Pouring Concrete in Hot Weather: 2026 Summer Guide
Hot weather concrete is doable – but it punishes every mistake fast. Pouring concrete in hot weather above 85-90°F compresses your working time, accelerates surface drying, and can rob your slab of 20-30% of its design strength if you skip the right precautions. The fix isn’t waiting for fall – it’s early morning scheduling, a few smart mix adjustments, and having the right products on-site before the truck arrives. This guide covers everything: ACI 305 temperature limits, the plastic shrinkage cracking risk, mix modifications, evaporation retarders, curing in summer heat, and real 2026 costs for every product you’ll need.
Why Heat Is Hard on Fresh Concrete
Concrete gains strength through a chemical reaction called hydration – water reacts with cement to form interlocking crystals. This reaction generates its own heat. In summer, you’re adding that internal heat to already-high ambient temperatures, and the result is a mix that behaves very differently from a cool-weather pour.
Heat affects concrete at three distinct stages. First, it shortens the time between discharge and initial set – the point where the mix becomes too stiff to work. Second, it accelerates surface evaporation, which can cause plastic shrinkage cracking before you’ve even finished troweling. Third, if the surface dries out during the 7-day curing window, hydration stops prematurely and the slab never reaches its rated strength – even though it looks and feels hard.
The Compounding Effect of Heat, Wind, and Low Humidity
High temperature alone is manageable. The real danger is when heat combines with dry wind and low humidity – a combination common in the Southwest and Great Plains in summer. Under these conditions, moisture can evaporate from a fresh concrete surface at rates exceeding 0.20 lb/ft²/hour, which is the ACI 305 threshold for mandatory evaporation control measures.
ACI 305R is the American Concrete Institute’s standard for hot weather concreting. It defines hot weather as any combination of high temperature, low humidity, high wind speed, or solar radiation that causes high evaporation rates from fresh concrete. The full standard is available at concrete.org and is the basis for every recommendation in this guide.
ACI 305 Hot Weather Temperature Limits
ACI 305 sets the fresh concrete temperature at placement to a maximum of 90°F. Many project specs – especially for commercial work – tighten this to 85°F. These aren’t air temperature limits; they’re the temperature of the concrete mix itself at the point it leaves the truck chute.
What Temperature Means at Each Stage
| Air Temperature | Concrete Risk Level | Key Actions Required | Pour Feasibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 75°F | Low – standard conditions | Standard curing compound, keep moist 7 days | ✅ No restrictions |
| 75-85°F | Moderate – manageable | Curing compound, consider evaporation retarder if windy | ✅ Straightforward |
| 85-95°F | High – active management needed | Early morning pour, chilled water, Type B retarder, evaporation retarder | ⚠️ Plan carefully |
| 95-105°F | Very high – specialist practices | All of the above + ice substitution, shaded forms, night pours considered | ⚠️ Experienced crews only |
| Above 105°F | Extreme | Night pour or reschedule; daytime placement not recommended | ❌ Reschedule if possible |
Mix Temperature vs. Air Temperature
The air temperature is not the same as the concrete mix temperature. On a 95°F day, a standard mix delivered without cooling can arrive at 95-100°F itself – above the ACI 305 limit before a single scoop is placed. Your first step when ordering hot-weather concrete is to specify a maximum mix temperature at discharge – typically 80-85°F. Your ready-mix supplier controls this by substituting cold water or ice for some of the mixing water.
💡 How Much Does Ice Lower Concrete Temperature?
Replacing all mixing water with ice lowers the concrete mix temperature by approximately 8-10°F. Replacing half the mixing water with ice drops it by 4-5°F. On a day where aggregate and cement temperatures are pushing the mix above 90°F, this ice substitution is often the difference between a legal placement and a rejected load. Ask your supplier whether they charge extra – most plants include ice substitution for free on hot days when requested in advance.
Use the concrete set time calculator to see how your mix temperature affects initial set timing on pour day. A 90°F mix can cut initial set time by 30-45 minutes compared to a 70°F mix – enough to matter on a large residential pour.
Scheduling – The Most Important Decision You Make
On any pour above 85°F, scheduling is more important than any admixture or product you buy. Get the timing right and hot weather becomes manageable. Get it wrong and you’re racing a surface that’s setting faster than your crew can finish it.
The Early Morning Rule
Book your ready-mix truck to arrive between 6 AM and 9 AM in summer. Here’s exactly why each hour matters:
- 6-7 AM: Air temperature is at or near its daily low. Forms, subgrade, and rebar are cool from overnight. Mix temperature at discharge is lowest. Evaporation rate is minimal. This is the best concrete window of the day in summer.
