How Much Does Concrete Cost in Fresno County, CA?
Compare concrete costs in Fresno County, CA. Driveways average $4,945, patios $4,325, and sidewalk sections $1,235. Updated May 2026.
What homeowners in Fresno County actually pay.
Local market ranges built from regional labor, materials, and permitting data — not national averages.
Concrete Driveway (400 sq ft)
Patio Slab (400 sq ft)
Sidewalk Section (50 linear ft)
National avg $4,800 × 1.03x local adjustment = $4,945
Why Fresno County prices look like this.
Labor Rates for Concrete Work in Fresno
How Fresno County Hazards Affect Concrete Projects
Climate Conditions and Concrete Durability in Fresno County
Energy Costs and Concrete's Thermal Role in Fresno
Financing a Concrete Project in Fresno County
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Questions buyers ask about concrete in Fresno County.
Short answers to the most common things we hear about local pricing, scope, and timing.
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What does a concrete driveway cost in Fresno County in 2026?
A 400-square-foot driveway runs $3,605 to $6,695, with a typical project averaging $4,945. These figures apply a 1.03x local adjustment to the national baseline, reflecting Fresno cement mason wages of $29.96/hour. Decorative finishes, thicker slabs (5 inches versus the standard 4 inches), or significant regrading push costs toward the upper range.
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How much does a concrete patio slab cost in Fresno County?
A standard 400-square-foot patio slab costs $3,090 to $6,180, averaging around $4,325. Stamped or colored concrete adds $3 to $8 per square foot above a plain broom-finish pour. Permits in Fresno County add roughly $50 to $200 depending on project scope, and most contractors include permit fees in their quoted price.
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What does sidewalk concrete repair or replacement cost near Fresno?
A 50-linear-foot sidewalk section costs $825 to $1,855, averaging $1,235. Final cost depends on demolition and haul-off of existing concrete, required subgrade work, and whether the pour must form around tree roots or accommodate significant grade changes. In areas near Fresno's higher flood-risk zones, thicker base preparation may be warranted.
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Does Fresno County's flood and wildfire risk affect concrete project planning?
Yes, both matter. The county's inland flood FEMA NRI score of 98.70 means low-lying slabs face heaving risk from saturated soils, so proper drainage slopes and compacted base material are worth the extra cost. The wildfire risk score of 98.44 makes concrete flatwork a smart choice near the Sierra Nevada foothills, where it outperforms wood decking as a fire-resistant surface and clears of ember debris more readily.
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Does Fresno County's climate cause freeze-thaw damage to concrete?
No. The county logs 2,138 heating degree-days per year, well below the 3,700 HDD national median, and winter weather carries a Very Low FEMA NRI score of 17.73. Standard mix designs without air entrainment are adequate. The bigger durability concern is summer heat: high solar intensity (6.04 kWh/m²/day peak sun) can cause plastic shrinkage cracks if finishers skip evaporation retarder during hot pours.
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What is the best way to finance a concrete project in Fresno County?
For projects under $10,000, a home equity line of credit (HELOC) is often the lowest-cost option given Fresno County's median home value of $362,600. For larger combined jobs in the $8,000 to $14,000 range, a fixed-rate personal installment loan avoids the rate risk of revolving credit. The 30-year mortgage rate as of May 14, 2026 is 6.36%; use that as a ceiling benchmark when evaluating any financing offer.
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Is Fresno County a good location for solar-ready concrete work?
Yes. Fresno's NREL-rated peak sun hours average 6.04 kWh/m²/day, and a 6 kW roof-mount system is projected to generate 9,647 kWh/year. At California's residential rate of $0.332/kWh, that offsets roughly $3,203 in annual electricity costs. If your concrete project runs near the electrical panel or a planned panel location, having the contractor sleeve conduit in the slab during the pour costs under $100 and avoids cutting concrete later when solar is installed.
How these numbers were built.
Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents.