Maine Concrete Calculator | Cubic Yards, Bags and ME Cost | Free Tool
❄ ME DEPT OF PUBLIC SAFETY · MAINE BUILDING CODE · PINE TREE STATE✓ 100% Free
MaineConcrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & Cost
Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and ME-accurate ready-mix costs for any Maine project — driveways, camp foundations, coastal saltwater slabs, Aroostook County footings, garage floors, sidewalks & more.
$168
Avg ME Ready-Mix (per Cu Yd)
4,000
Min PSI — All ME Exterior Flatwork
5–7%
Air Entrainment — Required Statewide
72 in.
Max Frost Depth — Aroostook County
🚗 Driveway🏖 Camp / Lake Foundation🛣 Patio / Garage Slab🌏 Coastal / Saltwater Slab🪨 Footings🏔 Ledge Rock Site
The Maine Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders estimate cubic yards, bag count, and ready-mix costs across the Pine Tree State. ME pricing typically runs $155–$225/yd — above the national average due to cold-climate mix requirements, low population density, and long delivery distances to remote sites. Maine has some of the deepest frost depths in the continental United States — 48 inches in southern ME rising to 72 inches in Aroostook County — making deep footings and proper 4,000 PSI air-entrained concrete absolutely essential statewide. Maine also features a unique camp and lake home foundation market, significant coastal saltwater exposure zones, and widespread ledge rock subgrade that requires drilling and blasting on many sites. Enter your dimensions below, or explore more tools at Concrete Toolkit.
Maine Concrete Calculator
❄ ME-Accurate Pricing · Maine Building Code · Pine Tree State
Enter your project dimensions to calculate volume, bags needed, and estimated ME material cost.
Residential driveway: 5 in. min, 4,000 PSI, 5-7% air entrainment required statewide. Maine building permit required in most municipalities. Frost depth 48-72 in. statewide.
Sidewalk 5 in · Driveway 5-6 in · Garage 5 in · Foundation 10 in · Footing 12 in+
Cubic Yards Required
—
Including waste factor
📋 Project Summary
💵 ME Cost Estimate
📐 Maine Driveway Cross-Section — ME Cold-Climate Standard Layers
Broom / Brushed Finish — ME Standard
Concrete — 5 in. Min (ME Driveway) 4,000 PSI Min · 5-7% Air Entrainment Required · W/C Ratio 0.45 Max
⬛ No. 4 Rebar 18 in. O.C. or 6x6 W2.9 Wire Mesh — Required ME Climate
🪨 6 in. Compacted Crushed Gravel Base (ME DOT Spec)
Compacted Subgrade / ME Native Soil or Ledge Rock — Frost Depth 48-72 in.
Maine's concrete environment is defined by three dominant factors: extreme frost depth, remote rural delivery, and coastal saltwater exposure. Aroostook County in northern Maine has frost depths up to 72 inches — the deepest in the continental United States outside Alaska — requiring the longest footings of any state. Southern Maine (Portland, Biddeford) starts at 48 inches, still significantly deeper than most of the country. 4,000 PSI with 5–7% air entrainment is the absolute minimum for all Maine exterior concrete — Maine's 40–70 annual freeze-thaw cycles combined with road salt will destroy improperly specified concrete within 2–4 years. Maine Building Code is based on the IBC with state amendments, administered through the Maine Department of Public Safety, Building Codes and Standards Division. Contractor licensing is managed by the Maine Department of Professional and Financial Regulation at maine.gov/pfr.
🔵 Maine Minimum Concrete Specifications — Statewide
All exterior ME flatwork (driveways, patios, sidewalks): 4,000 PSI min, 5-7% air entrainment, 5 in. min thickness, W/C 0.45 max · Southern ME Foundations (Portland, Biddeford, Sanford): 4,000 PSI, 48-54 in. frost depth · Central and Western ME (Augusta, Lewiston, Rangeley): 4,000-4,500 PSI, 54-64 in. frost depth · Aroostook County / Northern ME: 4,500 PSI strongly recommended, 60-72 in. frost depth — deepest in continental US · Coastal ME (Portland, Rockland, Bar Harbor): 4,000-4,500 PSI, Type II or Type V cement for saltwater splash zones · Camp / lake foundations: full perimeter footings to local frost depth required regardless of seasonal use.
🏖 ME Camp and Lake Home Foundations
Maine's tradition of lake camps — the local term for cottages or cabins — represents a huge share of ME concrete work. Maine has over 6,000 lakes and ponds with lakefront camp properties across the state. All camps, even seasonal, require full perimeter footings to local frost depth under Maine Building Code. Remote camp sites often require concrete pump trucks and add $25–$55/yd in delivery surcharges. Aroostook County camp footings at 72 inches deep require significantly more concrete than any other state.
