The Illinois Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders across The Prairie State estimate cubic yards, bag count, and ready-mix costs for any Illinois concrete project. Chicago metro ready-mix runs $155–$192/yd depending on PSI and mix type — reflecting one of the highest labor and logistics costs in the Midwest. Downstate Illinois cities like Springfield, Peoria, Rockford, and Champaign run $138–$168/yd. Illinois's brutal winters demand air-entrained 4,000 PSI concrete for all exterior flatwork, and the state's notorious expansive glacial clay soils — found across nearly the entire state — require careful subgrade preparation for every pour. Enter your dimensions for instant, Illinois-accurate results.
Enter project dimensions to calculate volume, bags, and estimated Illinois material cost.
Use 5–6 in. for driveways. 4,000 PSI air-entrained required for all Illinois exterior flatwork — freeze-thaw and road salt will destroy non-compliant slabs within 1–2 winters.
Patio 4 in · Sidewalk 4 in · Driveway 5–6 in · Garage 4–5 in · Foundation 8–12 in · Footing 12–18 in
Illinois Concrete Calculator — What You Need to Know
Illinois presents a demanding combination of harsh freeze-thaw winters, heavy road salt application, and statewide glacial clay soils — three factors that together define every concrete project in The Prairie State. Chicago and the northeast corridor average 120–150 freeze-thaw cycles per year, making air-entrained concrete non-negotiable. Illinois's glacially deposited clay soils — flat, expansive, and poorly draining — cover nearly the entire state and are the primary cause of slab cracking and settlement statewide. The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) licenses contractors, and all structural concrete work requires a permit from your local building department under the Illinois-adopted IBC.
🔵 Illinois Building Code — Minimum Concrete Requirements
All exterior flatwork: 4,000 PSI min with 5–7% air entrainment · W/C ratio: max 0.45 for freeze-thaw and deicing salt exposure · Chicago frost depth: 42 in. · Central IL (Springfield, Peoria): 36 in. · Southern IL (Carbondale, Cairo): 24–30 in. · Driveways: 5–6 in. recommended due to heavy salt exposure. Always verify with your local building department before starting structural or permitted work.
🚗 Illinois Driveway Concrete
A standard 20×20 ft driveway at 5 inches needs ~6.2 cu yd. At Chicago pricing ($165–$192/yd for 4,000 PSI air-entrained), material runs $1,023–$1,190. Illinois road salt is among the most aggressively applied in the US — use 4,000 PSI minimum and seal every 3 years. Downstate the same driveway runs $855–$1,041 at Springfield-area pricing.
🏙️ Chicago Metro Premium
Chicago, the collar counties (DuPage, Lake, Will, Kane, McHenry), and the I-290/I-88 corridor carry 15–25% higher labor and material costs than Downstate Illinois. Union labor rates, dense truck traffic affecting delivery windows, and premium mix specifications all contribute. Expect $165–$210/yd for 4,000 PSI in the Chicago metro versus $138–$165/yd in Springfield, Peoria, or Champaign.
🏗️ Foundation & Footings
Frost depth is 42 inches in Chicago, 36 inches in Central Illinois, and 24–30 inches in far Southern Illinois. Critically, Illinois's glacial clay soils are highly expansive — remove and replace clay with compacted CA-6 gravel under all slabs and footings. Use 4,000–4,500 PSI with waterproofing admixtures for below-grade foundation walls statewide.
How to Calculate Illinois Concrete Volume
Measure your project in feet (length × width), multiply by thickness in inches divided by 12 to get cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. For Illinois projects, always order a minimum of 10% extra — Chicago metro batch plants manage tight delivery windows along congested expressways, and Downstate rural areas may have limited same-day re-order capability. For pours over 10 cu yd, confirm the maximum haul time with your supplier before scheduling.
Example: 20 ft × 20 ft driveway × 5 in = 166.7 cu ft = 6.17 cu yd → Order 6.8 cu yd (+10%)
⚠️ Illinois Short-Load Fees & Chicago Metro Delivery
Chicago metro suppliers charge a short-load fee of $150–$300 for orders under 5–7 cubic yards — among the highest in the Midwest. Collar county suppliers (DuPage, Lake, Will) add fuel surcharges of $30–$80 per load. Downstate Illinois rural areas (Shawnee, Wabash, Hardin counties) add $100–$250 in delivery surcharges for long hauls. For any Illinois project under 0.5 cu yd, use 80 lb Quikrete or Sakrete bags from Menards, Home Depot, or Lowe's.
Illinois Concrete Pricing — Current Reference
Chicago and the collar counties represent the premium end of the Illinois ready-mix market. Springfield, Peoria, Rockford, and Champaign-Urbana offer significantly lower rates. Southern Illinois cities (Carbondale, Marion, Belleville) are the most affordable in the state, roughly on par with Missouri and Kentucky border pricing.
