How Much Is a 10 Yard Truck of Concrete? 2026 USA Price Guide
A 10 yard truck of concrete costs $1,250 to $1,800 delivered in 2026 for a standard 3000 to 4000 PSI residential mix. High-strength, fiber-reinforced, or colored mixes push that to $1,500 to $2,100 per full truckload. That is the material and delivery cost only – labor, base prep, and finishing are separate. This guide breaks down every cost component, which projects actually require a full 10-yard load, and how to avoid paying more than you should.
What Is a 10 Yard Truck of Concrete?
A “10 yard truck” refers to a standard ready-mix concrete drum truck loaded to its typical maximum capacity of 10 cubic yards. One cubic yard of concrete fills a space 3 feet wide, 3 feet long, and 3 feet deep. Ten of those = a 10-yard truckload, which weighs roughly 40,000 pounds when fully loaded.
A standard ready-mix truck can physically hold 8 to 11 cubic yards depending on the make, model, and mix design. Heavier mixes require a smaller load to stay within legal road weight limits. The 10-yard load is the industry benchmark because it represents the sweet spot of maximum volume with a single delivery – and it is the threshold above which most plants eliminate short-load fees entirely.
When contractors talk about “ordering a truck of concrete,” they almost always mean a 10-yard load. It is the most cost-efficient unit of purchase from a ready-mix plant and represents roughly the concrete needed for a standard two-car driveway, a large patio, or a pool deck section.
Every ready-mix supplier will ask for your cubic yardage before quoting a price. Use the concrete calculator to get your precise volume before you pick up the phone. Add 10% for waste. If your number is close to 10 yards, find out whether rounding up to a full truckload saves money vs. paying a short-load fee on a partial order.
Full Cost Breakdown: 10 Yards Delivered
Here is every line item that makes up the price of a 10-yard concrete truck delivery in 2026. Understanding each component is the only way to accurately compare quotes from different plants.
| Cost Component | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete material (3000 PSI, 10 yds) | $1,100 | $1,450 | $110 to $145/yd in low-cost markets |
| Concrete material (4000 PSI, 10 yds) | $1,250 | $1,650 | $125 to $165/yd national range |
| Standard delivery (within 20 miles) | Included | $350 | Most plants include it; some charge a flat truck fee |
| Short-load fee (if under 8-10 yds) | $0 | $750 | $0 on a full 10-yd load; $25-$75/yd on smaller orders |
| Mileage surcharge (beyond 20 miles) | $0 | $150+ | $5 to $15/yd per extra mile zone |
| Air-entraining agent (freeze-thaw) | $50 | $120 | $5 to $12/yd, recommended in northern states |
| Fiber reinforcement (polypropylene) | $80 | $200 | $8 to $20/yd, reduces cracking |
| Retarder (hot weather / long pour) | $150 | $250 | $15 to $25/yd, extends working time |
| Accelerator (cold weather) | $150 | $250 | $15 to $25/yd, speeds cure time |
| Integral color (decorative) | $200 | $600 | $20 to $60/yd depending on color and pigment load |
| Typical total: standard 4000 PSI load | $1,250 | $1,800 | Material + delivery, no admixtures |
| Typical total: specialty or colored mix | $1,500 | $2,100+ | Material + delivery + admixtures |
💰 Real Invoice Example: 10-Yard Driveway Pour in Ohio
Job: Two-car driveway, 20×35 ft at 5 inches thick
Concrete volume needed: 10.8 cubic yards (rounded to 11 for waste margin)
Mix spec: 4000 PSI air-entrained (freeze-thaw climate)
Concrete material (11 yds x $142/yd): $1,562
Air-entraining agent (11 yds x $8/yd): $88
Delivery (within 15 miles, included): $0
Short-load fee (over 10 yards, waived): $0
Total concrete cost: $1,650
Effective price per yard: $150 per yard
Labor, gravel base, rebar, forming, and finishing are additional – the concrete material is only one part of the full project cost.
