Calculate cubic yards, bags needed, and MN-accurate ready-mix costs for any Minnesota concrete project — driveways, cabin foundations, Twin Cities slabs, sidewalks, patios, footings & more.
Enter your project dimensions to calculate volume, bags needed, and estimated MN material cost.
Residential driveway: 5 in. min, 4,000 PSI, 5–7% air entrainment required statewide. MN Building Code permit required in most cities and townships.
Sidewalk 5 in · Driveway 5–6 in · Garage 5 in · Foundation 10 in · Footing 12 in+
Minnesota's climate is one of the most demanding in the continental United States for concrete construction. The Twin Cities alone experience 40–50 freeze-thaw cycles per year, while Duluth and northern MN can see 70–80+ cycles — making Minnesota one of the highest-stress concrete environments in North America. 4,000 PSI air-entrained concrete is the absolute minimum for all exterior flatwork statewide — driveways, patios, sidewalks, and garage floors alike. Concrete without proper air entrainment (5–7%) will begin to spall and deteriorate within 2–5 years under road salt and freeze-thaw. Minnesota Building Code is based on the IBC with significant state amendments and is enforced through the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry (DLI). Contractor registration is managed at dli.mn.gov.
All exterior MN flatwork: 4,000 PSI min, 5–7% air entrainment, 5 in. min thickness, W/C ≤ 0.45 · Foundations statewide: 4,000–4,500 PSI, damp-proofing required, 42–60 in. frost protection · Northern MN (Duluth, Bemidji, International Falls): 4,500 PSI strongly recommended, 55–60 in. frost depth · Red River Valley: 6 in. Class 5 aggregate base mandatory · Cabin / lake foundations: full perimeter footing to frost depth required regardless of seasonal use.
Minnesota has over 11,000 lakes with lakefront properties — cabin and lake home foundations represent a uniquely large share of MN concrete volume. All cabins, even seasonal, require full perimeter footings to frost depth under MN Building Code. Remote lake sites typically add $20–$45/yd delivery surcharge and require careful access planning for ready-mix trucks on wooded lake country roads.
Minnesota driveways require 5 inches minimum at 4,000 PSI with 5–7% air entrainment — heavier than most states. A standard 20×20 ft two-car driveway needs approximately 6.2 cubic yards. Full installed cost including labor, Class 5 base, wire mesh, and forming typically runs $5,500–$9,000 in the Twin Cities market. Sealing every 2 years is essential to resist road salt and freeze-thaw damage.
The Red River Valley (Moorhead, Crookston, Thief River Falls) sits on ancient glacial lake bed soils — some of the most expansive clay in the upper Midwest. These high-plasticity soils swell with moisture and shrink when dry. All Red River Valley concrete requires a 6 in. minimum compacted Class 5 aggregate base, rebar reinforcement, closely spaced contraction joints, and proper perimeter drainage to prevent slab upheaval.
Measure your project length and width in feet and depth in inches. Multiply length × width × (depth ÷ 12) for cubic feet, then divide by 27 for cubic yards. Because Minnesota requires a 5 inch minimum thickness (vs 4 inches in warmer states), MN volume estimates run approximately 25% higher for the same surface area. For cabin foundations or irregular lake lot footprints, divide the area into rectangles and sum the volumes. Always add 10% minimum waste — use 15% for rocky lake country sites where subgrade depth can vary.
Minnesota's concrete pouring season is constrained by one of the longest cold-weather windows in the US. ACI 306 cold-weather procedures are required whenever ambient temperatures are below 40°F — which in Minnesota applies from October through April (5–6 months). For cold-weather pours: use heated mix water and aggregates, target concrete delivery temperature of 55–65°F, enclose the pour with insulated blankets, maintain concrete above 50°F for 7+ days, and never pour on frozen subgrade. Ice in the subgrade will thaw and settle under a freshly poured slab, causing catastrophic cracking. October 15 – April 15 is considered cold-weather season statewide.
Minnesota's ready-mix market is above the national average, primarily driven by higher mix specification requirements (4,000 PSI air-entrained is the baseline), cold-weather production costs, and winter delivery challenges. The Twin Cities metro has the most competitive pricing with 20+ ready-mix plants. Duluth, Rochester, and St. Cloud are moderate. Northern and remote lake country MN commands the highest premiums — long haul distances and remote cabin site access add significant per-yard costs.
| Mix Type / PSI | MN Price / Cu Yd | National Avg | Best For | Air Entrained? | MN Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,500 PSI — Interior Only | $148–$168 | $153–$166 | Interior basement slabs ONLY — never MN exterior | Not for Exterior | Interior Only |
| 4,000 PSI — MN Standard Exterior | $162–$188 | $161–$173 | All MN exterior driveways, patios, sidewalks | Required 5–7% | MN Minimum |
| 4,500 PSI — Foundations / North MN | $175–$205 | $171–$181 | Foundations, northern MN, cabin footings | 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 | $205–$238 | $190–$210 | Bridge decks, industrial, precast, heavy civil | Recommended | Compliant |
| Fiber-Reinforced / Stamped | $195–$250 | $165–$210 | Decorative driveways, patios, walkways | Required 5–7% | Compliant |
Minnesota pricing divides across six key regions. The Twin Cities metro is the most price-competitive with the highest plant density in the state. Rochester and St. Cloud are moderate. Duluth, the Iron Range, and remote northern and lake country MN are the most expensive — delivery surcharges and access challenges for remote sites add significantly to per-yard costs.
| MN Region | Key Cities / Areas | 4,000 PSI / Cu Yd | Frost Depth | Air Entrainment | Permit Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Twin Cities Metro | Minneapolis, St. Paul, Bloomington, Plymouth | $162–$185 | 42–48 in. | Required | Yes |
| Rochester / SE Minnesota | Olmsted, Winona, Fillmore, Mower Counties | $165–$190 | 40–46 in. | Required | Yes |
| St. Cloud / Central MN | Stearns, Benton, Sherburne, Wright Counties | $165–$192 | 44–50 in. | Required | Yes |
| Duluth / North Shore | St. Louis, Cook, Lake Counties | $172–$205 | 52–60 in. | Required | Yes |
| Red River Valley | Moorhead, Crookston, Thief River Falls | $168–$200 | 50–58 in. | Required | Yes |
| Northern MN / Lake Country | Bemidji, International Falls, Brainerd, Ely | $178–$218 | 54–60 in. | Required | Varies |
Minnesota requires residential concrete contractors to be registered with the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry. Verify registration, check license status, and confirm Workers' Compensation and general liability insurance at dli.mn.gov. Always ask your contractor to confirm ACI 306 cold-weather procedures before any fall or spring pour — it is one of the most commonly skipped steps on residential MN projects.
MN Department of Labor & Industry, MnDOT, and ACI references for compliant concrete work in Minnesota.
Verify Minnesota contractor registration, check license standing, and confirm Workers' Compensation and general liability insurance for any concrete contractor on your property. MN DLI enforces the Minnesota Building Code and handles all residential contractor registration statewide.
Visit MN DLIMnDOT standard specifications for concrete construction include MN Class 5 aggregate base requirements, concrete mix design standards, and pavement design guides widely used as quality baselines for all private MN concrete construction. MnDOT also handles driveway access permits for properties on state roads.
Visit MnDOTACI 306 is the essential reference for every Minnesota concrete contractor — covering heated mix water, insulated enclosures, temperature monitoring, and curing procedures for cold-weather pours. With Minnesota's 5–6 month cold-weather season, ACI 306 knowledge is a fundamental requirement for any MN concrete professional.
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