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🌵 EL PASO TX · CHIHUAHUAN DESERT · ACI 305 · TEXAS IBC ✓ 100% Free

El Paso Concrete Calculator — Yards, Bags & Cost

Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and El Paso-accurate ready-mix costs for any concrete project — driveways, foundations, caliche-site footings, desert hot-weather slabs, West Texas patios & more.

$135
Avg El Paso Ready-Mix (per Cu Yd)
3,000
Min PSI — El Paso Exposed Flatwork
9 in
Frost Depth — El Paso / West Texas
TDLR
TX Dept. of Licensing & Regulation
🚗 Driveway 🏗️ Foundation / Slab 🪨 Caliche-Site Footing ☀️ Desert Hot-Weather Pour 🌵 West Texas Patio 🏠 Garage / Carport Floor
The El Paso Concrete Calculator helps homeowners, contractors, and builders in El Paso, Texas estimate cubic yards, bag count, and West Texas ready-mix costs for any concrete project. El Paso sits in the northern edge of the Chihuahuan Desert at 3,800 feet elevation — one of the most distinctive concrete environments in Texas. Ready-mix pricing in El Paso typically runs $121–$150 per cubic yard for standard 3,000–3,500 PSI, competitive with other Texas markets due to local cement production in the area. El Paso's most critical concrete challenges are its unique desert soil profile — large portions of the city sit atop caliche (a naturally-occurring calcium carbonate hardpan that behaves like rock), mixed with expansive desert clay in lower-lying neighborhoods — and its extreme hot-weather summer conditions, with ambient temperatures regularly exceeding 105°F from June through September. El Paso's high desert elevation also means rapid nighttime temperature drops even in summer, and occasional winter freeze events that can damage fresh concrete. Frost depth in El Paso is approximately 9 inches — minimal compared to northern states, but still the governing factor for footing design under the Texas IBC. Building permits in El Paso are issued by the El Paso Development Services Department — all structural concrete work requires a permit, and contractor licensing is managed statewide by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR).

🌵 El Paso Concrete Calculator

🌵 El Paso TX · Chihuahuan Desert · ACI 305 · Texas IBC Compliant
El Paso Concrete Calculator
Cubic yards, bags needed & El Paso ready-mix cost — instant results
🚗 Driveway 🏗️ Foundation 🪨 Caliche Site ☀️ Hot-Weather Slab 🌵 W. Texas Patio

Enter project dimensions to calculate volume, bags, and estimated El Paso material cost.

Residential driveway: 4 in. min, 3,000–3,500 PSI. No significant freeze-thaw concern in El Paso. Caliche subgrade is excellent base. Pour before 8 AM in summer. El Paso Development Services permit required for approach.

Patio/walkway 3.5–4 in · Driveway 4–5 in · Garage/carport 4 in · Footing 8–12 in · Foundation stem wall 8 in · Retaining wall 8–10 in

Cubic Yards Required
Including waste factor

📋 Project Summary

    💵 El Paso Cost Estimate

      📐 El Paso Driveway / Slab Cross-Section — West Texas Desert Standard Layers

      Broom Finish — El Paso Standard (ACI 305 Hot-Weather · No Freeze-Thaw Concern · Texas IBC)
      Concrete — 4–5 in. (El Paso Building Code / Texas IBC)
      3,000–3,500 PSI · Rebar on Expansive Clay Sites · W/C ≤ 0.50 · Low-Water Mix for Desert Heat
      ⬛ Rebar #3–#4 / Wire Mesh — Recommended on Expansive Desert Clay Sites
      🪨 Caliche Hardpan Layer — Excellent Natural Base Where Present (Confirm Depth)
      4 in. Compacted Crushed Base / Sand (Where Caliche Not at Grade)
      🌵 Desert Subgrade — Frost Depth: ~9 in. El Paso · Expansive Clay in Lower Neighborhoods
      27
      Cu ft per cubic yard
      45
      80 lb bags per cu yd
      $135
      Avg El Paso ready-mix / yd
      Concrete Slab Rebar Layer Caliche Hardpan Crushed Base Desert Subgrade

      El Paso Concrete Calculator — What You Need to Know

      El Paso's concrete environment is shaped by two dominant forces: its Chihuahuan Desert climate and its unique soil geology. The city's hot, arid summers — with June through September temperatures regularly reaching 100–110°F and low relative humidity — create some of the most challenging hot-weather concreting conditions in Texas. At El Paso's high desert elevation of approximately 3,800 feet, intense solar radiation, low humidity, and persistent afternoon winds combine to accelerate concrete surface evaporation dramatically, making ACI 305 hot-weather concreting practices essential for any summer pour. El Paso's soil profile is equally distinctive — much of the city, particularly the northeast and east side mesa areas, sits atop caliche (calcium carbonate hardpan), a naturally cemented rock-like layer that forms an excellent, highly stable concrete base. However, lower-lying areas — especially near the Rio Grande flood plain and older west-side neighborhoods — contain expansive desert clay that can shift significantly between wet winters and dry summers. The El Paso area also benefits from proximity to a regional cement manufacturing industry, keeping ready-mix prices competitive at $121–$150 per cubic yard — among the most affordable in Texas for a large city. Building permits are required from the El Paso Development Services Department for all structural concrete work, and contractor licensing is administered by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR).

      🔵 El Paso Building Code — Concrete Design Criteria (Texas IBC)

      Governing code: Texas IBC (2021 IBC as adopted by Texas) · Frost depth: approximately 9 inches (El Paso / West Texas) · Min PSI exposed flatwork: 3,000 PSI (El Paso standard) · Structural / foundations: 3,500–4,000 PSI · Air entrainment: Not required in El Paso's mild freeze-thaw climate · Rebar: Required on all structural foundations and recommended on flatwork over expansive clay soils · Hot weather: ACI 305 practices required June–September — pour before 8 AM, use chilled water, apply evaporation retarder · Permits: El Paso Development Services Department at City Hall. Always confirm requirements before starting any structural concrete project.

      🚗 El Paso Driveway Cost Estimate

      A standard 10×40 ft driveway at 4 inches needs ~4.9 cubic yards (at 5 in: ~6.2 yd). At El Paso pricing of $121–$146/yd, a 5-inch driveway material cost runs $750–$905 — among the most affordable in Texas. Where caliche is at or near grade, El Paso driveways may not need a separate gravel base — the caliche itself is often an excellent compacted substrate. Have your contractor verify caliche depth before ordering base material.

      🪨 Caliche — El Paso's Natural Concrete Base

      Caliche is a calcium carbonate hardpan layer that forms naturally in El Paso's arid desert environment — essentially a natural concrete up to 1–3 feet thick beneath the topsoil in many parts of the city, particularly on the east and northeast mesas. Where present, caliche provides an outstanding, non-expansive, load-bearing base for concrete flatwork and foundations. The challenge: caliche is extremely hard and difficult to excavate — jackhammering or mechanical rock breaking is often required for deep footings in caliche-heavy areas, adding $200–$800+ to excavation costs.

      ☀️ ACI 305 Desert Hot-Weather Concreting

      El Paso's June–September conditions — 100°F+ air temperatures, 10–20% relative humidity, and persistent afternoon west winds — can cause the top surface of freshly placed concrete to lose moisture faster than bleed water replenishes it, producing plastic shrinkage cracks within 20–40 minutes of placement. The solution: pour before 8 AM, specify chilled mix water or ice, pre-wet subgrade and forms, apply evaporation retarder (Confilm) immediately after screeding, and cure with white-pigmented curing compound within 15 minutes of final finishing. Never allow the surface to dry out before the curing compound is applied.

      How to Calculate Concrete Volume for El Paso Projects

      Measure your project length and width in feet, depth in inches. Convert depth to feet (divide by 12), multiply all three dimensions for cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. Add at least 10% for waste — for caliche-site projects where subgrade irregularity can increase volume, add 15%. For wider Texas pricing comparisons, see the San Antonio Concrete Calculator or the Texas Concrete Calculator.