🏔 Maine Ledge Rock Subgrade
Maine sits atop some of the oldest granite bedrock in North America. Ledge rock at or near the surface is extremely common across coastal Maine, western mountain areas, and much of the interior. Before any footing or slab pour, confirm subgrade conditions — ledge within 12 inches of planned grade may require drilling and blasting at $8–$25 per square foot before concrete work can begin. On ledge sites, footings may bear directly on cleaned rock surface rather than reaching frost depth, but require a licensed engineer sign-off in Maine.
🌏 ME Coastal Saltwater Exposure
Maine's 3,478 miles of coastline — the longest tidal shoreline of any state in the continental US — creates extensive saltwater exposure zones for concrete. Coastal spray, tidal splash, and marine air accelerate chloride-induced rebar corrosion and concrete deterioration. All concrete within 500 feet of tidal water should use 4,000-4,500 PSI minimum, supplementary cementing materials (fly ash or slag), epoxy-coated or stainless steel rebar, and 2 inch minimum cover. Type II low-alkali cement is recommended for marine splash zones.
How to Calculate Concrete Volume in Maine
Measure your project length and width in feet and depth in inches. Multiply length x width x (depth / 12) for cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. Maine's 5 inch minimum driveway thickness (vs 4 inches in southern states) means ME volume runs about 25% higher per square foot than warm-climate equivalents. For camp foundations on irregular wooded lots, divide the perimeter into rectangles and sum volumes. Always add 10% minimum waste — use 15% for ledge rock sites where subgrade depth varies, and 20% for remote Aroostook or coastal marsh locations where delivery and access challenges increase waste risk.
📐 Maine Concrete Formula
Volume (cu ft) = Length (ft) x Width (ft) x [Depth (in) / 12]
Volume (cu yd) = Volume (cu ft) / 27
Order Qty = CEIL[ Volume (cu yd) x Waste Factor ]
Example: 20 ft x 20 ft ME driveway x 5 in = 166.7 cu ft = 6.17 cu yd -- Order 6.8 cu yd
⚠ Maine Cold-Weather Concrete — ACI 306 Required Oct–May
Maine has one of the longest cold-weather concrete seasons in the continental United States — ACI 306 procedures are required from mid-October through mid-May statewide, and effectively year-round in Aroostook County where frost can persist into June. Required measures: heat mix water and aggregates, target concrete delivery temperature of 55–65F, enclose pours with insulated blankets, maintain concrete above 50F for minimum 7 days, and never pour on frozen subgrade under any circumstances. In northern Maine, ground frost can remain below the surface well into late spring even after air temperatures warm. Always use a soil temperature probe before any pour May through October in Aroostook, Piscataquis, Somerset, and Franklin counties.
Maine Concrete Pricing — Current Reference
Maine's ready-mix market is above the national average driven by cold-climate mix premiums, low population density, and long delivery distances. Portland and the southern ME coast have the most competitive pricing. Augusta, Bangor, and Lewiston-Auburn are moderately priced. The further north and inland you go — Aroostook County, Piscataquis, northern Somerset — the higher the per-yard price climbs due to fewer plant locations and longer haul distances. Remote camp sites across Maine regularly see $30–$60/yd delivery surcharges beyond standard plant pricing.
Mix Type / PSI
ME Price / Cu Yd
National Avg
Best For
Air Entrained?
ME Code
3,500 PSI — Interior Only
$148–$168
$153–$166
Interior basement slabs ONLY — never ME exterior
Not for Exterior
Interior Only
4,000 PSI — ME Standard Exterior
$162–$188
$161–$173
All ME exterior driveways, patios, sidewalks
Required 5-7%
ME Minimum
4,500 PSI — Foundations / Aroostook
$175–$205
$171–$181
Foundations, northern ME, coastal splash zones
Required 5-7%
Compliant
5,000 PSI — Structural / Commercial
$188–$218
$178–$193
Commercial slabs, heavy equipment pads
Recommended
Compliant
5,500 PSI — High Strength / Marine
$205–$240
$190–$210
Marine structures, bridge decks, industrial
Recommended
Compliant
Fiber-Reinforced / Stamped
$195–$255
$165–$210
Decorative driveways, camp patios, walkways
Required 5-7%
Compliant
3,500 PSI — Interior Only
ME Price / Cu Yd$148–$168
ME CodeInterior Only
4,000 PSI — ME Standard Exterior
ME Price / Cu Yd$162–$188
ME CodeME Minimum
4,500 PSI — Foundations / Aroostook
ME Price / Cu Yd$175–$205
ME CodeCompliant
5,000 PSI — Structural
ME Price / Cu Yd$188–$218
ME CodeCompliant
5,500 PSI — High Strength / Marine
ME Price / Cu Yd$205–$240
ME CodeCompliant
Maine Concrete Cost by Region
Maine pricing divides across six key regions. Portland and southern coastal ME offer the most competitive ready-mix pricing. Augusta, Bangor, and Lewiston-Auburn are moderately priced. The further north and inland the project, the higher the cost — Aroostook County is the most expensive region in Maine, regularly running $40–$60/yd above Portland metro pricing for the same mix specification.