Mix Type / PSI
Chicago Price / Cu Yd
Downstate IL Price
Best For
Air Entrained?
IL Code
3,000 PSI — Standard
$148–$168
$130–$148
Interior slabs only — NOT approved for IL exterior
Interior Only
Interior Only
3,500 PSI — Interior Grade
$155–$178
$138–$155
Basement floors, interior-only garage slabs
Interior Only
Interior Only
4,000 PSI — IL Required
$165–$192
$148–$168
All exterior flatwork — driveways, patios, walks
Required
Compliant
4,500 PSI — Structural
$178–$208
$160–$182
Foundations, grade beams, exposed to deicers
Required Exterior
Compliant
5,000 PSI — High Strength
$195–$228
$175–$198
Commercial, heavy structural loads
Required Exterior
Compliant
Chicago Collar County Premium
+10–20%
—
DuPage, Lake, Will, Kane, McHenry counties
Required
Same Code
3,000 PSI — Standard
Chicago Price / Cu Yd$148–$168
Downstate IL Price$130–$148
Best ForInterior slabs only
IL CodeInterior Only
3,500 PSI — Interior Grade
Chicago Price / Cu Yd$155–$178
Downstate IL Price$138–$155
Best ForBasement / interior garage
IL CodeInterior Only
4,000 PSI — IL Required
Chicago Price / Cu Yd$165–$192
Downstate IL Price$148–$168
Best ForAll exterior flatwork
IL CodeCompliant
4,500 PSI — Structural
Chicago Price / Cu Yd$178–$208
Downstate IL Price$160–$182
Best ForFoundations, grade beams
IL CodeCompliant
5,000 PSI — High Strength
Chicago Price / Cu Yd$195–$228
Downstate IL Price$175–$198
Best ForCommercial, heavy structural
IL CodeCompliant
Chicago Collar County Premium
Surcharge vs Chicago+10–20%
Applies ToDuPage, Lake, Will, Kane, McHenry
IL CodeSame Code
Illinois Concrete Best Practices — Freeze-Thaw & Prairie Clay
Two challenges define virtually every Illinois concrete project: severe freeze-thaw cycling and expansive glacial lake clay. Chicago averages 120–150 freeze-thaw cycles annually — far above the national average — and the state's flat topography means glacial clay sits at or near the surface from Rockford to Cairo. Together these factors demand the most thorough site preparation and mix specifications of any Midwestern state. Following these best practices protects every Illinois concrete investment.
Specify 5–7% air entrainment for every exterior pour — without entrained air voids, freeze-thaw expansion pressure fractures the cement paste matrix from within. This is the single most important protection for all outdoor Illinois concrete, from Chicago to Carbondale.
Always excavate and replace prairie clay — Illinois glacial lake clay (Chicago Clay) is among the most expansive soils in the Midwest. Remove 6–8 inches of clay subgrade and replace with compacted CA-6 crushed limestone or #57 gravel before any residential slab pour statewide.
Keep W/C ratio at 0.45 maximum — Illinois road salt application is extremely heavy. A low water-cement ratio creates a denser paste that resists both freeze-thaw and chloride ion penetration from deicing chemicals. Reject over-watered trucks — request a slump test on every delivery.
Use 5–6 inch thickness for driveways — 4 inches is the national minimum, but Illinois road salt exposure, freeze-thaw cycles, and vehicle loads make 5–6 inches the practical standard for residential driveways and garage aprons statewide.
Install rebar on an 18-inch grid over clay — polypropylene fiber mesh ($8–$14/yd) helps for patios and walkways, but #3 rebar on an 18-inch grid is the standard for Illinois driveways and garage slabs over expansive clay subgrade.
Avoid deicing salts for the first two winters — calcium chloride and sodium chloride severely attack new concrete surfaces. Use sand or kitty litter for traction for at least the first two full winter seasons after any new pour.
Cut control joints promptly — saw-cut joints 1 inch deep every 8–10 feet within 12 hours of pour. Illinois temperature swings of 40–60°F in a single day are common in shoulder seasons and cause significant thermal movement in slabs.
Apply penetrating sealer after 28-day cure — a silane/siloxane penetrating sealer dramatically reduces water and chloride absorption. In Illinois, reapply every 2–3 years due to the aggressive road salt environment — this is shorter than most other states.
Install a 6 mil polyethylene vapor barrier — place over the compacted gravel base before pouring to prevent Illinois's wet clay subgrade from drawing moisture up into the slab, which accelerates freeze-thaw damage and surface scaling.
