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Cost of Concrete Slab Per Square Foot: 2026 USA Price Guide

Cost of Concrete Slab Per Square Foot: 2026 USA Price Guide

Quick Reference: Cost Per Square Foot by Project Type

Before diving into every variable that affects the per-square-foot price, here is a quick reference table showing what fully installed concrete costs per square foot for the most common residential and light commercial projects in 2026. These figures reflect the national average market – not the highest-cost or lowest-cost regions.

$4 to $7
Budget Tier
4 in, mesh, broom finish, low-cost market or DIY materials
$7 to $10
Standard Tier
4 to 6 in, rebar, vapor barrier, trowel or broom finish, national average
$10 to $15
Premium Tier
6 in+, full rebar, decorative finish, high-cost market or specialty spec
$15 to $30+
Decorative Tier
Stamped, polished, or honed concrete with premium design elements
Project Type Typical Thickness Cost Per Sq Ft Notes
Outdoor patio (plain broom)4 in$6 to $10Most common residential project
Patio (exposed aggregate)4 in$8 to $13Adds wash-off finish step
Patio (stamped concrete)4 in$10 to $25Wide range based on pattern complexity
Walkway / sidewalk4 in$6 to $10Long narrow pours often cost more per sq ft
Shed pad / utility slab4 in$6 to $10Small sizes attract minimum job fees
Driveway (plain)5 to 6 in$7 to $12Needs thicker pour for vehicle loads
Driveway (decorative)5 to 6 in$10 to $20Coloured, stamped, or exposed aggregate
Garage floor (single car)4 to 5 in$6 to $10Standard residential garage
Garage floor (two to three car)5 to 6 in$7 to $13Higher spec for vehicle traffic
Shop / workshop floor6 in$8 to $14Full rebar grid, trowel finish
Pool deck4 in$8 to $14Slip texture required, often decorative
House foundation slab6 in$8 to $14Includes thickened edge footings
Barndominium / pole barn slab6 in + footings$9 to $15Thickened perimeter, utility stubs
Commercial floor (light)6 in$9 to $15Flatness tolerances, saw cuts, sealer
Polished interior slab6 in$15 to $30+Grind, hone, seal multi-stage process
📌 Calculate Your Project Cost Right Now:

Enter your slab dimensions, thickness, finish type, and zip code into the concrete cost estimator for a precise 2026 price specific to your market. The tool applies regional labour rates, current material pricing, and your chosen spec to produce a real project budget – not a national average that may not reflect your location.

Material vs. Labor Cost Per Square Foot

Every installed concrete slab price has two main components: materials and labour. Understanding the split helps you evaluate contractor quotes, spot overpriced bids, and decide whether any portion of the work makes sense to handle yourself.

$3-$7
Materials Per Sq Ft
Concrete, gravel, forms, reinforcement
$2-$5
Labor Per Sq Ft
Pour, finish, forming, site prep crew
$6-$12
Installed Per Sq Ft
National average, standard spec
50-60%
Labour Share
Of any installed slab price
Cost Component Per Sq Ft (Low) Per Sq Ft (High) What It Covers
Concrete material (4 in, 4000 PSI)$1.20$2.00Ready-mix delivery, 4000 PSI standard mix
Concrete material (6 in, 4000 PSI)$1.80$3.00Ready-mix delivery, 6 in thickness
Gravel base (4 in compacted)$0.50$1.50Crushed stone delivery and compaction
Wire mesh reinforcement$0.35$0.806×6 welded wire, standard residential
Rebar (#4 at 18 in OC)$0.80$1.50Structural reinforcement, garage/shop spec
Vapor barrier (10 mil poly)$0.15$0.35Moisture protection under enclosed slabs
Forms and stakes$0.40$1.20Lumber, metal forms, layout stakes
Pour and finish labor$2.00$5.00Screeding, floating, troweling, brooming
Excavation and grading labor$0.40$1.67Site prep prior to pour day
Control joints$0.10$0.40Saw-cut at 10 to 15 ft spacing
Curing and sealing$0.15$0.60Curing compound, optional penetrating sealer
Contractor overhead and profit$0.80$2.00Typically 20 to 35% markup on labour

Labour is 50 to 60% of the total installed price on most residential slabs. That ratio means a 20% reduction in labour rates – moving from a California market to a Texas market, for example – reduces the total installed price by 10 to 12% on its own. It also explains why DIY concrete work saves meaningful money on the labour side but does not change material costs, which are set by the ready-mix plant regardless of who places the concrete.

Cost Per Square Foot by Slab Size

Per-square-foot costs are not flat across all slab sizes. Small slabs cost more per square foot because contractor mobilisation costs – truck, crew, equipment, and travel time – are spread over fewer square feet. Large slabs have a lower effective per-square-foot rate because those fixed costs are diluted. Here are 2026 installed prices for common slab sizes at a standard 4-inch broom finish specification in national average markets.

Slab Size Square Feet Per Sq Ft Total Cost Range Notes
6×636 sq ft$14 to $22$500 to $800Minimum job charge applies; rarely cost-effective
8×864 sq ft$11 to $18$700 to $1,150Still in minimum charge territory at most contractors
10×10100 sq ft$9 to $14$900 to $1,400Common shed pad size
10×20200 sq ft$8 to $12$1,600 to $2,400Single-car parking pad
12×12144 sq ft$8 to $13$1,150 to $1,870Small patio
12×20240 sq ft$7 to $12$1,680 to $2,880Single-car garage slab
16×16256 sq ft$7 to $11$1,790 to $2,816Mid-size patio
20×20400 sq ft$7 to $11$2,800 to $4,400Two-car garage or large patio
24×24576 sq ft$7 to $10$4,032 to $5,760Standard two-car garage
20×30600 sq ft$7 to $10$4,200 to $6,000Large patio or RV pad
24×30720 sq ft$6.50 to $10$4,680 to $7,200Two-car garage with shop area
30×30900 sq ft$6.50 to $10$5,850 to $9,000Large garage or small shop
30×401,200 sq ft$6 to $9.50$7,200 to $11,400Two to three bay shop
30×501,500 sq ft$6 to $9.33$9,000 to $14,000Large garage or barndominium slab
40×602,400 sq ft$5.75 to $9$13,800 to $21,600Commercial shop or warehouse pad
50×1005,000 sq ft$5.50 to $8.50$27,500 to $42,500Small commercial building
⚠️ Minimum Job Charges on Small Slabs:

Most concrete contractors set a minimum job charge of $500 to $1,000 regardless of slab size. On a 6×6 or 8×8 slab, this minimum charge makes the effective per-square-foot cost far higher than the standard $6 to $12 range. If your project is under 150 square feet, compare the all-in quote from a contractor against the cost of mixing bags yourself – the material cost for a 100 sq ft slab at 4 inches is only $150 to $220 in bags, and the labour is manageable for a single person over a weekend.

Cost Per Square Foot by Thickness

Thickness is the most direct variable in the concrete material cost calculation. Each inch of thickness adds concrete volume – and therefore cost – in a perfectly linear way. Here is what each thickness level costs per square foot in 2026 in materials only, and in total installed cost.

Thickness Concrete Volume Per 100 Sq Ft Material Cost Per Sq Ft Total Installed Per Sq Ft Best Application
3 inches0.93 cu yds$1.20 to $1.75$4 to $7Walkways, thin-set patios, overlays only
4 inches1.23 cu yds$1.60 to $2.25$6 to $10Patios, shed pads, walkways, mild-use slabs
5 inches1.54 cu yds$2.00 to $2.80$7 to $11Driveways, single-car garages, RV pads
6 inches1.85 cu yds$2.40 to $3.35$8 to $13Garages, shops, foundations, most building slabs
7 inches2.16 cu yds$2.80 to $3.90$9 to $14Heavy-load commercial, loaded pallet racking
8 inches2.47 cu yds$3.20 to $4.45$10 to $16Vehicle lifts, heavy equipment, structural
10 inches3.09 cu yds$4.00 to $5.55$12 to $18Industrial, high-load structural pads
12 inches3.70 cu yds$4.80 to $6.65$14 to $21Heavy industrial, engineered structural slabs

Increasing from 4 inches to 6 inches adds roughly $0.80 to $1.10 per square foot in concrete material cost. On a 400 sq ft garage floor, that is $320 to $440 extra in material – a small premium for significantly better durability and load capacity. Always confirm the right thickness for your application with the slab thickness calculator before finalising your specification.

Cost Per Square Foot by Project Type

Different project types demand different specifications beyond just thickness – reinforcement, subbase depth, vapor barriers, flatness tolerances, and finishing techniques all vary. Here are the real installed per-square-foot costs for each major project category in 2026.

