Buyer's Guide

The Cost of Asphalt Paving in Utah (2026 Pricing Guide)

Buyer's Guide 7 min read By 3H Paving Team
Asphalt driveway in front of a residential Utah property

Most pricing guides online either lowball you to get the click or scare you off with worst-case numbers. Here's a straight take on what asphalt paving actually costs in Utah in 2026 β€” what's normal, what drives the number, and what to be skeptical of when you get quotes.

The quick numbers

For Utah residential and small commercial work in 2026:

  • New asphalt paving: $4–$7 per square foot installed
  • Asphalt repair (patch / overlay): $3–$5 per square foot for the repaired area
  • Sealcoating: $0.18–$0.30 per square foot (two coats, including crack fill on small cracks)
  • Striping: $0.50–$1.25 per linear foot of line, plus stalls and markings
  • Grading & excavation: highly variable β€” typically $1.50–$4 per square foot for prep work

A typical 800 sq ft residential driveway in 2026: $3,200–$5,600 installed. A 20,000 sq ft commercial lot sealcoated: $4,000–$8,000.

What drives the number up or down

Three quotes for the same driveway can come in $2,000 apart. It's not random β€” here's what each contractor is pricing in.

1. Base prep

The single biggest variable. A driveway built on a properly prepped base lasts 25+ years; one rushed on top of bad base lasts 5. If a quote is significantly cheaper than others, ask what's in the base prep. Common shortcuts:

  • Skipping grading on a sloped lot
  • Using less road base aggregate than spec calls for
  • Not compacting properly between layers

2. Asphalt thickness

For Utah residential driveways, we spec 3 inches of compacted asphalt over 4 inches of road base. Some contractors will quote 2 inches to come in cheap. It looks identical the day it's installed. It falls apart 5 years sooner.

3. Square footage

Per-square-foot price drops as the job gets bigger. Mobilization, equipment, and crew time are largely fixed. A 400 sq ft pad quote is higher per square foot than a 1,500 sq ft driveway.

4. Access and slope

Tight driveways that paving equipment can't get into easily cost more in labor. Steep slopes (over 10%) require extra crew and specialty techniques to keep the asphalt from sliding before it cools.

5. Tear-out and disposal

Removing old asphalt or concrete adds cost: roughly $1–$2 per square foot for tear-out and hauling. If you're paving over dirt or grass, you skip this line.

6. Season / scheduling

Spring and fall quotes are usually firm. Mid-summer (July–August) can run hotter on price because every contractor's booked. Late-season jobs (October) sometimes get a small discount as crews look to fill calendars before winter β€” but the trade-off is a tighter weather window.

7. Distance from the contractor's base

If a crew is driving 90 minutes each way, that's reflected in the quote. We keep crews based in both regions (Wasatch Front and Bear Lake) specifically so we don't have to pass that cost on.

Sample budgets for common projects

Residential driveway, 800 sq ft, new install

  • Tear-out (if needed): $800–$1,600
  • Grade and base prep: $1,200–$2,000
  • Asphalt install (3 inches compacted): $3,200–$5,600
  • Total: $5,200–$9,200 (without tear-out, $4,400–$7,600)

Residential driveway, 800 sq ft, sealcoat

  • Crack fill (typical residential): $100–$250
  • Two-coat sealcoat: $150–$240
  • Total: $250–$490

Small commercial lot, 8,000 sq ft, sealcoat + restripe

  • Crack fill: $400–$900
  • Two-coat sealcoat: $1,500–$2,400
  • Restripe (typical 25 stalls + lines): $600–$1,200
  • Total: $2,500–$4,500

Pothole repair, single pothole

  • Small pothole (under 2 sq ft, surface): $200–$400 minimum service call
  • Larger pothole with base repair: $400–$800
  • Often makes sense to bundle with other work to avoid minimum-call fees

Red flags in a quote

If you're shopping quotes, here's what to watch for:

  • Pressure to decide today. Reputable crews don't need a deposit by Friday.
  • "Leftover material" deals. The classic door-knocker scam. Real crews don't drive around with extra hot asphalt looking for buyers.
  • No written warranty. Every legitimate paving job should come with a written warranty. If they won't put it in writing, walk.
  • Cash-only. Reputable contractors take checks and (usually) cards.
  • No physical address or insurance docs. Easy to verify on a business search β€” do it before the work starts.
  • Quote that's 30%+ below the others. Usually means thinner asphalt, skipped base prep, or both. You'll pay the difference in year 5.

How we quote

When you ask us for a quote, we come out, measure, walk the project, and put numbers on paper before we leave. The quote lists materials, prep, square footage, thickness, and the warranty. If you want to compare us to two other crews β€” we'd actually encourage that. Pricing transparency is good for everyone.

Get your free written estimate β†’

Or call us at (435) 310-4694.

Related reading:

Need help with your asphalt project?

Free estimate, written quote, no pressure. We'll be out within 48 hours.

Ready to pave it right?

Free, no-pressure estimate. We'll be out within 48 hours and you'll have a written quote in hand.