      📐 El Paso Concrete Volume Formula

      Volume (cu ft) = Length (ft) × Width (ft) × [Depth (in) ÷ 12]
      Volume (cu yd) = Volume (cu ft) ÷ 27
      Order Qty = CEIL[ Volume (cu yd) × Waste Factor ]
      Example: 20 ft × 10 ft patio × 4 in = 66.7 cu ft = 2.47 cu yd → Order 2.8 cu yd (+10%)

      ⚠️ El Paso Summer Pours — ACI 305 Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Alert

      El Paso's summer combination of high temperature, low humidity, and wind creates evaporation rates that regularly exceed the ACI 305 threshold of 0.20 lb/ft²/hr — the point at which plastic shrinkage cracking becomes probable in freshly placed concrete. A 105°F afternoon with 15% humidity and a 10 mph wind can strip moisture from a concrete surface at 0.40–0.60 lb/ft²/hr — two to three times the critical threshold. The result: hairline to medium cracks that form before the concrete has developed any meaningful strength. Never schedule an El Paso flatwork pour for afternoon in June–September without ACI 305 precautions. Use an evaporation calculator (ACI 305R Figure 2.1.5) to check your planned pour conditions the morning of the job. If evaporation exceeds 0.20 lb/ft²/hr, reschedule for dawn or install wind breaks around the pour area.

      El Paso Concrete Pricing Reference

      El Paso's ready-mix market benefits from regional cement manufacturing, keeping prices competitive with — and sometimes below — other major Texas cities. The city is served by multiple batch plants. Short-load fees of $75–$175 apply for orders under 5 yards at most El Paso plants. The CEMEX Southwestern Portland Cement facility historically served West Texas and New Mexico markets, contributing to competitive El Paso pricing versus more isolated Texas markets like Amarillo or Midland-Odessa. Saturday delivery typically adds $6–$10/yd at most El Paso plants.

      Mix Type / PSI El Paso Price / Cu Yd Texas Avg Best For Rebar Needed? EP Code
      3,000 PSI — EP Standard$121–$142$119–$147Driveways, patios, walkways, carport floorsRecommendedCompliant
      3,500 PSI — Structural$126–$148$124–$152Foundations, garage floors, structural slabsRequiredCompliant
      4,000 PSI — Heavy Structural$133–$158$129–$158Expansive clay foundations, commercial structuralRequiredCompliant
      4,500 PSI — Industrial$142–$170$138–$168Industrial, heavy commercial, tilt-wallRequiredCompliant
      5,000 PSI — Commercial / PT$152–$185$147–$180Post-tensioned slabs, specialty commercialRequiredCompliant
      Colored / Stamped / Fiber$160–$210$150–$200Decorative patios, stamped drivewaysRecommendedCompliant

      3,000 PSI — EP Standard

      El Paso Price / Cu Yd$121–$142
      Texas Avg$119–$147
      Best ForDriveways, patios, walkways, carport floors

      3,500 PSI — Structural

      El Paso Price / Cu Yd$126–$148
      Texas Avg$124–$152
      Best ForFoundations, garage floors, structural slabs

      4,000 PSI — Heavy Structural

      El Paso Price / Cu Yd$133–$158
      Texas Avg$129–$158
      Best ForExpansive clay foundations, commercial structural

      4,500 PSI — Industrial

      El Paso Price / Cu Yd$142–$170
      Texas Avg$138–$168
      Best ForIndustrial, heavy commercial, tilt-wall

      5,000 PSI — Commercial / PT

      El Paso Price / Cu Yd$152–$185
      Texas Avg$147–$180
      Best ForPost-tensioned slabs, specialty commercial

      ✅ El Paso Winter Concrete — Mild but Monitor Overnight Temps

      El Paso's winters are mild compared to most of Texas — average January highs reach 57°F — but overnight temperatures regularly drop to the mid-20s°F from December through February, and cold snaps can occur as late as March. Fresh concrete poured in the afternoon can be vulnerable to overnight freeze damage if daytime temperatures are in the 50s and nights drop below 28°F. Follow ACI 306 basic cold-weather precautions for any El Paso winter pour when the overnight forecast is below 35°F within 24 hours of placement: use warm mix water, cover the finished slab with insulating blankets immediately after final finishing, and maintain the slab above 50°F for at least 24 hours. El Paso's dry desert air also accelerates evaporation in winter winds — apply curing compound promptly year-round.