Cost by PSI and Mix Type
The single biggest variable inside the per-yard price is the mix strength. More Portland cement per yard = higher PSI = higher cost. Here is what a full 10-yard truckload costs at each common strength level in 2026.
| Mix Type | PSI | Per Yard (2026) | 10-Yard Truckload Total | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Mix | 2500 PSI | $110 to $140 | $1,100 to $1,400 | Non-structural fills, light foot traffic |
| Standard Residential | 3000 PSI | $120 to $150 | $1,200 to $1,500 | Patios, sidewalks, mild-climate driveways |
| General Purpose | 3500 PSI | $128 to $158 | $1,280 to $1,580 | Residential driveways, garage floors |
| High-Strength Residential | 4000 PSI | $135 to $168 | $1,350 to $1,680 | Driveways, garages, cold climates (most popular spec) |
| Premium Structural | 4500 PSI | $145 to $180 | $1,450 to $1,800 | Foundation slabs, heavy commercial |
| High-Performance | 5000 PSI | $152 to $192 | $1,520 to $1,920 | Structural elements, industrial floors |
| Fiber-Reinforced | 3500 to 4000 PSI | $148 to $195 | $1,480 to $1,950 | Driveways, industrial floors, high-traffic areas |
| Air-Entrained | 4000 PSI | $138 to $172 | $1,380 to $1,720 | Any slab in freeze-thaw climate zones |
| Integral Color | 3500 to 4000 PSI | $158 to $210 | $1,580 to $2,100 | Decorative patios, driveways, pool decks |
For most residential driveways, patios, and garage floors, 4000 PSI is the right specification. It costs only $15 to $20 more per yard than 3000 PSI – about $150 to $200 more on a full truckload – but delivers meaningfully better freeze-thaw resistance, surface durability, and long-term performance. Refer to the concrete PSI guide to confirm the right mix for your specific project before placing your order.
All Fees and Surcharges Explained
The per-yard number a plant quotes is rarely your final cost per yard. Here are all the surcharges that can appear on a ready-mix invoice – and how to budget for each one.
| Surcharge | Typical Amount | When It Applies | How to Avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short-load fee | $25 to $75/yard | Orders under 8-10 cubic yards | Order 10+ yards; combine with neighbor’s job |
| Flat truck delivery fee | $150 to $350/load | Some plants charge per truck, not per yard | Ask upfront; compare all-in prices |
| Mileage surcharge | $5 to $15/yard per zone | Job site over 15-20 miles from plant | Order from nearest supplier |
| Saturday delivery | $80 to $150/load | Weekend pours | Schedule Monday through Friday |
| After-hours delivery | $100 to $200/load | Early morning or evening pours | Schedule during business hours |
| Standby/waiting time | $50 to $100/hour | After first 5-10 free minutes | Have crew and forms ready before truck arrives |
| Returned concrete disposal | $25 to $50/yard | Unused concrete returned on the truck | Order accurate volume; add 10% not 20% |
| Winter surcharge | $10 to $20/yard | Pours in cold months (some markets) | Pour in spring/fall if possible |
| Fuel surcharge | $8 to $25/load | High fuel cost periods; some plants charge always | Ask whether it is in the quoted price |
Once the drum truck arrives at your job site, the clock starts. Most plants give you 5 to 10 free minutes, then charge $50 to $100 per hour of standby time. On a 10-yard pour, an experienced crew can discharge the truck in 20 to 30 minutes. An unprepared one might take 60 to 90 minutes – adding $75 to $150 to your bill. Have all forms set, tools staged, crew on site, and the pour area completely ready before you call to confirm delivery time.
Cost by US Region
Ready-mix prices are not uniform across the country. Regional differences in aggregate availability, transportation distance from cement plants, and local market competition all affect what you pay per yard. Here is what a standard 10-yard load of 4000 PSI concrete costs by US region in 2026.
| Region | States | Per Yard (4000 PSI) | 10-Yard Load Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deep South / Southeast | TX, GA, AL, MS, SC | $120 to $155 | $1,200 to $1,550 |
| Florida | FL | $125 to $160 | $1,250 to $1,600 |
| Midwest | OH, IN, IL, MI, MN, WI | $128 to $162 | $1,280 to $1,620 |
| Mountain / Southwest | AZ, CO, NM, NV, UT | $130 to $168 | $1,300 to $1,680 |
| Mid-Atlantic | PA, VA, MD, NJ | $138 to $172 | $1,380 to $1,720 |
| Pacific Northwest | WA, OR, ID | $140 to $178 | $1,400 to $1,780 |
| Northeast | NY, MA, CT, NH | $145 to $185 | $1,450 to $1,850 |
| California | CA | $150 to $200 | $1,500 to $2,000 |
For state-specific estimates, use the cost calculators for Texas, Florida, Ohio, California, Georgia, Arizona, and New York.
Which Projects Need a Full 10 Yard Load?
Knowing whether your project needs a full truck is important before you call the plant. Ordering a full 10-yard load when you only need 4 yards wastes money. Ordering 4 yards when your project needs 9 yards means paying a steep short-load fee. Here is where common residential projects land.
| Project | Cubic Yards (with 10% waste) | Full Truckload? | Short-Load Fee? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12×12 patio (4 in) | ~2.0 yds | No | Yes – significant |
| 20×20 patio (4 in) | ~5.5 yds | No | Yes – moderate |
| 24×24 garage floor (4 in) | ~8.0 yds | Close (partial load) | Yes – small |
| 20×30 patio (4 in) | ~8.2 yds | Close (partial load) | Yes – small |
| Two-car driveway 20×35 (5 in) | ~12.0 yds | Yes – over one load | No |
| 25×25 patio (4 in) | ~8.6 yds | Close – round up to full | No if rounded to 10 |
| Pool deck 800 sq ft (4 in) | ~11.0 yds | Yes | No |
| Basement floor 40×30 (4 in) | ~16.5 yds | Yes – nearly 2 loads | No |
| Single-car driveway 10×25 (5 in) | ~4.3 yds | No | Yes – significant |
| Shed pad 10×12 (4 in) | ~1.6 yds | No | Yes – very significant |
Use the ready-mix truck calculator to determine exactly how many yards your specific project needs and whether you will hit short-load territory. For driveway-specific volume, the concrete driveway calculator gives a precise cubic yard figure based on your exact dimensions.
Find Out Exactly How Many Yards Your Project Needs
Get a precise cubic yard figure in seconds – then know whether you need a full truckload or not.
Use the Concrete CalculatorOptions When You Need Less Than 10 Yards
If your project needs less than a full truckload, you have three realistic options – each with different cost and convenience trade-offs.
Option 1: Order Ready-Mix and Pay the Short-Load Fee
For most projects between 3 and 9 yards, ordering ready-mix and accepting the short-load surcharge is still the most practical approach. The fee runs $25 to $75 per yard. On a 5-yard order with a $40 per yard surcharge, you pay $200 extra but still get professional-quality machine-batched concrete delivered to your site. This is what most homeowners and small contractors do for patios and standard driveways.
Option 2: Volumetric Mixer Truck
A volumetric mixer carries dry cement, aggregate, and water separately and mixes on-site. You pay only for what is actually dispensed – no short-load fee, no waste charge for leftover material, no risk of running short mid-pour. Cost: $170 to $230 per cubic yard – slightly higher than full-load ready-mix but often less than short-load-penalized ready-mix on small orders. Ideal for remote locations, projects with uncertain volume, and any job between 2 and 8 yards. Use the ready-mix truck calculator to compare total costs for your specific volume.
Option 3: Bagged Concrete
For anything under about half a cubic yard – post holes, mailbox bases, small repair patches – mixing 80 lb bags is practical. At $6 to $8 per 80 lb bag, bagged concrete costs $165 to $220 per cubic yard in materials alone. That is more expensive than full-load ready-mix but avoids minimum order requirements. One 80 lb bag fills approximately 0.6 cubic feet. Use the concrete bags calculator to see exactly how many bags your project needs and compare the cost to ordering ready-mix.
If your project comes in at 7 or 8 yards, look for ways to hit 10. A 4-inch concrete apron at the garage entrance, a connecting walkway, or a small additional pad can push you into full-truckload territory and eliminate the short-load fee entirely. The extra concrete cost is almost always less than the short-load surcharge you would have paid on the partial order.
