Concrete Contractors in Spokane, Washington

Call (509) 352-4494 — Free Written Estimates

Spokane is hard on concrete. Frost drives 24 to 30 inches into the ground here, February can swing from 15 degrees to 45 in a single afternoon, and the ground underneath is Palouse clay and glacial outwash sitting on basalt — soil that holds water in some spots, drains fast in others, and moves with the seasons either way. Concrete poured without accounting for that cracks, heaves, and spalls. Concrete poured with it lasts thirty years.

Spokane Concrete Co connects homeowners across Spokane and Spokane Valley with flatwork crews: driveways, patios, sidewalks, slabs, steps, and repair.

What happens before the pour decides how long it lasts

Anyone can order a truck. The difference between a driveway that survives Spokane winters and one that’s cracked by year three happens in the day before the concrete arrives — how deep the excavation went, whether the base got compacted in lifts or just dumped and raked, whether there’s drainage away from the slab, whether the thickness and rebar match the load, and whether the control joints were cut in the right places at the right depth.

That’s also why bids vary so wildly on the same job. A low bid is usually buying less base, less thickness, or less time. Ask any bidder — including the one this site sends you — exactly what’s under the concrete. If they can’t answer specifically, keep calling.

What we do

Driveways. Replacement and new pours, the highest-value work in Spokane concrete — and the most sensitive to base prep and drainage.

Patios & Stamped Concrete. Outdoor living space, broom finish through stamped and colored decorative work.

Sidewalks & Walkways. Including the root-heave repairs the South Hill’s old street trees generate every year.

Slabs & Garage Floors. Shop slabs, garage floors, shed and hot tub pads — the acreage-property staple.

Concrete Repair & Resurfacing. Spalling, cracking, and settled slabs — the freeze-thaw damage that shows up every spring.

Service area

Spokane proper, the South Hill and North Spokane neighborhoods, and Spokane Valley out through Millwood and Liberty Lake.

What it costs

Real numbers, so you can sanity-check any bid: sidewalks and walkways run roughly $6–$12 per square foot installed ($25–55 per linear foot for a standard four-foot walk). Driveway replacement typically lands $5,000–$10,000+ depending on size, access, tear-out, and what the base needs. Repairs and resurfacing come in far below replacement when the slab is still structurally sound — and an honest crew will tell you which situation you’re in.

Get a written estimate

Describe the project, get a real number in writing before anyone starts.

Call (509) 352-4494 — Free Written Estimates