      El Paso Concrete Project Tips

      • Always pour before 8 AM in summer — El Paso's June–September conditions are severe enough to cause plastic shrinkage cracking on unprotected flatwork within 30–40 minutes of placement. Schedule all summer concrete pours to start at dawn or before 8 AM, when temperatures are still in the 70–80°F range and winds are typically calmer. Have all crew, tools, and curing materials ready before the truck arrives — there is no margin for delay in El Paso summer heat.
      • Confirm caliche depth before ordering base material — in many El Paso neighborhoods, particularly east-side mesa areas (Cielo Vista, Eastside, Northeast), caliche is present at 6–18 inches below grade and provides an excellent natural base for concrete flatwork. If caliche is confirmed at or near grade, you may not need a separate crushed stone base — ask your contractor to probe or excavate a test hole before ordering aggregate base materials. On the other hand, jackhammering caliche for deep footings adds significant excavation cost — budget $200–$800+ for mechanical caliche breaking.
      • Know your soil — caliche vs. expansive clay — El Paso's soil profile varies significantly by neighborhood. Higher-elevation east-side and mesa areas typically have caliche-dominated subsoil — an excellent concrete base. Lower-lying areas near the Rio Grande, the Lower Valley, and many west-side older neighborhoods contain expansive desert clay that swells with winter rains and contracts in summer drought. On expansive clay sites, specify rebar or wire mesh in all flatwork and over-excavate 4 inches, replacing with compacted crushed base, to prevent slab heaving and cracking.
      • Use low W/C ratio mixes for desert durability — El Paso's dry desert heat causes concrete to lose water rapidly during both placement and curing. Specify a water-to-cement (W/C) ratio of 0.45 or lower for all El Paso exterior concrete — a lower W/C ratio improves strength, reduces shrinkage cracking, and produces denser, more durable concrete that resists the desert's intense UV radiation and temperature cycling. Use a mid-range water reducer (HRWR/superplasticizer) to maintain workability without adding excess water.
      • Apply curing compound within 15 minutes of final finish — in El Paso's hot, dry, windy desert conditions, moisture evaporates from a finished concrete surface faster than almost anywhere in the country. A white-pigmented curing compound (ASTM C309 Type 2) reflects solar heat and seals the surface against moisture loss. Apply it within 15 minutes of final finishing on any El Paso summer pour — in severe conditions (100°F+, dry wind), this window may shrink to 10 minutes. Do not rely on wet burlap alone for curing in El Paso summer — the burlap dries out too quickly.
      • Get your El Paso Development Services permit before you pour — the El Paso Development Services Department requires permits for foundations, structural slabs, retaining walls, and most concrete projects tied to structures. The permit process in El Paso includes a mandatory footing inspection before any concrete is placed on structural projects — schedule this inspection well in advance, as summer construction season creates inspection backlogs. Any driveway approach connecting to a TxDOT-maintained state highway or FM road in El Paso requires a TxDOT driveway access permit.
      • Budget for elevated concrete pricing in 2026 — global cement tariffs implemented in 2025–2026 have added cost pressure to ready-mix pricing across the US, including El Paso. While El Paso benefits from regional cement manufacturing, expect pricing volatility and confirm current per-yard pricing directly with local El Paso batch plants before finalizing your project budget. Ordering full truckloads (8–10 yards) rather than short loads saves $8–$20/yd at most El Paso suppliers.

