Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and Baltimore-accurate ready-mix costs for driveways, slabs, foundations, patios & footings — Baltimore City, Baltimore County, Maryland.
Enter your project dimensions to get volume, bags needed, and estimated Baltimore MD material cost.
Residential driveway: 5 in. min, 4,000 PSI, 5–6% air entrainment required. Rebar recommended over Baltimore Piedmont/clay soils. 30 in. frost depth per Baltimore City Code. ACI 306 Nov–Mar. Baltimore City DHCD permit + MHIC license required.
Sidewalk 4 in · Driveway 5 in · Garage 4–5 in · Foundation wall 10 in+ · Footing 12 in+ at 30 in below grade
Baltimore sits directly on the Fall Line — the geological boundary between the ancient Piedmont metamorphic rock upland to the north and west and the younger Coastal Plain sedimentary deposits to the south and east. This means soil and bedrock conditions vary dramatically across the metro area: northern and western Baltimore City and Baltimore County sit on Piedmont schist, gneiss, and saprolite — residual soils from weathered metamorphic rock that are generally stable but can contain pockets of deep saprolite requiring caution. Southern Baltimore City and Anne Arundel County sit on Coastal Plain sands, silts, and clays that require more careful base preparation. Baltimore's urban core also contains significant urban fill from decades of demolition and redevelopment — always verify subgrade conditions with a soil probe before any Baltimore City foundation project.
Frost Depth: 30 inches (762 mm) — officially codified in Baltimore City Building Code Section 301 · Winter Design Temperature: 13°F · Weathering Severity: Severe · All exterior flatwork: 4,000 PSI min, 5 in. min, 5–6% air entrainment, W/C 0.45 max, rebar recommended · Foundation walls: 4,500 PSI, 10 in. min, rebar per MD structural spec · Nov–Mar: ACI 306 cold-weather mandatory · All work: Baltimore City DHCD or Baltimore County DPWT permit required. Maryland MHIC license required for all home improvement work. New construction requires MD Home Builder Registration.
Baltimore's 30-inch frost depth is officially written into Baltimore City Building Code Section 301 — one of the few US cities with frost depth explicitly codified at the municipal level rather than by reference to state or IRC tables. All structural footings, foundation walls, and piers in Baltimore City must have their bearing surface below 30 inches from finished grade. Baltimore County adopts the Maryland Building Code which also requires 30-inch frost protection for the Baltimore metro area. Always confirm current depth requirements with the relevant building department before excavation — call Baltimore City DHCD at (410) 396-3360 for city projects and Baltimore County DPWT at (410) 887-3351 for county projects.
Baltimore is one of the US cities most defined by its historic rowhouse stock — tens of thousands of attached brick rowhouses dating from the 1870s through 1940s. Rowhouse concrete work presents unique challenges: extremely restricted truck access on narrow city blocks requires pump trucks or wheelbarrow relay for most Baltimore City projects; urban fill and demolition debris beneath many city lots require careful subgrade assessment before pouring; and shared party walls with neighboring rowhouses mean foundation work and stoop replacement must be carefully designed to avoid differential settlement impacts on adjacent structures. Always assess access routes before ordering concrete — many Baltimore City alleys are too narrow for standard mixer trucks.
All Maryland contractors performing home improvement work valued over $500 must hold a current Maryland Home Improvement Commission (MHIC) license from the Maryland DLLR. This applies to all concrete flatwork, driveway replacement, patio construction, retaining walls, and foundation repair on existing Baltimore residential properties. MHIC licenses are separate from new construction — new home builders must register with the Maryland Home Builder Registration Unit under the Office of the Attorney General. Verify any Baltimore concrete contractor's MHIC license at dllr.state.md.us before signing any contract. Unlicensed home improvement work in Maryland is a misdemeanor — and homeowners lose all state consumer protection rights when hiring unlicensed contractors.