ME Region
Key Cities
4,000 PSI / Cu Yd
Frost Depth
Air Entrainment
Permit
Southern ME / Greater Portland
Portland, Biddeford, Sanford, Saco
$162–$182
48–54 in.
Required
Yes
Lewiston-Auburn / Central ME
Lewiston, Auburn, Brunswick, Bath
$165–$188
52–58 in.
Required
Yes
Augusta / Mid-Maine
Augusta, Waterville, Skowhegan, Farmington
$167–$192
56–64 in.
Required
Yes
Bangor / Eastern ME
Bangor, Brewer, Ellsworth, Machias
$168–$198
56–64 in.
Required
Yes
Western ME / Mountains
Rangeley, Bethel, Rumford, Kingfield
$172–$208
60–68 in.
Required
Varies
Aroostook County / Northern ME
Presque Isle, Caribou, Houlton, Fort Kent
$182–$225
64–72 in.
Required
Varies
Southern ME / Greater Portland
4,000 PSI Price$162–$182/yd
Frost Depth48–54 in.
Lewiston-Auburn / Central ME
4,000 PSI Price$165–$188/yd
Frost Depth52–58 in.
Augusta / Mid-Maine
4,000 PSI Price$167–$192/yd
Frost Depth56–64 in.
Bangor / Eastern ME
4,000 PSI Price$168–$198/yd
Frost Depth56–64 in.
Western ME / Mountains
4,000 PSI Price$172–$208/yd
Frost Depth60–68 in.
Aroostook County / Northern ME
4,000 PSI Price$182–$225/yd
Frost Depth64–72 in.
✓ Verify Your ME Contractor Before You Pour
Maine requires residential contractors to be registered with the Maine Department of Professional and Financial Regulation (PFR). Verify contractor registration, license status, and insurance at maine.gov/pfr. Always confirm your contractor has a documented ACI 306 cold-weather concrete plan for any October through May pour in Maine — and a ledge assessment for any site in coastal or western mountain areas.
Maine Concrete Project Tips
4,000 PSI with 5-7% air entrainment is non-negotiable for all ME exterior concrete — Maine roads are heavily salted from November through April. Any exterior concrete without proper air entrainment will begin to spall and delaminate within 2-4 years. Never accept 3,000 or 3,500 PSI non-air-entrained concrete for any Maine driveway, patio, sidewalk, or garage floor.
Know your frost depth before designing any ME footing — Maine frost depths range from 48 inches in Portland to 72 inches in Fort Kent. Always confirm the required footing depth with your local town or city building department before any design. Aroostook County footings require the deepest concrete work in the continental US and budget significantly more material per linear foot of footing than any other state.
Assess for ledge rock before any site work begins — Maine's granite bedrock is close to the surface across coastal areas, western mountains, and much of the interior. Commission a test pit or probe survey before budgeting any concrete job. Ledge removal adds $8–$25/sq ft to site preparation costs. On confirmed ledge sites, get a licensed engineer to certify that bearing on rock surface meets structural requirements before pouring footings.
All ME camp and lake home foundations must reach full frost depth — Maine Building Code requires full perimeter footings to frost depth for all structures regardless of seasonal use. There are no seasonal-use exemptions. A Rangeley or Moosehead Lake camp requires footings to 60+ inches just as a year-round home does. Budget accordingly and confirm with your local town office before designing camp foundations.
Coastal ME concrete requires enhanced specifications — within 500 feet of tidal water, use 4,000-4,500 PSI minimum with supplementary cementing materials (30% fly ash or 40% slag replacement), epoxy-coated or stainless steel rebar, minimum 2 inch cover, and a silane or siloxane sealer applied after 28-day cure. Maine's rocky coast with tidal spray creates one of the most aggressive concrete exposure environments in the northeastern US.
Never pour ME concrete on frozen subgrade — frozen ground under a freshly poured slab will thaw and settle in spring, causing catastrophic cracking. In Aroostook and northern ME, ground frost can persist below the surface into late June. Use a soil temperature probe and confirm ground temperature above 32F at full footing depth before any pour. This is especially critical for camp foundations poured in late spring after a long northern Maine winter.
Use crushed gravel base per Maine DOT specification — Maine DOT specifies crushed gravel (not sand) as the base material for all flatwork. Use 6 inches minimum, compacted to 95% Modified Proctor density. This freely draining base prevents frost heave beneath Maine's heavily frozen winter soils. On soft or organic subgrades (common near lakeshores), increase base depth to 8-12 inches or use geotextile fabric before base placement.
