Regional Cost Guide

How Much Does Concrete Cost in Miami-Dade County, FL?

Concrete driveway install runs $8,645–$16,055 in Miami-Dade County, FL—2.47x the national average. See labor, climate, and financing details.

Cost Range $8,645 – $16,055
Average $11,855
Updated April 12, 2026
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Pouring concrete in Miami-Dade County costs significantly more than in most of the country. Regional cost data places the county at a 2.47x multiplier versus national averages, which lands it in the very_high tier for construction pricing. A standard 400 sq ft concrete driveway that runs about $4,800 nationally typically lands near $11,855 here, with a full range of $8,645 to $16,055 depending on thickness, reinforcement, finish, and site prep. Patio slabs and sidewalk sections scale similarly. The premium reflects a tight South Florida labor market, stringent hurricane-zone building requirements, and the logistics of moving ready-mix through dense urban corridors. The ranges below are derived directly from national baselines multiplied by the county-specific factor, so you can benchmark contractor quotes against a defensible local figure instead of a generic U.S. average.

Cost Breakdown

Concrete Driveway (400 sq ft)

$8,645 Avg: $11,855 $16,055

Patio Slab (400 sq ft)

$7,410 Avg: $10,375 $14,820

Sidewalk Section (50 linear ft)

$1,975 Avg: $2,965 $4,445

How costs are calculated: National avg $4,800 × 2.47x multiplier = $11,855

Concrete Labor Rates in Miami-Dade

Concrete crews in Miami-Dade draw from the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach metro labor pool. According to 2024 OEWS data, Cement Masons & Concrete Finishers (SOC 472051) earn a mean wage of $25.53/hr, or roughly $53,110/year. The metro employs approximately 3,490 workers in this occupation, one of the deeper concrete-finishing workforces in the Southeast. That scale helps keep crews available during peak building season, but South Florida's construction boom keeps skilled finishers in steady demand, so expect contractors to pass through both wage pressure and overtime on fast-tracked jobs. Labor typically accounts for 40–50% of a residential flatwork quote, so a $2–$3/hr swing in crew rates can meaningfully move your final bid. When comparing estimates, ask how many finishers are assigned and whether the rate reflects prevailing-wage or union scale for commercial-adjacent work.

Weather & Hazard Risks That Affect Concrete

Miami-Dade carries a FEMA National Risk Index score of 99.62 (Very High)—among the highest in the nation. The dominant concrete-relevant hazards are hurricane (99.96, Very High), coastal flooding (99.60, Very High), inland flooding (99.71, Very High), and lightning (99.94, Very High). Tornado risk sits at 98.73 and hail at 96.56, both Relatively High. What this means for your slab: reputable contractors will spec thicker sections, heavier rebar or fiber mesh, and elevated finish grades to shed flood water. Expansion joints and proper curing are critical because saturated subgrade and wind-driven rain can undermine a thin pour within a single storm season. Wildfire risk is Relatively Moderate (96.85) and winter weather is unrated (0.00), so freeze-thaw is not a cost driver here—but hurricane-zone code compliance typically adds 8–15% to a bare-bones quote.

Climate Zone & Curing Conditions

Miami-Dade sits in IECC Climate Zone 1A, the hot-humid designation that covers only the southern tip of Florida and a handful of U.S. territories. The 'A' moisture regime means high ambient humidity year-round, and the DOE HVAC region classifies it as southeast. For concrete work, this climate is a double-edged sword: you never lose days to frozen ground, but high slab temperatures and intense sun can flash-set a pour if crews don't fog, shade, or schedule around midday heat. Expect contractors to price in hot-weather concreting practices—retarders, evaporation reducers, and early-morning starts—especially from May through September. Humidity also means finished slabs cure under consistently wet conditions, which is generally favorable for strength development but can delay sealer and stain applications. Ask your contractor how they adjust mix design and pour timing for Zone 1A conditions.

Energy Costs for Concrete Work

Florida residential electricity averaged $0.159/kWh in the January 2026 reporting period, per EIA data. Concrete pours themselves are not energy-intensive for the homeowner, but adjacent costs matter: running a mixer, powering job-site lighting, and operating saws for control joints all draw from your meter if the crew taps house power. More importantly, if your project includes a heated slab, garage epoxy cure lamps, or post-pour dehumidification inside an enclosed space, that $0.159/kWh rate sets your operating cost. For a typical 400 sq ft driveway, on-site electricity use is negligible—under $10 across the project. But for larger interior slabs or decorative work that requires controlled curing, ask whether the contractor supplies a generator or expects to draw from your panel, and factor the utility rate into any multi-day cure cycle.

Financing Your Concrete Project

As of March 26, 2026, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate (MORTGAGE30US) stood at 6.38%. That matters because many homeowners fund larger concrete projects—full driveway replacements, pool decks, or structural slabs—through a cash-out refinance or HELOC tied to prevailing mortgage benchmarks. In Miami-Dade, the median home value is $425,400 and median annual property taxes run $3,516, so most owners have meaningful equity to tap but should weigh closing costs against a mid-five-figure project. At 6.38%, financing a $12,000 driveway over 10 years through a home equity product adds roughly $4,000 in lifetime interest versus paying cash. Many concrete contractors also offer third-party installment financing at higher promotional APRs; compare that against your home-equity option before signing. Shorter-term 0% promotional cards can work for sub-$5,000 repair jobs if you can retire the balance before the promo expires.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a concrete driveway cost in Miami-Dade County?

A 400 sq ft concrete driveway in Miami-Dade typically runs $8,645 to $16,055, with an average near $11,855. That reflects the national $4,800 typical price multiplied by the county's 2.47x regional cost factor.

Why is concrete so expensive in Miami-Dade compared to the national average?

Miami-Dade carries a 2.47x cost multiplier—among the highest in the U.S.—driven by tight labor supply (3,490 finishers metro-wide at $25.53/hr mean wage), hurricane-zone code requirements, and dense-urban logistics for ready-mix delivery.

What does a concrete patio slab cost here?

A 400 sq ft patio slab ranges from $7,410 to $14,820, averaging about $10,375. That is the national typical of $4,200 scaled by the 2.47x Miami-Dade multiplier.

How much for a short section of sidewalk?

A 50 linear ft sidewalk section runs $1,975 to $4,445, with a typical price near $2,965—derived from the $1,200 national average times the 2.47x local factor.

Does Miami-Dade's hurricane risk affect concrete pricing?

Yes. With a FEMA hurricane risk score of 99.96 and coastal flood risk of 99.60, contractors typically spec thicker slabs, heavier reinforcement, and elevated grades. These hurricane-zone adjustments commonly add 8–15% to a baseline quote.

What are concrete finishers paid in the Miami metro?

Per 2024 OEWS data, Cement Masons & Concrete Finishers (SOC 472051) in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach metro earn a mean wage of $25.53/hr, or roughly $53,110 annually, across a workforce of about 3,490.

Is now a good time to finance a concrete project?

The 30-year mortgage rate was 6.38% as of March 26, 2026. With Miami-Dade's $425,400 median home value, home-equity financing is viable, but at 6.38% a $12,000 driveway financed over 10 years adds roughly $4,000 in interest versus paying cash.

Data Sources

Cost estimates are derived from government data including the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS), Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS), FEMA National Risk Index, EIA energy data, IECC climate zone classifications, Federal Reserve (FRED), and HUD Fair Market Rents. Generated April 12, 2026.

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