How to Calculate If You Need 10 Yards
The formula for calculating cubic yards is straightforward. You need three measurements: length, width, and thickness – all in feet. Then apply this formula:
(Length ft × Width ft × Thickness ft) ÷ 27 = Cubic Yards
Always add 10% to the calculated volume for waste, subgrade variation, and measurement error. Here are quick calculations for common project sizes:
📐 Quick Calculation Examples
20×20 patio at 4 inches: 20 × 20 × 0.333 = 133.3 cu ft ÷ 27 = 4.94 yds + 10% = 5.4 yards
24×24 garage at 4 inches: 24 × 24 × 0.333 = 191.9 cu ft ÷ 27 = 7.1 yds + 10% = 7.8 yards
20×35 driveway at 5 inches: 20 × 35 × 0.417 = 291.9 cu ft ÷ 27 = 10.8 yds + 10% = 11.9 yards (full load + partial second truck)
30×30 patio at 4 inches: 30 × 30 × 0.333 = 299.7 cu ft ÷ 27 = 11.1 yds + 10% = 12.2 yards (full load)
Use the concrete slab calculator for complex shapes, odd dimensions, or multiple areas in one pour.
How to Get the Best Price on a Full Truckload
A 10-yard concrete purchase is a significant transaction. These steps help make sure you pay a fair price and avoid unnecessary add-on costs.
- Call at least two plants and request a total delivered price. Ask for the per-yard price, any flat truck fee, and all surcharges that apply to your job on one number. Compare total invoices, not just headline per-yard rates.
- Pour Monday through Friday during business hours. Weekend and after-hours deliveries add $80 to $200 per load. On a 10-yard order, scheduling flexibility alone can save more than $150.
- Have your site 100% ready before the truck is confirmed. Forms set, rebar tied, crew on-site, tools staged. Standby time fees of $50 to $100 per hour accumulate fast on a fully loaded drum truck waiting for a disorganized crew.
- Order to the nearest half yard, not the nearest whole yard. Rounding a 10.3-yard need up to 11 yards costs roughly $140 to $165 in extra concrete. Rounding down and running short mid-pour is a far more expensive mistake. Calculate precisely with the concrete calculator, add your 10% waste factor, then order to the nearest half yard up.
- Ask about contractor account pricing. Some plants offer 5 to 10% lower per-yard rates for account holders vs. cash customers. If you are a contractor or do regular concrete work, an open account typically pays for itself quickly.
- Specify admixtures during the order, not on delivery day. Calling the plant the morning of your pour to add fiber reinforcement or a retarder may not be possible. Specify your full mix design when you place the order – usually 24 to 48 hours in advance.
Concrete Volume and Cost Calculators
- Concrete Calculator – cubic yards for any shape
- Concrete Slab Calculator – rectangular slab volume
- Concrete Driveway Calculator – driveway cubic yards
- Concrete Patio Calculator – patio volume estimate
- Garage Floor Calculator – garage slab cubic yards
- Ready-Mix Truck Calculator – truckloads needed for your pour
- Concrete Bags Calculator – bags vs. ready-mix cost comparison
- Concrete Pour Cost Calculator – full pour cost with labor
- Concrete Cost Estimator – complete project budget tool
- Concrete Footing Calculator – footing and foundation volume
Key Takeaways
- A 10 yard truck of concrete costs $1,250 to $1,800 delivered in 2026 for a standard 3000 to 4000 PSI residential mix.
- Specialty mixes including fiber-reinforced, colored, or 5000 PSI concrete push a 10-yard load to $1,500 to $2,100.
- 10 cubic yards is the threshold above which most plants waive short-load fees – making it the most cost-efficient unit of purchase.
- A standard ready-mix drum truck holds 8 to 11 cubic yards; the 10-yard maximum capacity is the industry standard reference point.
- Projects that typically need 10 or more yards include two-car driveways, large patios (25×25 and up), pool decks, and basement floor slabs.
- Standby time fees, weekend delivery charges, and mileage surcharges are the most common sources of invoice surprises – budget for all three before your pour day.
- Always calculate your cubic yardage before calling any plant, add 10% for waste, and compare total all-in prices rather than just the headline per-yard rate.
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