✅ Illinois Road Salt — Concrete Protection Note
Illinois applies among the highest volumes of road salt per lane-mile in the US — the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) treats thousands of miles of state highways annually. This salt migrates into driveways via runoff, tire tracks, and footwear. For any Illinois driveway or garage floor, specify 4,000 PSI minimum, W/C ≤ 0.45, 5–7% air entrainment, and a penetrating sealer reapplied every 2–3 years. These four measures provide comprehensive protection against Illinois road salt and freeze-thaw combined exposure.
How much does concrete cost per yard in Illinois?+
Chicago metro ready-mix runs $165–$228/yd depending on PSI grade and location within the metro area. Collar counties (DuPage, Lake, Will) add 10–20% to Chicago city rates. Downstate Illinois cities (Springfield, Peoria, Champaign, Rockford) range $138–$198/yd. Short-load fees of $150–$300 apply statewide for orders under 5–7 cubic yards.
What PSI concrete is required in Illinois?+
4,000 PSI with 5–7% air entrainment is required for all exterior flatwork statewide under the Illinois-adopted IBC. Interior slabs in conditioned spaces may use 3,000–3,500 PSI without air entrainment. Illinois's heavy road salt application makes 4,000 PSI the bare minimum — many experienced Illinois contractors specify 4,500 PSI for driveways that see heavy deicing salt exposure.
How deep do footings need to be in Illinois?+
Frost depth varies across Illinois: 42 inches in Chicago and northern Illinois, 36 inches in Central Illinois (Springfield, Peoria, Bloomington), and 24–30 inches in Southern Illinois (Carbondale, Marion, Cairo). Footings must reach undisturbed, competent soil below frost depth — in most of Illinois, that means getting below the expansive clay layer as well. Your local building department specifies the exact requirement for your site.
Why does concrete crack so much in Illinois?+
Two primary causes: Illinois glacial lake clay that swells and shrinks dramatically with moisture changes, and freeze-thaw cycling that creates internal pressure in improperly mixed concrete. The solution is thorough clay excavation and replacement with compacted CA-6 gravel, proper 4,000 PSI air-entrained mix design, rebar reinforcement, and control joints cut every 8–10 feet within 12 hours of each pour.
Do I need a permit for a concrete driveway in Illinois?+
Permit requirements vary by municipality. Chicago, the collar counties, and most incorporated Illinois cities require permits for new driveways and structural slabs. Many smaller villages and unincorporated areas have different thresholds. Always check with your local building department — Illinois has over 1,000 municipalities each with their own permitting rules. Unpermitted work can affect property sales and homeowners insurance.
Can I pour concrete in Illinois winter?+
Cold-weather concreting per ACI 306 is possible but requires heated enclosures, insulating blankets, accelerating admixtures, and warmed mixing water. Most Illinois contractors suspend exterior pours from December through February. Concrete temperature must stay above 50°F for the first 72 hours — Chicago wind chill makes winter pours especially challenging and expensive, adding $3–$10/sq ft in cold-weather protection costs.
How many bags of concrete do I need for an Illinois project?+
One 80 lb bag yields about 0.60 cubic feet — roughly 45 bags per cubic yard. For projects under 0.5 cu yd anywhere in Illinois, bagged concrete is more cost-effective than ready-mix with short-load fees. Use the Illinois Concrete Calculator above for an instant bag count and ready-mix cost estimate at current Chicago or Downstate IL pricing.
What is CA-6 gravel and why is it used in Illinois?+
CA-6 is the Illinois DOT designation for crushed limestone aggregate graded 1.5 inch down to fines — the standard compactable base material used under virtually all Illinois concrete slabs and driveways. It compacts readily to a stable, well-draining layer that resists Illinois's expansive clay subgrade movement. Specify 6 inches of compacted CA-6 as the base course under any Illinois residential concrete project for best long-term performance.
Illinois Building Code, contractor licensing, permitting, and freeze-thaw concrete standards for projects statewide.
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Illinois IDFPR — Contractor Licensing
Contractor Licensing
Verify licensed Illinois contractors, check active license and registration status, bonding, and insurance requirements before hiring any crew for foundation, structural, or residential concrete work. The IDFPR maintains an online license lookup tool covering all registered Illinois construction contractors.
Apply for Chicago building permits, access the Chicago Building Code and Illinois-adopted IBC requirements, and schedule inspections for driveways, foundations, structural slabs, and concrete flatwork across Chicago and Cook County — Illinois's largest and most active construction permitting jurisdiction.
The American Concrete Institute's ACI 318 governs freeze-thaw exposure categories F1 and F2 — the controlling industry standard for Illinois mix design, air entrainment percentages, W/C ratio requirements, and deicing salt resistance applicable to all exterior concrete from Waukegan to Cairo.