Baltimore is well-served by regional ready-mix plants including Schuster Concrete (8 Maryland plants), Cemex, and several independent Maryland suppliers serving Baltimore City, Baltimore County, Anne Arundel County, and Harford County. All exterior mixes require air entrainment adding $5–$9/yd above base pricing. Short-load fees of $110–$175 apply for orders under 3 cubic yards. Pump truck hire runs $425–$750 — essential for most Baltimore City rowhouse and urban backyard pours. Winter ACI 306 heated-mix surcharge adds $12–$22/yd November through March. Fiber reinforcement is available for $7–$12/yd. Saturday surcharge is typically $8–$15/yd with most Baltimore area suppliers.
| PSI Grade | Baltimore Price / Cu Yd | Air Entrained | Best For | MD Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,500 PSI | $148–$168 | Interior Only | Heated interior slabs, light duty — not exterior | Interior Only |
| 4,000 PSI | $158–$180 | Required 5–6% | All exterior flatwork — Baltimore MD minimum | MD Minimum |
| 4,500 PSI | $172–$196 | Required 5–6% | Foundations, footings, retaining walls, stoops | Compliant |
| 5,000 PSI | $186–$212 | Required 5–6% | Heavy commercial, port industrial, structural | Compliant |
Baltimore's Mid-Atlantic winters bring sustained cold from mid-November through mid-March, with a Winter Design Temperature of 13°F per the Baltimore City adopted code. Never pour onto frozen subgrade — Baltimore's urban fill soils, Piedmont saprolite, and Coastal Plain clays all freeze unevenly and can thaw at different rates, causing differential settlement under fresh concrete. Use heated mix water maintaining 55–65°F at delivery. Enclose fresh concrete with insulated curing blankets maintaining above 50°F for minimum 7 days. Baltimore's wet Mid-Atlantic winters add a rain and snow contingency requirement — always have waterproof sheeting staged before any November through March pour. Monitor hourly forecasts from NWS Baltimore-Washington (weather.gov/lwx) on all winter pour days.
Baltimore City DHCD permits, Maryland MHIC contractor licensing, and ACI 306 cold-weather standards for compliant Baltimore City and Baltimore County concrete work.
The Baltimore City Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) manages all building permits and inspections within Baltimore City limits. Permits are required for driveways, foundations, retaining walls, structural slabs, sidewalks, and rowhouse stoops. Apply online via the Baltimore City online permit portal or call (410) 396-3360. All permit applications must include the contractor's current Maryland MHIC license number per state MHIC regulations. Foundation and structural concrete projects require a Maryland licensed PE stamped plan for plan review. For projects in unincorporated Baltimore County, contact Baltimore County DPWT at (410) 887-3351. Always confirm your exact jurisdiction — Baltimore City and Baltimore County are completely separate governmental entities with separate permit offices and inspection processes.
Visit Baltimore City DHCDThe Maryland Home Improvement Commission (MHIC), administered by Maryland DLLR, requires all contractors performing home improvement work over $500 in Maryland to hold a current MHIC license. This covers all concrete driveways, patios, walkways, stoops, retaining walls, and foundation repair on existing Baltimore residential properties. Verify any Baltimore concrete contractor's MHIC license number, active status, expiration date, and complaint or enforcement history at dllr.state.md.us before signing any home improvement contract. The MHIC guaranty fund provides consumer protection — but only for work performed by licensed contractors. Always confirm current general liability ($1M minimum) and workers compensation insurance in writing before any project begins. New construction contractors must use the Home Builder Registration Unit instead of MHIC.
Visit Maryland MHICACI 306 is the essential reference for every Baltimore MD concrete contractor working November through March. It specifies heated enclosure requirements, mix water temperature targets of 55–65°F at delivery, insulated curing blanket R-value schedules, embedded temperature sensor monitoring, minimum protection duration by section thickness, and removal of cold-weather protection procedures. Baltimore's 13°F winter design temperature, 30-inch frost depth, Severe weathering zone designation, frequent wet Mid-Atlantic winter precipitation, and urban fill soil variability combine to create demanding cold-weather concrete conditions from mid-November through mid-March. ACI 306 non-compliance is the leading cause of frozen pours, early-age strength loss, and rejected structural inspections on Baltimore winter concrete projects.
Visit ACI