Patio Slab Cost Per Square Foot

A concrete patio costs $6 to $10 per square foot for a plain broom finish and $10 to $25 per square foot for stamped or decorative finishes. The typical residential patio ranges from 200 to 500 square feet – large enough to avoid minimum job charges but small enough that decorative upgrades are affordable. Use the concrete patio cost calculator for a full budget by size and finish type.

Driveway Slab Cost Per Square Foot

A concrete driveway costs $7 to $12 per square foot for a plain finish at 5 to 6 inches thick. Driveways carry regular vehicle loads and need thicker concrete and better reinforcement than patios. A typical two-car driveway of 400 to 600 square feet runs $3,000 to $7,200 installed. Decorative driveway work with exposed aggregate or integral colour adds 20 to 40% to the base price. Use the concrete driveway cost calculator for a full estimate.

Garage Floor Cost Per Square Foot

A garage floor costs $7 to $13 per square foot for a standard 6-inch pour with rebar and a trowel finish. Single-car garages (200 to 250 sq ft) run $1,400 to $3,250. Standard two-car garages (400 to 500 sq ft) run $2,800 to $6,500. Three-car garages and large shop floors (600 to 1,200 sq ft) run $4,200 to $15,600. Use the garage floor cost calculator for a complete breakdown.

Foundation Slab Cost Per Square Foot

A house foundation slab costs $8 to $14 per square foot fully installed in 2026. This includes the thickened perimeter footings, deeper excavation, full rebar grid, vapor barrier, utility stub-outs, and a steel-trowel finish. On a 1,200 sq ft house slab, the total installed cost runs $9,600 to $16,800. Foundation slabs in California and the Northeast run $14 to $22 per square foot. Use the foundation slab cost calculator for a site-specific estimate.

Project Type Sq Ft Range Per Sq Ft Installed Key Spec Difference
Shed / utility pad50 to 200 sq ft$6 to $114 in, mesh only, no vapor barrier needed
Patio – plain finish100 to 600 sq ft$6 to $104 in, mesh or rebar, broom finish
Patio – decorative100 to 600 sq ft$10 to $254 in, same base but stamped/coloured surface
Walkway / sidewalk20 to 200 sq ft$6 to $114 in, broom texture, narrow forms cost more
Driveway200 to 800 sq ft$7 to $125 to 6 in, rebar, control joints every 10 ft
Garage floor200 to 800 sq ft$7 to $135 to 6 in, rebar, vapor barrier, trowel finish
Shop / workshop400 to 2,400 sq ft$8 to $146 in, full rebar grid, flatness tolerance spec
Pool deck200 to 800 sq ft$8 to $144 in, slip texture required, often decorative
House foundation800 to 3,000 sq ft$8 to $146 in + thickened edge, full rebar, stubs
Barndominium slab800 to 3,000 sq ft$9 to $156 in + footings, anchor bolts, utility rough-in

Cost Per Square Foot by Finish Type

Finish type is the most powerful tool for moving the per-square-foot cost either up or down once you have fixed your thickness and reinforcement spec. Here is what each finish adds to the base broom-finish price in 2026.

Finish Type Total Installed Per Sq Ft Added Cost Over Broom Best Application
Broom finish (baseline)$6 to $10$0Driveways, walkways, utility areas
Trowel finish (smooth)$7 to $11+$0.50 to $1.50Garage floors, interior slabs
Exposed aggregate$8 to $14+$2 to $4Patios, pool decks, outdoor entertainment
Salt finish$7 to $11+$1 to $2Pool decks, walkways – subtle texture
Coloured / integral colour$8 to $13+$2 to $4Decorative patios, driveways
Stamped – basic (1 pattern)$10 to $14+$4 to $6Entry patios, simple pool decks
Stamped – mid-range (2 colours)$13 to $18+$7 to $10Premium patios, driveway accents
Stamped – premium (custom)$18 to $25+$12 to $18High-end outdoor living spaces
Hardener / densifier$7 to $11+$0.50 to $1Shop floors – reduces surface dusting
Epoxy coating (applied after cure)$9 to $14+$2 to $5Garage floors, workshop showrooms
Honed concrete$12 to $20+$6 to $12Interior slabs, barndominium living areas
Polished concrete (full grind)$15 to $30++$10 to $22+Commercial showrooms, high-end residential
✅ The Best Value Upgrades Per Square Foot:

If you want the most visual impact per dollar, exposed aggregate delivers a significant decorative upgrade for $2 to $4 per square foot over a plain broom finish. It is durable, low-maintenance, and looks far more premium than a basic broom finish. Integral colour adds $2 to $4 per square foot and works well combined with a standard broom or trowel finish. Stamped concrete is the premium option but requires sealing every 2 to 3 years to maintain its appearance – factor in that ongoing maintenance cost when comparing it against exposed aggregate.