      Frequently Asked Questions — El Paso Concrete Calculator

      How much does concrete cost per yard in El Paso, Texas?+
      Expect $121–$150 per cubic yard for standard 3,000–3,500 PSI ready-mix in El Paso — competitive with other Texas cities and below the national average. El Paso benefits from proximity to regional cement manufacturing in West Texas and New Mexico, keeping ready-mix costs lower than more isolated markets. Short-load fees of $75–$175 apply for orders under 5 yards. Colored, stamped, or specialty fiber mixes run $160–$210/yd from most El Paso suppliers.
      What is caliche and how does it affect concrete in El Paso?+
      Caliche is a calcium carbonate hardpan layer — essentially a naturally formed cement-like rock — found beneath the soil across much of El Paso, especially on mesa and east-side areas. For concrete work, caliche is actually a major advantage: where present, it provides an exceptionally stable, non-expansive, load-bearing base that often eliminates the need for a separate crushed gravel base course. The downside: caliche is very hard, and excavating through it for deep footings requires jackhammering or mechanical equipment, adding $200–$800+ to excavation costs on caliche-dense sites.
      What PSI concrete do I need for an El Paso driveway?+
      Use 3,000 PSI minimum for a standard El Paso residential driveway — this meets the Texas IBC for exposed flatwork in El Paso's mild climate. Unlike northern states, air entrainment is not required in El Paso due to minimal freeze-thaw exposure. On expansive desert clay sites, upgrade to 3,500 PSI with #4 rebar or wire mesh for extra resistance against soil movement. In all cases, use a low W/C ratio (0.45–0.50) to maximize density and durability against El Paso's intense UV radiation and temperature swings.
      How deep do footings need to be in El Paso?+
      El Paso's frost depth is approximately 9 inches — the minimum footing depth under the Texas IBC. However, actual footing depth in El Paso is almost always governed by reaching stable bearing soil below any loose fill, expansive clay, or soft topsoil — typically 12–18 inches in practice. On caliche-heavy sites, footings may bear directly on caliche at relatively shallow depths. Always confirm required footing depth with the El Paso Development Services Department and your geotechnical conditions before excavating.
      Do I need a permit for concrete work in El Paso?+
      Yes — the El Paso Development Services Department requires building permits for foundations, structural slabs, retaining walls, and most concrete construction tied to structures. A simple patio on private property that is not tied to a structure may not require a permit — confirm with the Development Services Department before starting. Driveway approaches on city streets require an El Paso right-of-way permit; approaches on TxDOT-maintained highways require a TxDOT access permit. All Texas contractors performing structural concrete must hold a valid TDLR license.
      How many cubic yards for an El Paso garage floor?+
      A standard 20×24 ft two-car garage at 4 inches needs approximately 5.93 cubic yards (6.5 yd with 10% waste). At El Paso pricing of $126–$148/yd, material cost runs roughly $819–$962 — one of the most affordable garage slab markets in Texas. Include rebar or wire mesh on any expansive clay site in El Paso. Caliche base areas may not need a separate aggregate base — confirm subsoil type before adding base material costs to your budget.
      When is the best time to pour concrete in El Paso?+
      The ideal concrete pouring window in El Paso is October through May — the fall, winter, and spring months offer cooler temperatures, lower evaporation rates, and reduced plastic shrinkage cracking risk. March through May is especially popular: temperatures are mild, winds are manageable, and there is essentially no freeze risk. For summer pours (June–September), target dawn starts (6–8 AM) to get the concrete placed, finished, and cured before the worst afternoon heat. Avoid pouring when overnight temps are forecast below 35°F without insulating blankets — typically December through February in El Paso.

      Official El Paso Concrete Resources

      El Paso Development Services permits, Texas TDLR contractor licensing, and TxDOT access permits for compliant El Paso concrete work.

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      El Paso Development Services

      Permit Authority · Texas IBC

      The El Paso Development Services Department issues all building permits in El Paso under the Texas IBC. Permits are required for foundations, structural slabs, retaining walls, and most concrete projects tied to structures. A mandatory footing inspection must be passed before structural concrete is placed. Contact El Paso Development Services at (915) 212-1591 or visit the permit counter at City Hall before starting any foundation, slab, or structural concrete project in El Paso.

      Visit EP Development Services
      🔨

      TDLR — Texas Contractor Licensing

      TX Dept. of Licensing & Regulation

      The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) administers contractor licensing in Texas, including El Paso. Contractors performing most structural concrete and construction work in Texas must hold the appropriate TDLR license. Always verify your El Paso concrete contractor's TDLR license before signing any contract — unlicensed contractor work is one of the most common sources of disputes and code violations in El Paso's active residential and commercial construction market.

      Verify TDLR License
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      TxDOT — Driveway Access Permits

      TX Dept. of Transportation · EP District

      The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) El Paso District requires an access permit before constructing any driveway approach on a state-maintained highway, US route, or FM road in El Paso. Many El Paso arterial roads including Montana Avenue, Alameda Avenue, Dyer Street, and Loop 375 frontage areas are TxDOT-maintained. Apply through the TxDOT El Paso District office before any concrete is poured on a state-route driveway apron — violations can result in required removal at the owner's cost.

      Visit TxDOT El Paso District