Install contraction joints at 8-10 ft spacing in both directions — Maine's temperature range from -30F in Aroostook to 90F summer creates extreme thermal cycling. Saw-cut or tooled joints at 8-10 ft spacing in both directions are essential to control shrinkage cracking. Saw-cut within 6-12 hours of pour completion to prevent random cracking before joints are established. Seal all joints with a flexible polyurethane or silicone sealant to prevent water and salt infiltration.
Frequently Asked Questions — Maine Concrete Calculator
How much does concrete cost per yard in Maine?+
$162–$188 per cubic yard for 4,000 PSI air-entrained ready-mix in the Portland and Lewiston-Auburn areas. Augusta and Bangor run $167–$198/yd. Western ME and Aroostook County command $172–$225/yd with additional remote delivery surcharges of $25–$60/yd for isolated camp or rural sites. Short-load fees of $100–$200 typically apply for orders under 3–5 cubic yards statewide.
What PSI concrete is required for Maine driveways?+
4,000 PSI with 5–7% air entrainment is the minimum for all Maine exterior driveways statewide. Maine's heavy road salt use, 40–70 annual freeze-thaw cycles, and temperatures that can drop to -30F in northern counties will rapidly destroy any lower-strength or non-air-entrained concrete. Minimum thickness is 5 inches. Any contractor proposing 3,000 or 3,500 PSI non-air-entrained concrete for a ME driveway should be declined immediately.
How deep are concrete footings in Maine?+
Maine has the deepest frost-depth footings in the continental United States. Southern ME (Portland area) requires 48–54 inches. Central and western ME (Augusta, Rangeley) require 56–64 inches. Aroostook County (Presque Isle, Caribou, Fort Kent) requires 64–72 inches — deepest in the lower 48 states. Always confirm your exact required footing depth with your local town or city building department before any design or excavation.
What happens if there is ledge rock at my Maine site?+
Ledge rock is extremely common in Maine — particularly in coastal areas, western mountains, and much of the interior. If ledge is encountered within your required footing depth, you have two options: drill and blast the ledge to reach required depth (cost: $8–$25/sq ft), or obtain a licensed structural engineer's certification that bearing directly on cleaned bedrock surface provides adequate structural support. Most Maine building officials will accept engineer-certified ledge bearing as an alternative to full frost-depth excavation.
Do Maine camp foundations require footings to frost depth?+
Yes — Maine Building Code requires full frost-depth footings for all structures, including seasonal camps. There are no seasonal-use exemptions in Maine. A camp in Rangeley (frost depth 62 in.) requires the same depth footings as a year-round home. Frost-protected shallow foundations (FPSF) with perimeter insulation are permitted in some Maine jurisdictions — verify with your local town or city code office before proceeding with any alternative foundation system.
Can I pour concrete in Maine winter?+
Yes, but only with full ACI 306 cold-weather procedures — heated mix water and aggregates, delivery temperature 55–65F, insulated blanket enclosures, temperature monitoring for 7+ days minimum, and never on frozen subgrade. Winter pours in Maine add $5–$12/yd in heating costs. Most Maine residential contractors avoid November through April pours due to cost, risk, and the difficulty of heating enclosures in extreme northern Maine cold. Aroostook County contractors routinely quote cold-weather surcharges of $10–$18/yd for winter work.
Do I need a permit for concrete work in Maine?+
Yes in most Maine cities and towns. Portland, Bangor, Augusta, Lewiston, Biddeford, and most municipalities require building permits for driveways, foundations, retaining walls, and structural concrete. Many smaller Maine towns also require permits for camp foundations and accessory structure slabs. Always confirm permit requirements with your local town office or city building department before breaking ground. Shoreland zoning rules also apply to concrete work within 250 feet of lakes and rivers in Maine.
Maine PFR, ME DOT, and ACI references for compliant concrete work across the Pine Tree State.
🏛
Maine PFR — Contractor Licensing
Licensing and Registration
Verify Maine residential contractor registration, check license status, and confirm Workers Compensation and general liability insurance for any concrete contractor on your property. The Maine Department of Professional and Financial Regulation administers contractor licensing statewide. Always confirm your contractor holds the correct Maine registration for concrete and foundation work before any pour.
Maine DOT standard specifications include crushed gravel base requirements, concrete mix design standards for Maine's extreme cold climate, and pavement design guides used as baselines for private ME concrete work. ME DOT also processes driveway access permits for properties on state routes and US highways across Maine's extensive rural road network.
ACI 306 is the essential standard for every Maine concrete contractor — covering heated mix water, insulated enclosures, temperature monitoring, and protected curing for cold-weather pours. With Maine's 7-month cold-weather season and Aroostook County's extreme temperatures reaching -30F, ACI 306 compliance is non-negotiable for any Maine concrete professional working outside the June through September peak window.