Cost Per Square Foot by US Region

Regional labour rates are the biggest driver of per-square-foot price variation across the USA. Here are 2026 installed costs for a standard 4-inch plain slab and a 6-inch garage floor by region.

Region 4 in Plain Slab/Sq Ft 6 in Garage Floor/Sq Ft Labour Rate Reference
South (TX, OK, AR)$4.50 to $7.50$7 to $10$25 to $38/hr
Southeast (GA, AL, MS, TN, SC)$5 to $8$7.50 to $11$26 to $40/hr
Florida$5.50 to $8.50$8 to $12$28 to $42/hr
Midwest (OH, IN, IL, MI, WI)$6 to $9$8.50 to $12$30 to $45/hr
Great Plains (MN, IA, MO, KS, NE)$5.50 to $8.50$8 to $11.50$28 to $42/hr
Mountain (CO, UT, MT, ID, WY)$6 to $9.50$8.50 to $12.50$30 to $47/hr
Southwest (AZ, NM, NV)$6 to $9.50$8.50 to $12.50$30 to $47/hr
Southeast Atlantic (NC, VA, MD)$6.50 to $10$9 to $13$32 to $50/hr
Mid-Atlantic (PA, NJ, DE)$7.50 to $11$10 to $14$38 to $58/hr
Northeast (NY, MA, CT, RI)$9 to $14$11 to $16$45 to $72/hr
California (all markets)$9 to $15$11.50 to $17$52 to $80/hr
Pacific Northwest (WA, OR)$8 to $13$10 to $15$42 to $66/hr

Reinforcement Cost Per Square Foot

Reinforcement is one of the most impactful line items for long-term slab performance and one of the most negotiated in contractor quotes. Here is what each type adds per square foot in 2026.

Reinforcement Type Added Cost Per Sq Ft Notes Right For
No reinforcement$0Never recommended – always use at minimum meshNothing – unreinforced slabs crack
6×6 W1.4 Wire Mesh$0.35 to $0.80Most common for basic patios and utility padsOutdoor pads, light-use slabs, no vehicles
Polypropylene fiber$0.15 to $0.40Mixed into concrete batch – supplement onlyAdded to mesh or rebar – not standalone
#4 Rebar at 18 in OC$0.80 to $1.50Standard for garage floors and enclosed building slabsGarages, workshops, enclosed pads
#4 Rebar at 12 in OC$1.20 to $2.00Higher density for heavier loadsHeavy equipment, vehicle lifts
#5 Rebar at 12 in OC$1.67 to $2.80Structural applications onlyFoundation slabs, very heavy commercial
Post-tension cables$2.00 to $4.00Requires engineering, special finishingExpansive soils, engineered structures

Full Project Cost Examples

Here are complete line-item project examples showing what a concrete slab costs per square foot in total across three real-world specifications and size categories in 2026.

📋 Example 1: 16×20 Patio, Plain Broom Finish – Midwest

Size: 16×20 = 320 sq ft | Thickness: 4 inches

Concrete (4.7 yds x $140): $658 | Gravel base: $280 | Wire mesh: $180 | Forms: $200 | Excavation: $300 | Pour + finish labor: $960 | Control joints: $100 | Sealer: $150

Total: $2,828 — $8.84/sq ft

📋 Example 2: 20×22 Garage Floor, Trowel Finish – Southeast

Size: 20×22 = 440 sq ft | Thickness: 6 inches

Concrete (9.8 yds x $145): $1,421 | Gravel base: $460 | Rebar (#4 at 18 in): $528 | Vapor barrier: $130 | Forms: $300 | Excavation + grading: $420 | Pour + trowel labor: $1,760 | Control joints: $180 | Curing + seal: $220 | Permit: $150

Total: $5,569 — $12.66/sq ft

📋 Example 3: 25×35 Stamped Patio, 2-Color Pattern – Pacific Northwest

Size: 25×35 = 875 sq ft | Thickness: 4 inches

Concrete (12.9 yds x $160): $2,064 | Gravel base: $700 | Mesh: $490 | Forms: $525 | Excavation: $700 | Pour labor: $3,500 | Stamping (2 colours): $3,500 | Release agent + colour hardener: $800 | Saw cuts + caulk: $350 | Premium seal (2 coats): $700 | Permit: $200

Total: $13,529 — $15.46/sq ft

Get Your Exact Per-Square-Foot Cost Estimate

Enter your dimensions, thickness, finish, and location for a 2026 price specific to your project.

