Concrete Cost Estimator

Local Concrete Cost Guide

Concrete Driveway Cost in Memphis, TN

A concrete driveway costs about $6 to $15 per square foot installed in 2026 for a plain broom finish, so a typical two-car driveway of 600 square feet runs roughly $3,600 to $9,000. Colored and stamped driveways push higher, and removing an old driveway adds a separate line item. Thickness and base prep are the quiet cost drivers most homeowners overlook.

Below you will find realistic price ranges, the factors that move them, and where it makes sense to spend versus save. Use the driveway calculator to turn your length, width, thickness, and tear-out choices into cubic yards and an installed estimate.

Last updated June 10, 2026

Calculate Local Costs for Memphis

Use this calculator to estimate the volume of concrete needed and the installed cost in Memphis. Pricing is automatically adjusted for the local labor market.

What Drives the Cost in Memphis

  • Thickness: Four inches suits light cars; 5 to 6 inches is standard for trucks, RVs, and freeze-thaw climates, adding concrete and often a stronger mix.
  • Base preparation: A driveway lives and dies by its base. Excavation, grading, and 4 to 6 inches of compacted gravel can add $2 to $5 per square foot.
  • Finish: Broom is cheapest and grippiest. Color, exposed aggregate, and stamping add material and skilled labor that can double the price.
  • Tear-out: Removing and hauling an old driveway typically adds $2 to $6 per square foot and is almost always quoted separately.
  • Reinforcement and jointing: Rebar on a grid and properly spaced control joints resist the cracking that driveways are prone to, adding modest cost up front.
  • Drainage and slope: Driveways must shed water. Regrading, drains, or a slight slope correction can add cost but prevent pooling and freeze damage.

New driveway vs replacement

A brand-new driveway on bare ground only pays for excavation, base, and the pour. A replacement adds demolition and disposal of the old slab — often $2 to $6 per square foot — plus the chance of fixing drainage or base problems that cracked the old one.

If the existing driveway is only lightly cracked and structurally sound, resurfacing or an overlay can be cheaper than a full tear-out. If it is heaving, settling, or badly cracked, replacing it is usually the better long-term value.

Is a concrete driveway worth it vs asphalt?

Concrete costs more up front than asphalt but lasts longer (commonly 30+ years vs 15-20), needs less frequent maintenance, and offers decorative options asphalt cannot. Asphalt is cheaper to install and easier to patch, and performs well in very cold climates.

Over a 25-year horizon the lifetime costs often converge once you factor in asphalt resealing and resurfacing. Choose concrete for longevity and looks; choose asphalt for the lowest install price.

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