- 7-9 AM: Still favorable. Air and surface temperatures are rising slowly. You have enough time to place, screed, and begin finishing on most residential slabs.
- 9-11 AM: Temperatures rising toward peak. Acceptable for small pours under 400-500 sq ft. Larger slabs risk cold joints if placement takes more than 90 minutes.
- After 11 AM: Not recommended above 90°F. Surface sets before interior on afternoon summer pours, and the cracking that results is permanent.
💼 Example: Summer Pour Scheduling in Dallas, TX
You’re pouring a 20×30-foot patio (600 sq ft) in Dallas in July. Typical forecast: 98°F high, 78°F overnight low, 25% relative humidity, 12 mph wind.
Scheduled truck arrival: 6:30 AM (temp: ~82°F)
Expected placement complete: 7:30 AM
Screeding and bull floating: 7:30-8:15 AM
Evaporation retarder applied: 8:15 AM (before bleed water disappears)
Troweling begins: 8:30-9:30 AM
Curing compound applied: 9:30 AM (immediately after final trowel pass)
Temperature at completion: ~90°F – manageable because work is done
Result: Clean surface finish, no plastic shrinkage cracks
Compare this to a 1 PM pour at 98°F where you’d have 20-30 minutes less working time and face direct afternoon sun on a setting surface.
When to Consider Night Pours
In states like Arizona, Nevada, and Southern California where summer daytime temperatures regularly exceed 105-110°F, some contractors schedule night pours between 9 PM and 2 AM when air temperatures drop to the low-to-mid 80s°F. This isn’t unusual for commercial work in the Southwest and is increasingly common for large residential projects. If you’re in a region with extreme summer heat, ask your contractor whether a night pour is an option – the lighting cost ($150-400 for construction lighting on a residential project) is well worth it compared to the risks of a midday pour in extreme heat.
🌡️ Know Your Set Time Before the Truck Arrives
Enter your mix design and forecast temperature to see exactly how long you have to place and finish before initial set. Avoid the most common summer pour mistake.
Check My Set Time →Hot Weather Mix Design and Admixtures
Your ready-mix supplier can make several adjustments to the concrete formulation that make hot weather pouring dramatically easier. Most of these cost less than $20 per yard and are worth every penny when temperatures climb above 85°F.
Key Mix Modifications for Hot Weather
| Modification | What It Does | Cost Per Yard (2026) | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cold water substitution | Reduces mix temperature 5-8°F | Usually free | Above 85°F air temp |
| Ice substitution (partial or full) | Reduces mix temperature 8-15°F | $3-8 | Above 90°F air temp |
| Type B set retarder (ASTM C494) | Extends working time 30-90 min | $5-15 | Above 85°F, large pours |
| Fly ash replacement (15-25%) | Reduces heat of hydration, improves workability | $5-12 savings | Above 85°F, mass pours |
| Water-reducing admixture (Type A) | Maintains workability at lower w/c ratio | $8-18 | When slump needs maintaining without adding water |
The Water-Cement Ratio Trap
When concrete gets stiff in summer heat, the temptation is to add water at the job site to restore workability. Never do this. Adding water after batching increases the water-cement ratio, which directly reduces compressive strength. Every 0.10 increase in w/c ratio reduces 28-day strength by approximately 1,000 PSI. A mix designed for 3,000 PSI can drop to 2,000 PSI from field water addition on a hot day.
If the mix arrives too stiff, ask the driver to add a water-reducing admixture (superplasticizer) if one wasn’t already included. Or order the next load with a retarder. Never add water at the chute. Use the water-cement ratio calculator to understand exactly what field water addition does to your design strength before you’re tempted.
A Type B retarder costs $5-15 per yard and buys you 30-90 minutes of extra working time. For a 600 sq ft driveway using 10-11 cubic yards, that’s $50-165 total. Compare that to the cost of re-pouring a section because the first batch started setting before you could tie it into the second. Retarders are standard practice for experienced summer concrete crews – request one any time your pour will take more than 90 minutes from first discharge to final screed.
For a complete reference on mix proportions and cement types for summer conditions, see the concrete mixing instructions guide and the concrete formula calculation reference page.
Plastic Shrinkage Cracking – How to Prevent It
Plastic shrinkage cracking is the most common concrete defect on summer pours – and one of the most preventable. It shows up as irregular cracks across the surface within the first 30-60 minutes of placement, often before finishing is even complete. Once the cracks form, they cannot be fixed.
Why It Happens
Fresh concrete bleeds – water inside the mix migrates toward the surface as the heavier particles settle. In normal conditions, bleed water reaches the surface and evaporates at roughly the same rate it rises, keeping the surface moist during the plastic phase. In hot, dry, windy conditions, evaporation outpaces bleed water rise. The surface layer dries out while the interior is still plastic. The surface shrinks, the interior doesn’t, and the tension creates cracks.
ACI 305 Evaporation Rate Formula
Use the ACI 305 evaporation rate nomograph at concrete.org to calculate your specific risk before pour day. Plug in your forecast and decide whether evaporation control measures are needed.
Preventing Plastic Shrinkage Cracking – Your Three-Layer Defense
-
Evaporation retarder spray (most important): Applied to the surface immediately after screeding and bull floating, before troweling begins. Forms a thin temporary film that dramatically slows surface moisture loss. Common products:
- Confilm (BASF) – $28-35/gallon, covers 300-400 sq ft
- Eucon E-Con (Euclid Chemical) – $25-32/gallon, covers 300-500 sq ft
- Master-Cure 1315 (BASF) – $27-34/gallon, covers 300-450 sq ft
- Windbreaks: Temporary plywood panels, shade cloth, or tarps on the windward side of the pour reduce wind speed across the slab surface and cut evaporation rate significantly. A 15 mph wind hitting a fresh concrete surface at 90°F with 30% humidity can push evaporation rates to 0.35-0.40 lb/ft²/hr. Cutting wind speed in half nearly halves the evaporation rate.
- Fogging: A fine water mist above (not on) the fresh concrete raises the relative humidity in the microclimate above the slab. Don’t let water droplets fall directly on the surface – use a mist nozzle at a height that produces fog, not rain.
🌞 Plan Your Summer Pour – Get Accurate Material Quantities
Know your cubic yards, aggregate needs, and 2026 costs before you schedule your hot weather pour. Our calculators cover every project type.
Use the Mix Calculator →Placing and Finishing in Summer Heat
Even with the best mix adjustments and an early morning start, hot weather places specific demands on the placing and finishing process. A crew that normally finishes a 600 sq ft driveway in 3 hours on a 70°F day may have 2 hours or less on a 95°F morning. Every step needs to be tighter and faster.
Preparation Before the Truck Arrives
- Pre-wet everything: Dampen forms, subbase, and rebar with water 30-60 minutes before the truck arrives. You want cool, damp surfaces – not standing water. Standing water dilutes the mix at the bottom of the pour.
- Shade the subbase if possible: Asphalt subbase and dark soil can reach 140-160°F in direct summer sun. If forms are on a black asphalt surface, cover with white poly sheeting for a few hours before the pour to reduce surface heat.
- Have all tools and materials staged: Every minute searching for a bull float or a curing compound sprayer is a minute the concrete is setting. Before the truck arrives: tools out, evaporation retarder sprayer filled and ready, curing compound sprayer filled and staged at the edge of the pour.
- Have the full crew on-site before discharge begins: Short-staffing a hot weather pour is the fastest way to create cold joints and surface setting problems. If the slab would normally take 3 people, add a 4th person in summer heat.
Timing the Finish in Heat
The biggest finishing mistake on summer pours is beginning troweling too early. When the surface appears dry in summer heat, it’s tempting to start troweling to close the surface. But if bleed water hasn’t fully evaporated yet and you trowel over it, you seal that water into the surface layer – creating a weak, flaky top that scales off within a few winters.
The test: press your gloved hand on the surface. If it leaves a wet imprint, bleed water is still present – wait. If it leaves a dry, clean impression, bleed water is done and troweling can begin. In summer heat, this test becomes critical because the surface can look and feel dry before bleed water has fully risen from deeper sections of the slab.
Troweling over bleed water on a summer pour causes surface delamination – a condition where the top 1/16-inch layer separates from the slab underneath. You won’t see it at first, but within 1-2 winters of freeze-thaw cycling, the thin surface layer starts popping off in flakes the size of your palm. This is called surface scaling, and it’s permanent. The only fix is grinding down the delaminated layer and applying a surface overlay – typically $3-8 per square foot in 2026.
For a complete step-by-step guide to the entire placing and finishing process, see how to finish concrete and how to pour a concrete slab. Both cover hot-weather-specific adjustments at each step.
Curing Concrete in Hot Weather – 7-Day Strategy
Curing is where more summer slabs fail than during the pour itself. The concrete looks hard. It’s been 24 hours. The sun is baking it. It must be fine. But without continuous moisture during the first 7 days, hydration stops whenever the concrete dries out – and the slab stays at whatever strength it reached at that point, permanently.
Why 7 Days Matters More in Summer
A properly cured slab that was kept moist for 28 days is approximately 50% stronger than one allowed to air-dry from day 1. Even a 7-day moist cure produces concrete roughly 30-40% stronger than air-dried concrete. In summer, that gap is even larger because the hot, dry air accelerates moisture loss every hour the surface is exposed. For a driveway you expect to last 30 years, 7 days of active curing is the single best investment you make.
Hot Weather Curing Methods Compared
| Curing Method | Effectiveness | Cost (2026) | Summer Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liquid curing compound | Good – 75-80% moisture retention | $18-30/gallon (covers ~200 sq ft) | Apply immediately after finishing – don’t wait in summer heat |
| Wet burlap + plastic sheeting | Excellent – 90%+ moisture retention | $0.15-0.30/sq ft material cost | Re-wet burlap twice daily in high heat; plastic prevents evaporation |
| Curing blankets (fabric) | Very good – 85% moisture retention | $0.50-1.00/sq ft rental | Keep moistened; provides both moisture and surface temperature control |
| Ponding (small slabs) | Excellent – continuous water contact | Labor only | Very effective for flat slabs; build earth berms around perimeter |
| Polyethylene film (white) | Good – reduces evaporation well | $0.03-0.06/sq ft | Use white poly – black absorbs solar heat and can overheat the surface |
In summer heat, you lose meaningful moisture from the surface in the first hour after finishing. Don’t let the crew break for lunch before the curing compound goes down. Stage the sprayer at the edge of the pour before the truck arrives. The moment the final trowel pass is done, start applying. At $25-30 per gallon covering 200 sq ft, a 600 sq ft driveway needs about 3 gallons – about $75-90 in materials. That $90 is protecting a $3,000-5,000 driveway. It’s not optional.
For the full seasonal breakdown of curing methods, timelines, and moisture requirements, the concrete curing and drying time guide is the most detailed resource on the site. For adjusted hot-weather strength timelines, the curing temperature calculator gives day-by-day projections based on your actual forecast.
Common Hot Weather Concrete Mistakes
Most hot weather concrete failures are predictable and preventable. Here are the mistakes that show up again and again on residential projects in summer – and exactly how to avoid each one.
Mistake 1: Afternoon Pour Scheduling
What happens: The truck arrives at 2 PM. By 3 PM, the surface is setting faster than the crew can finish it. The crew rushes the troweling, introduces surface defects, and the finish shows trowel lines and drag marks. Worse, the interior of the slab is still plastic while the surface is setting – the differential causes diagonal cracking from corners and transverse cracks across the width within days.
The fix: Hard rule – no summer concrete pours above 90°F after 9 AM unless it’s a small patch under 200 sq ft. Book early morning. If the supplier can’t deliver before 9 AM, push the pour to the next available early morning slot.
Mistake 2: Skipping the Evaporation Retarder in Wind
What happens: The contractor says “I’ve been pouring concrete for 20 years without that stuff.” The pour goes in at 7 AM. There’s a 20 mph breeze. By 8:30 AM, a 3-foot x 6-inch diagonal crack has appeared across the surface while the crew is still bull floating. Wind-driven plastic shrinkage cracking can happen in minutes at high evaporation rates. There is no repair that restores the original surface.
The fix: Check the wind forecast before every summer pour. If wind is over 10 mph and relative humidity is below 50% and temperature is above 80°F, an evaporation retarder is mandatory – not optional. It costs $75-120 for a typical residential pour. The alternative is a cracked driveway.
Mistake 3: Letting the Curing Compound Dry Out
What happens: Curing compound is applied correctly on pour day. But on day 3, a worker walks across the slab and their boot punctures the membrane. Nobody reapplies. By day 5, the surface has developed hairline map cracking from drying shrinkage in the hot sun – the concrete started losing moisture as soon as the compound film was breached.
The fix: Inspect the curing compound film daily for the first 7 days. If you see foot traffic marks, scuff marks, or areas where the compound has peeled, reapply immediately. For large slabs, wet burlap under a plastic sheet is more robust than compound alone – the physical barrier is harder to accidentally damage.
Mistake 4: Finishing Before Bleed Water Has Cleared
What happens: The surface looks dry – the summer heat evaporated the surface sheen quickly. The finisher starts hard-troweling. But internal bleed water is still migrating upward. Troweling seals the surface over the bleed water, which then forms a weak layer just under the finished surface. By winter 2, the top layer starts scaling off in sheets.
The fix: Always perform the hand impression test before troweling. Push your gloved palm flat on the surface. Wet imprint: bleed water still present, wait 10-15 minutes and test again. Dry, clean impression: ready to trowel. This extra wait costs you 10-20 minutes. Skipping it can cost you the top layer of the entire slab.
Calculators to Plan Your Summer Pour
Good planning before a hot weather pour makes pour day itself much smoother. Know your cubic yards before you call the supplier, understand your set time window before the truck arrives, and have your curing materials calculated and purchased before you schedule.
Timing and Temperature
- Concrete Set Time Calculator – See how heat compresses your working window based on mix temp and air temp
- Curing Temperature Calculator – Adjusted strength milestones for hot weather conditions
- Water-Cement Ratio Calculator – Understand what field water addition does to your 28-day strength
Material Quantities
- Driveway Concrete Calculator – Cubic yards and 2026 pricing for your exact driveway size
- Concrete Patio Calculator – Material quantities and cost for summer patio pours
- Concrete Slab Calculator – Cubic yards for general slabs, floors, and flat work
- Concrete Mix Calculator – Proportions for your specific hot weather mix design
- Concrete Aggregate Calculator – Stone, sand, and gravel quantities if site-batching
- Concrete Yardage Calculator – Quick volume conversion from your measurements
Cost and Delivery
- Concrete Cost Calculator – Full project cost with 2026 summer ready-mix pricing
- Ready-Mix Truck Calculator – Number of loads and minimum order planning for your job
- Slab Thickness Calculator – Correct depth for your application and vehicle loads
For the complete driveway and slab pouring process, see how to pour a concrete driveway and how to pour a concrete slab. For surface work after placement, how to finish concrete covers every step from bull floating to final troweling with hot-weather-specific notes. For the cost comparison between concrete and asphalt driveways in summer conditions, see concrete vs. asphalt driveways.
🎯 Key Takeaways
- Pouring concrete in hot weather above 85-90°F is manageable but requires early scheduling, mix adjustments, and active moisture management from pour to 7-day cure.
- ACI 305 maximum mix temperature at placement is 90°F – specify a maximum discharge temperature when ordering and request chilled or ice water if needed.
- Schedule your pour for 6-9 AM: Early morning is the most critical decision on any summer pour. Afternoon pours above 90°F are the leading cause of residential driveway cracking.
- Request a Type B retarder for any pour over 500 sq ft in heat: Costs $5-15/yard and buys 30-90 minutes of extra working time. Worth it every time.
- Never add water at the job site: Every 0.10 increase in w/c ratio costs approximately 1,000 PSI of design strength. Use a water reducer instead.
- Apply evaporation retarder after screeding, before troweling: Mandatory when wind speed exceeds 10 mph + humidity below 50% + temp above 80°F. Costs $75-120 for a typical residential slab.
- Wait for bleed water to clear before troweling: Early troweling over bleed water causes surface delamination and scaling within 1-2 winters.
- Apply curing compound within 20 minutes of final finishing: Don’t wait. In summer heat, you lose significant moisture in the first hour after finishing.
- Keep the slab moist for 7 full days: Re-wet burlap covering twice daily in high heat. A concrete surface that dries out during curing never reaches its design strength.
- In extreme heat above 105°F: Consider a night pour between 9 PM and 2 AM. Add $150-400 for construction lighting – far less than the cost of a damaged slab.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes – hot weather concrete is poured successfully every day across the US Southwest, Southeast, and Great Plains. The key is managing the conditions, not avoiding them. Schedule an early morning pour, request chilled or ice water in the mix, use a Type B retarder above 85°F, apply an evaporation retarder before troweling, and apply a curing compound immediately after finishing. Without these steps, a summer pour above 90°F can lose 20-30% of its design strength. With them, you get a full-strength slab that performs for decades.
ACI 305 sets the maximum fresh concrete temperature at placement to 90°F. Many specifications tighten this to 85°F for residential and commercial flatwork. Above 95°F air temperature, placement is very challenging without significant mix modifications including ice substitution and retarding admixtures. Above 105°F air temperature, consider a night pour scheduled between 9 PM and 2 AM when temperatures naturally drop. The mix temperature – not the air temperature – is what matters at placement, so always verify discharge temperature with your ready-mix supplier before accepting a load on hot days.