Use the Concrete Cost Estimator

What Drives Cost Per Square Foot Up or Down

Knowing the average per-square-foot price is a starting point. Knowing what moves that price in either direction is what lets you build a true budget.

Factors That Push Cost Per Square Foot Higher

  • Thicker pour – every additional inch of thickness adds $0.40 to $0.85/sq ft in concrete material cost.
  • Rebar instead of mesh – adds $0.45 to $0.70/sq ft over wire mesh; double-bar grids for heavy loads add more.
  • Decorative finish – stamped work adds $4 to $18/sq ft; polished concrete adds $9 to $22/sq ft.
  • Difficult site access – if a pump truck is needed, adds $0.40 to $1.00/sq ft on large slabs.
  • Sloped or difficult terrain – extra excavation, retaining, and grading adds $0.60 to $4.00/sq ft depending on severity.
  • Small slab size – fixed mobilisation costs spread over fewer square feet inflate the effective rate on small jobs.
  • California, Northeast, or Pacific Northwest market – labour rates in these markets are 40 to 80% higher than the southern USA.
  • Weekend or after-hours pours – adds $0.05 to $0.15/sq ft on large slabs; flat $50 to $150/load from the plant.
  • High-strength concrete (5000+ PSI) – adds $0.10 to $0.25/sq ft in material cost over standard 4000 PSI.

Factors That Pull Cost Per Square Foot Lower

  • Large pour area – fixed costs (mobilisation, pump, forming labour) spread across more square feet.
  • Flat, easily accessible site – straightforward excavation and direct truck chute access reduce labour time.
  • Low-cost US market – Texas, rural Midwest, and the South have the lowest concrete labour rates in the country.
  • Owner-completed site prep – clearing, excavation, and gravel spreading done by the owner before the pour crew arrives can save $0.40 to $1.50/sq ft.
  • Standard broom or trowel finish – base finishes require no specialty equipment or extra curing steps.
  • Multiple slabs scheduled together – combining two adjacent pours in one contractor visit spreads mobilisation across both.

DIY vs. Contractor Cost Per Square Foot

DIY concrete is viable for small, simple slabs. For larger or more complex projects, the financial savings are smaller than most people expect. Here is the honest comparison for 2026.

Approach Cost Per Sq Ft Best Slab Size Skills Required Risk
Full contractor (turnkey)$6 to $14Any sizeNone from ownerLow – contractor is responsible
Owner does site prep, contractor pours$5 to $11Any size over 200 sq ftBasic grading, gravel workLow to moderate
Owner sets forms, contractor pours$4.50 to $10200 to 600 sq ftLayout, leveling, formingModerate – form accuracy matters
Full DIY (owner pours)$3 to $6Under 200 sq ftScreeding, floating, finishingHigh on first attempt

The most practical cost-reduction strategy for most homeowners is to handle site preparation – clearing vegetation, rough grading, and gravel delivery and spreading – themselves, then hire a professional crew for the pour day. This approach saves $0.80 to $2.50 per square foot while keeping the highest-risk part of the project in experienced hands. On a 400 sq ft garage floor, that is $320 to $1,000 in genuine savings with minimal quality risk.

How to Use a Per-Square-Foot Price to Build Your Budget

A per-square-foot price is only useful if you know what it does and does not include. Here is a reliable process for building an accurate budget from any per-square-foot quote.

  1. Measure your exact area. Use the concrete calculator to confirm your square footage for any shape – including L-shaped slabs, circular areas, and irregular borders.
  2. Multiply by the per-square-foot rate. Use the range for your project type, thickness, and region from the tables above. Multiply by both the low and high ends to get your budget range.
  3. Check what the per-square-foot price includes. Always ask or confirm: does the rate include excavation and grading? Gravel base? Reinforcement? Delivery? Finishing? Sealing? Permits? Some contractors quote a “pour and finish only” rate and itemise everything else separately.
  4. Add site prep if not included. Budget $0.40 to $2.50/sq ft for excavation, grading, and gravel base if the contractor’s rate does not cover it.
  5. Add pump costs if access is restricted. Add $0.40 to $1.00/sq ft if the site requires a pump rather than direct chute discharge.
  6. Add permit and inspection fees. Budget $0 to $0.60/sq ft depending on your municipality’s requirements for the project type.
  7. Compare three quotes. Use the concrete cost estimator as your independent reference. Quotes more than 25% below the estimator output deserve scrutiny – confirm what is missing from the scope before accepting.

