Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and Los Angeles CA-accurate ready-mix costs for driveways, patios, garage slabs, foundations & footings across LA County, the San Fernando Valley, and the greater Southern California metro.
Enter project dimensions to calculate volume, bags, and estimated Los Angeles CA material cost.
Use 4–5 in. for driveways. 4,000 PSI minimum for all structural LA concrete per CBC. #4 rebar required. Soils report required for most LA County permits. LADBS permit required for all structural concrete — check ladbs.lacity.org before starting.
Patio 4 in · Sidewalk 4 in · Driveway 4–5 in · Garage 4–5 in · Foundation 8–12 in · Grade Beam 12–18 in · Retaining Wall 8–12 in
Structural concrete minimum: 4,000 PSI (Seismic Zone 4) · Non-structural flatwork: 3,000 PSI minimum · Rebar: #4 minimum, 18 in. OC for slabs on grade over expansive soil · Frost depth: N/A — no frost concern in LA · Air entrainment: Not required · Soils report: Required for most LA County structural permits · Special inspection: Required for all structural concrete ≥ 4,000 PSI per CBC Special Inspection program · Termite shield: Required under all LA County slabs · W/C ratio: ≤ 0.50 for exterior. Always verify with LADBS (LA Department of Building and Safety) before starting any permitted work.
A standard 20×20 ft driveway at 4 inches needs ~4.9 cu yd. At LA pricing ($178–$210/yd for 4,000 PSI), material runs $872–$1,029. No air entrainment is needed in LA — but heat curing in summer is critical. In the San Fernando Valley where temps reach 105°F, schedule all LA pours before 7 AM in July–September, wet the subgrade the night before, and apply white-pigmented curing compound immediately after finishing.
Los Angeles sits across multiple active fault systems including the San Andreas, Puente Hills, Newport-Inglewood, and Whittier faults. Seismic Design Category D mandates engineered foundations, minimum #4 rebar at 18-inch spacing, engineer-designed grade beams, and special inspection for all structural concrete. Never build a foundation in LA without a California-licensed structural engineer. CBC-compliant seismic detailing adds 15–25% to structural concrete costs versus non-seismic states.
Highly expansive montmorillonite clay soils are found throughout LA County — particularly in the San Fernando Valley, San Gabriel Valley, South LA, and hillside zones. A geotechnical (soils) report is required by LADBS for most structural permits and costs $1,500–$4,000. The report specifies foundation depth, bearing capacity, and soil treatment. Pre-saturation of expansive soils before pouring is frequently required in the geotech report — this alone adds 2–3 days to LA project timelines.
Every concrete foundation in Los Angeles must be designed for Seismic Design Category D (the highest residential classification). This means: (1) a licensed California Structural Engineer (SE) or Civil Engineer (CE) must design all foundations — no prescriptive foundation sizing allowed for most LA soil conditions; (2) minimum 4,000 PSI concrete is required for all structural elements per CBC 2022; (3) #4 rebar minimum at 18 in. OC in both directions for slabs on grade, with closer spacing over expansive soils per geotech recommendations; (4) grade beams connecting spread footings are required for most LA single-family foundations; (5) a LADBS-approved special inspector must be on-site during all structural concrete pours; (6) hold points in LADBS's inspection process require city approval before and after concrete placement. Budget 4–8 weeks for LADBS permit review on residential foundation projects.
LA's coastal neighborhoods (Santa Monica, Venice, Westside) have mild conditions year-round, but the San Fernando Valley, Pasadena, Pomona, and East LA regularly hit 100–108°F in summer — among the most challenging hot-weather concrete conditions in the US. For any LA pour when air temp exceeds 90°F: (1) schedule pour before 7 AM — never after 9 AM in summer; (2) request chilled mix water and ice-cooled aggregate from supplier (adds $8–$18/yd); (3) wet forms and subgrade the night before; (4) apply evaporation retarder spray (Confilm or equivalent) immediately after screeding each section; (5) apply white-pigmented curing compound within minutes of final troweling; (6) moist-cure with burlap and plastic sheeting for 7 days minimum; (7) avoid pouring when concrete mix temperature exceeds 90°F at the truck — reject the load if necessary.
Los Angeles is served by dozens of batch plants across LA County including facilities in the San Fernando Valley, San Gabriel Valley, Vernon, Long Beach, and outlying areas. LA commands California's premium concrete pricing driven by high cement costs, California Air Resources Board (CARB) diesel standards for trucks, and elevated labor and delivery costs. Pasadena, Long Beach, Burbank, and Glendale carry similar pricing. Remote hillside sites may add $25–$60/yd pump or short-access surcharges.
| Mix Type / PSI | Los Angeles Price / Cu Yd | National Avg | Best For | Air Entrained? | CBC Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,000 PSI | $172–$188 | $130–$148 | Non-structural patios, sidewalks | Not Required | Non-Structural |
| 3,500 PSI | $180–$198 | $138–$158 | General flatwork, driveways | Not Required | Compliant |
| 4,000 PSI — LA CBC Standard | $188–$210 | $148–$166 | All structural · Seismic Zone 4 minimum | Not Required | CBC Required |
| 4,500 PSI — Structural / Seismic | $202–$228 | $160–$175 | Foundations, retaining walls, grade beams | Not Required | Compliant |
| 5,000 PSI — Commercial | $218–$245 | $172–$190 | Commercial, tilt-up, high-strength | Not Required | Compliant |
| Pump Surcharge | +$25–$60/yd | +$15–$40/yd | Hillside / tight-access LA sites | Separate | Often Required |
| Hot Weather Chilled Mix | +$8–$18/yd | +$6–$14/yd | All pours when air temp exceeds 90°F | Separate | Recommended |
LADBS permits, California CBC 2022, seismic standards, and geotechnical requirements for LA County concrete projects.
LADBS is the permit authority for all City of Los Angeles concrete construction. Apply for residential and commercial building permits, track inspection status, verify contractor licenses, and download CBC-compliant standard plan sheets for footings, retaining walls, and slabs. LADBS enforces California CBC 2022, LA Municipal Code, and local amendments including seismic, grading, and soils requirements that are among the most stringent in the US.
Visit LADBS OnlineThe California Building Code (CBC) 2022 — based on IBC 2021 with California amendments — governs all residential and commercial concrete construction in Los Angeles. It specifies minimum concrete strengths, seismic reinforcement requirements, soils report mandates, and special inspection programs. Los Angeles adopts CBC with additional local amendments, particularly around grading, hillside construction, and geological hazard zones. All LA structural concrete must comply with CBC 2022 and LADBS local amendments.
View California CBCThe Structural Engineers Association of Southern California (SEAOSC) is the leading professional organization for LA seismic structural engineering. Use SEAOSC's member directory to find a California-licensed Structural Engineer (SE) experienced in LA seismic concrete design for your foundation or retaining wall project. SEAOSC also publishes guidance documents on CBC seismic concrete requirements, hillside construction, and post-disaster concrete inspection protocols for the greater Los Angeles region.
Visit SEAOSC