Plastic shrinkage cracking happens when surface moisture evaporates faster than bleed water rises from inside the mix. The surface shrinks while the interior is still plastic, creating tension cracks. It’s most likely when temperatures exceed 80°F combined with wind speeds over 10-15 mph and relative humidity below 50%. Prevention: apply an evaporation retarder spray immediately after screeding (before troweling), set up windbreaks on the windward side of the pour, and use a fine water mist above – not on – the surface to raise local humidity. Once plastic shrinkage cracks form, there is no effective repair without grinding and overlaying.
Yes, for any pour above 85°F or any pour that will take more than 90 minutes to place and finish, a Type B set-retarding admixture per ASTM C494 is highly recommended. It extends your working time by 30-90 minutes depending on dosage and temperature – the difference between a rushed, defect-prone finish and a quality surface. Cost is $5-15 per cubic yard from your ready-mix supplier. Request it when calling in your order – most plants have it on every truck. If you forget to order it and the mix is arriving too fast, you can ask the driver about adding a retarder at the drum, though plant-batched admixtures always work better.
High temperatures accelerate early strength gain but reduce long-term 28-day strength. Concrete placed and cured at 90°F without moisture control can lose 10-15% of its design strength compared to concrete cured at 70°F. If the surface is allowed to dry out during the curing period – which hot weather accelerates – hydration stops prematurely and strength loss can reach 30-50%. The cure is consistent moisture management for 7 days minimum. Concrete cured with moisture for 28 days is approximately 50% stronger than air-dried concrete placed at the same time.
The best time to pour concrete in summer is 6-9 AM – the coolest window of the day before temperatures build toward their afternoon peak. This gives you maximum working time, minimal evaporation stress, and lets the surface take its initial set in cooler conditions before direct afternoon sun arrives. In extreme-heat states like Arizona, Nevada, and Southern California where summer highs regularly exceed 105-110°F, many crews start at 5-5:30 AM or schedule night pours between 9 PM and 2 AM. Afternoon pours above 90°F are the most common cause of premature residential driveway cracking nationwide.
Light foot traffic is generally safe 24-48 hours after a summer pour under normal hot-weather conditions. Because heat accelerates early strength gain, a summer slab at 24 hours may actually be firmer to walk on than a cold-weather slab at the same age. However, “firm to walk on” doesn’t mean cured – keep vehicles off for the full 7 days and apply no loads above normal foot traffic during the curing window. Use the curing temperature calculator for a precise day-by-day timeline for your specific summer conditions.
Yes – a curing compound or equivalent moisture retention method is essential for any summer pour, and more important in hot weather than in cool weather. In summer heat, exposed concrete can lose significant surface moisture within the first 30-60 minutes after finishing. Without a curing compound, that moisture loss continues for days and the concrete may never complete hydration. Apply a liquid curing compound (like Euclid Super Floor Coat or W.R. Meadows Sealtight) immediately after the final trowel pass at about $18-30 per gallon covering 200 sq ft. A 600 sq ft driveway needs 3-4 gallons – roughly $75-120 that protects a $3,000-5,000 project.
🧮 Ready to Plan Your Summer Pour?
Get accurate cubic yard estimates, 2026 ready-mix pricing, and weather-adjusted set time and curing timelines with our free concrete calculators.
View All Free Calculators →🔗 Related Calculators and Guides
- → Concrete Set Time Calculator – See how summer heat compresses your working window before the truck arrives
- → Curing Temperature Calculator – Adjusted strength and readiness milestones for hot weather conditions
- → Water-Cement Ratio Calculator – Understand the strength impact of summer field water additions
- → Driveway Concrete Calculator – Cubic yards and 2026 pricing for your exact driveway dimensions
- → Concrete Patio Calculator – Material and cost estimates for summer patio pours
- → Concrete Slab Calculator – Cubic yards for patios, floors, and general flatwork
- → Concrete Cost Calculator – Total project cost with 2026 summer ready-mix pricing
- → Concrete Curing and Drying Time Guide – Seasonal curing methods, timelines, and moisture requirements
- → How to Pour a Concrete Driveway – Complete step-by-step pour guide with summer-specific notes
- → How to Finish Concrete – Troweling, texturing, and surface treatment for summer pours




