Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and Louisville KY-accurate ready-mix costs for driveways, patios, garage slabs, foundations & footings across Jefferson County and the Greater Louisville metro.
Enter project dimensions to calculate volume, bags, and estimated Louisville KY material cost.
Use 4–5 in. for driveways. 3,500 PSI + 4–6% air entrainment recommended for all Louisville exterior flatwork. Footings must be below 24 in. frost depth. Lime-treat or replace expansive clay subgrade under structural slabs.
Patio 4 in · Sidewalk 4 in · Driveway 4–5 in · Garage 4 in · Footing 10–14 in (below 24 in. frost) · Foundation 8–10 in
Exterior flatwork minimum: 3,000 PSI · Louisville standard: 3,500 PSI + 4–6% air entrainment recommended · Driveways / structural: 3,500–4,000 PSI · Frost depth: 24 in. — footings must extend below · W/C ratio: ≤ 0.50 for exterior exposed concrete · Clay subsoil: lime-treat or replace under structural foundations · Curing: 7-day minimum; insulated blankets for pours below 40°F. Always confirm with Louisville Metro Codes & Regulations before starting permitted work.
A standard 20×20 ft driveway at 4 inches needs ~4.9 cu yd. At Louisville pricing ($142–$162/yd for 3,500 PSI air-entrained), material runs $696–$794. Louisville's transitional climate means air entrainment is strongly recommended — 40–60 annual freeze-thaw cycles are enough to cause significant scaling in non-air-entrained concrete within 3–5 years. Use #3 rebar over Louisville's expansive clay subgrade for maximum crack resistance.
Louisville sits on deep deposits of expansive red and grey Illinoian glacial clay laid down by the Ohio River. This clay shrinks significantly during Louisville's dry summers and swells dramatically during wet winters, causing seasonal differential movement of 1–2 inches beneath slabs. Lime stabilization ($2–$5/sq ft) or full clay replacement is the standard approach for Louisville structural foundations. Even flatwork over untreated clay in Louisville benefits from fiber mesh or rebar reinforcement.
Louisville's climate bridges the warm South and cold Midwest — summers reach 95°F with high Ohio Valley humidity while winters bring 10–20°F lows. This means Louisville concrete contractors must plan for both hot weather evaporation control in summer and cold weather protection in winter. The ideal Louisville pour season is April–May and September–October, avoiding both peak summer heat and the November–March freeze risk window.
Louisville's Ohio River Valley clay is among the most problematic subsoils for concrete in the mid-South. The clay's high plasticity index (PI 30–50) means it gains and loses significant volume with moisture changes — causing seasonal heave under slabs in winter and settlement during summer droughts. For any Louisville structural foundation or slab on grade over native clay: (1) get a geotechnical report confirming soil bearing capacity, (2) lime-stabilize the top 8–12 inches of clay or replace with compacted crushed limestone, (3) install a 4–6 inch compacted crushed limestone base course, (4) use 4,000 PSI concrete with #4 rebar or post-tension tendons for floor slabs over clay, (5) ensure all surface drainage is directed away from the slab perimeter — moisture changes are the primary driver of Louisville clay movement.
Summer (June–Aug): Schedule pours before 8 AM; order set retarder (+$8–$14/yd) for temps above 85°F; wet subgrade and forms the night before; apply evaporation retarder spray immediately after screeding; cure with white-pigmented compound. Winter (Nov–Mar): Never pour below 40°F without cold-weather protocol; use heated mix water and Type III accelerating cement; apply insulated curing blankets for minimum 7 days; protect forms until concrete reaches 50°F for at least 72 hours. Budget +$10–$18/yd cold-weather surcharge from Jefferson County suppliers November through March.
Louisville and Jefferson County are served by multiple batch plants along the I-64, I-65, and I-71 corridors, providing competitive mid-South pricing. Jeffersontown, Shively, St. Matthews, and Lyndon carry similar pricing to Louisville proper. Southern Indiana suburbs across the Ohio River (Clarksville, New Albany) may carry slightly different pricing from Indiana-based suppliers.
| Mix Type / PSI | Louisville Price / Cu Yd | National Avg | Best For | Air Entrained? | KY Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,000 PSI | $135–$148 | $130–$148 | Interior slabs, light flatwork | Optional | Min Only |
| 3,500 PSI — Louisville Standard | $142–$162 | $138–$158 | Driveways, patios, garage floors | 4–6% Rec. | Compliant |
| 4,000 PSI — Structural | $155–$175 | $148–$166 | Foundations, heavy driveways, grade beams | 4–6% Rec. | Compliant |
| 4,500 PSI — High Strength | $168–$190 | $160–$175 | Heavy structural, post-tension slabs | As Spec. | Compliant |
| 5,000 PSI — Commercial | $180–$210 | $172–$190 | Commercial, tilt-up, high-strength | As Spec. | Compliant |
| Summer Set Retarder | +$8–$14/yd | +$8–$15/yd | All pours June–Aug above 85°F | Separate | Recommended |
| Cold Weather Surcharge | +$10–$18/yd | +$10–$20/yd | Heated mix / accelerator Nov–Mar | Separate | Recommended |
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Louisville Metro permits, Kentucky Building Code, and concrete standards for Jefferson County projects.
Apply for Louisville Metro building permits for driveways, foundations, retaining walls, and all structural concrete work. Louisville Metro enforces the Kentucky Building Code and requires mandatory footing, pre-pour, and final inspections for all structural concrete projects. Verify your contractor holds a Kentucky contractor license and general liability insurance before signing any Louisville concrete contract.
Visit Louisville Metro CodesVerify your Louisville foundation and structural concrete engineer holds an active Kentucky PE license through the Kentucky State Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors (KYBPELS). All residential and commercial foundations in Louisville require a Kentucky-licensed PE familiar with Ohio River Valley clay soil conditions. PE stamp is required on all Louisville Metro foundation permit submittals.
Visit KYBPELSACI 318 is the governing standard for structural concrete design and is the reference code for all Kentucky-permitted foundation, grade beam, and structural slab work in Louisville. It specifies minimum concrete strength, reinforcement requirements, cover dimensions, and construction tolerances for residential and commercial concrete structures. Required reference for all Louisville PE-stamped foundation designs.
Visit ACI.org