, that translates to $1,800-$6,600+ depending on your state and paver material. Concrete pavers are the most affordable at $8-$15/sq ft installed, while natural stone runs $15-$30/sq ft. I have estimated patio projects across the mid-Atlantic for years, and the cost variable that catches most homeowners off guard is the base preparation. A 300 sq ft paver patio in suburban Maryland came to $4,200 installed -- and $1,400 of that was excavation, gravel base, and compaction that sits under the pavers nobody sees. The paver materials were $900. You are paying for the invisible foundation that prevents settling, heaving, and weed growth. Use our...

How Much Concrete Do I Need? Concrete Calculator for Slabs & Footings
How Much Concrete Do I Need? Concrete Calculator for Slabs & Footings Concrete is calculated in cubic yards. For a 4-inch thick slab, you need approximately 1.23 cubic yards per 100 square feet. A typical 10×10 patio slab requires about 1.3 cubic yards of concrete, or approximately thirty 80-pound bags if mixing by hand. When I poured a 12x20-foot driveway extension last spring, I calculated 3.3 cubic yards but ordered 3.75 to account for uneven ground. The total came to $565 in ready-mix concrete, and I used every bit of the extra -- the subgrade had low spots that swallowed nearly half a yard more than the formula predicted. That project taught me why rounding up matters more than any waste percentage chart. Use our Concrete Calculator(/construction/concrete-calculator) to get precise quantities for slabs, footings, columns, and more. !Concrete volume calculator showing cubic yards needed for common slab sizes including patio,...