Key Takeaways

  • A concrete slab costs $6 to $12 per square foot installed in 2026, with the national average at $8/sq ft for a standard 4-inch residential slab with broom finish.
  • Materials alone run $3 to $7 per square foot. Labour adds $2 to $5 per square foot. Labour is 50 to 60% of the total installed price on most residential slabs.
  • Thickness directly drives material cost: going from 4 to 6 inches adds $0.80 to $1.10/sq ft in concrete material – worth doing for any garage, shop, or enclosed building slab.
  • Stamped concrete costs $10 to $25/sq ft installed. Polished or honed concrete costs $15 to $30+/sq ft. Exposed aggregate at $8 to $14/sq ft is the best value decorative option.
  • Small slabs under 150 sq ft attract minimum job charges that inflate the effective per-square-foot rate well above the published range.
  • California and the Northeast pay 40 to 80% more per square foot than Texas, the Southeast, and the Midwest – almost entirely because of labour rate differences.
  • The best cost-reduction strategy is to handle site preparation yourself and hire a professional crew for pour day – saving $0.80 to $2.50/sq ft with minimal quality risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a concrete slab cost per square foot?
A concrete slab costs $6 to $12 per square foot installed in the USA in 2026, with the national average around $8 per square foot for a standard 4-inch residential pour with a broom finish. Materials alone run $3 to $7 per square foot. Labour adds $2 to $5 per square foot. Decorative finishes, thicker pours, and high-cost markets like California and the Northeast push the total toward $12 to $15 per square foot.
How much does a 10×10 concrete slab cost?
A 10×10 concrete slab (100 sq ft) costs $600 to $1,400 installed in 2026 for a standard plain finish. At $6/sq ft (low-cost market, basic spec) the total is $600. At $8/sq ft (national average) the total is $800. At $14/sq ft (small slab minimum charge or high-cost market) the total is $1,400. Note that many contractors apply a minimum job fee of $500 to $800 on any job, making the effective per-square-foot rate on small slabs higher than the standard national range.
How much does a 20×20 concrete slab cost?
A 20×20 concrete slab (400 sq ft) costs $2,400 to $6,400 fully installed in 2026. The range reflects both the low end (basic 4-inch broom finish in a southern US market at $6/sq ft = $2,400) and the high end (6-inch garage floor spec in California at $16/sq ft = $6,400). The national average for a standard 4-inch patio spec on a 20×20 slab is around $3,200 ($8/sq ft).
How much does stamped concrete cost per square foot?
Stamped concrete costs $10 to $25 per square foot installed in 2026. Basic single-pattern stamped work with one colour runs $10 to $13/sq ft. Mid-range two-colour stamped concrete with a release agent and sealer runs $13 to $18/sq ft. Premium custom patterns with multiple colours, saw cuts, and high-quality sealing run $18 to $25/sq ft. Use the stamped concrete cost calculator for a project-specific estimate.
What is the cheapest concrete slab per square foot?
The cheapest fully installed concrete slab costs $4 to $6 per square foot in low-cost US markets like rural Texas, Georgia, Alabama, and the Midwest in 2026. This reflects a 4-inch pour of 3000 PSI concrete with wire mesh and a standard broom finish on a flat, easily accessible site. Materials alone for the same spec run $3 to $4 per square foot. The very lowest prices only occur on larger pours of 500+ sq ft where fixed costs are diluted across more area.
How much does a garage floor cost per square foot?
A garage floor costs $7 to $13 per square foot installed in 2026 at the 6-inch spec recommended for vehicle traffic. A single-car garage (240 sq ft) runs $1,680 to $3,120. A two-car garage (400 to 480 sq ft) runs $2,800 to $6,240. The wide range reflects regional labour rate differences – a garage floor in Ohio costs $8 to $10/sq ft while the same spec in California costs $12 to $16/sq ft. Use the garage floor cost calculator for your specific size and region.

Sources & References

Pricing data in this guide is cross-referenced from government labour statistics, industry cost databases, and concrete industry associations. All figures reflect June 2026 USA market conditions.

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