Concrete Contractor Services
Concrete contractor services encompass the full range of professional work involving the placement, finishing, repair, and structural use of concrete in residential, commercial, and civil construction contexts. This page defines the scope of those services, explains how the work is sequenced, identifies the most common project types, and draws clear distinctions between service categories to help property owners and project managers match the right contractor to the right scope. Concrete is one of the most widely used construction materials in the United States, and selecting a qualified specialist directly affects structural integrity, code compliance, and long-term durability.
Definition and scope
Concrete contractor services are a distinct subset of specialty contractor services categories, focused exclusively on work where portland cement–based mixtures are the primary structural or surface material. The scope extends beyond simple pouring — it includes formwork design and construction, subgrade preparation, reinforcement placement (rebar or wire mesh), concrete ordering and placement, surface finishing, curing management, joint cutting, and post-placement sealing or coating.
The American Concrete Institute (ACI), the primary standards body for concrete construction in the US (ACI 318-19, Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete), classifies concrete work across structural, architectural, and decorative categories. Contractors may hold general concrete licenses or specialty endorsements covering flatwork, vertical concrete, decorative overlays, or shotcrete application.
State contractor licensing boards determine which work requires a licensed concrete contractor versus a general contractor who self-performs the concrete scope. Requirements vary by jurisdiction; contractor licensing requirements by state provides a state-by-state breakdown.
How it works
Concrete work proceeds through a defined sequence that leaves little room for resequencing once it begins. A departure from this sequence — for example, placing concrete before subgrade compaction is complete — produces defects that are costly or impossible to remedy without demolition.
The standard project sequence:
- Site evaluation and subgrade preparation — Soil bearing capacity is assessed, unsuitable material is excavated, and base aggregate (typically 4–6 inches of compacted gravel) is placed and compacted to the design specification.
- Formwork construction — Forms define the shape and elevation of the finished concrete element. For flatwork such as driveways and slabs, wood or steel forms are staked to grade. For walls or columns, engineered formwork systems are used.
- Reinforcement placement — Rebar or welded wire reinforcement is placed at the correct cover depth per ACI 318 requirements. Fiber reinforcement may supplement or replace conventional steel in flatwork applications.
- Concrete ordering and delivery — Ready-mix concrete is specified by compressive strength (commonly 3,000 to 4,000 psi for residential flatwork, 4,000 to 5,000 psi for structural elements), water-cement ratio, slump, and admixture package. Delivery is coordinated to minimize time between batching and placement.
- Placement and consolidation — Concrete is discharged, spread, and consolidated using vibrators to eliminate voids around reinforcement.
- Finishing — Screeding, bull floating, and troweling achieve the required surface texture. Broom finishes are standard for exterior slabs; steel-trowel finishes are used for interior floors and industrial slabs.
- Curing — Curing compounds, wet burlap, or plastic sheeting are applied immediately after finishing to maintain moisture for a minimum of 7 days, per ACI 308 recommendations (ACI 308R-16, Guide to External Curing of Concrete).
- Joint cutting and sealing — Control joints are saw-cut within 4 to 12 hours of placement to manage cracking. Joints are later sealed to prevent water and debris infiltration.
Common scenarios
Concrete contractor services divide into four primary project categories based on geometry, load requirements, and function:
Flatwork — Driveways, sidewalks, patios, pool decks, garage floors, and warehouse slabs. Flatwork is the highest-volume residential concrete service. Typical residential driveway slabs are 4 inches thick; garage floors and slabs subject to vehicle traffic are commonly specified at 5 to 6 inches.
Structural concrete — Foundation walls, footings, grade beams, columns, and elevated slabs. This category overlaps with foundation contractor services, particularly where poured-in-place concrete walls replace or supplement masonry block construction. Structural concrete work is subject to engineered drawings and inspections under local building codes.
Decorative concrete — Stamped concrete, exposed aggregate, colored concrete, and polished concrete floors. Decorative work requires additional finishing expertise and, in the case of polished floors, specialized grinding and densifying equipment. This category intersects with flooring contractor services when the scope involves interior slab polishing.
Concrete repair and restoration — Crack injection, spall repair, slab lifting (mudjacking or polyurethane foam injection), overlay application, and waterproofing. Repair contractors must assess the root cause of deterioration before selecting a repair method; repairs that address only the surface symptom without correcting drainage, joint failure, or subgrade movement will not hold.
Decision boundaries
Concrete contractor vs. masonry contractor — Concrete contractors work with cast-in-place and precast concrete; masonry contractor services cover unit masonry (brick, block, stone). A poured concrete foundation wall falls to the concrete contractor; a concrete masonry unit (CMU) block wall falls to the masonry contractor. Projects involving both materials may require coordination between two licensed trades.
Concrete contractor vs. general contractor self-performing concrete — On residential projects, a licensed general contractor sometimes self-performs flatwork under their general license. On commercial projects governed by contractor permit and inspection responsibilities, structural concrete typically requires a separately licensed specialty subcontractor, and the engineer of record must review and approve the concrete mix design before placement.
Decorative vs. structural scope — A decorative concrete overlay contractor is not qualified to assess or repair structural defects beneath the overlay. When a slab exhibits significant cracking, settlement, or moisture intrusion, a structural evaluation must precede any decorative scope.
Project cost factors for concrete work — including material costs, labor rates by region, and reinforcement pricing — are addressed in detail at contractor services pricing and cost factors.
References
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration — Concrete and Masonry Construction Standards (29 CFR 1926, Subpart Q)
- ACI 308R-16, Guide to External Curing of Concrete
- ACI 318-19, Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete
- National Ready Mixed Concrete Association — Industry Standards and Publications
- Portland Cement Association — Concrete Technology Resources