Concrete Patio Installation
Jacksonville FL β
Built for Florida’s Climate
Every concrete patio we install in Jacksonville is engineered for Duval County’s sandy silica subgrade, subtropical UV, 54-inch annual rainfall, and live oak root systems. Broom finish, stamped, exposed aggregate, salt finish, covered lanai slabs, and outdoor kitchen footings. Written quote within 24 hours of your on-site visit.
Licensed Florida Contractor, DBPR Β· Certificate of Insurance on request Β· Since 2017
What Is a Concrete Patio?
A concrete patio is a poured, reinforced concrete slab creating an outdoor living surface for dining, lounging, or entertaining, typically adjacent to the home or pool. In Jacksonville FL, concrete patios cost $8β$15 per square foot installed, last 25β35 years with proper base preparation, and β according to National Association of Realtors data β can recover 80-95% of installation cost at resale when kept to a simple, well-executed design.
How Much Does a Concrete Patio Cost in Jacksonville FL in 2026?
A concrete patio in Jacksonville FL costs $8 to $15 per square foot installed in 2026, based on current ready-mix concrete prices of $130β$175 per cubic yard from local Duval County batch plants. A standard 12Γ16 ft broom-finish patio (192 sq ft) runs $1,536β$2,880 all-in β including compacted limerock base, rebar reinforcement on 18-inch centers, 3,500 PSI ready-mix pour, broom finish, control joints cut within 24 hours, and curing compound applied same day. Stamped concrete adds $4β$9 per sq ft to those numbers. Covered lanai slabs run $9β$14/sq ft. Outdoor kitchen footings are quoted separately based on the specific appliance loads involved.
- Broom finish concrete patio: $8β$11/sq ft
- Exposed aggregate patio: $10β$14/sq ft
- Salt finish patio: $9β$12/sq ft
- Stamped concrete patio: $14β$20/sq ft
- Integral color add-on: +$1.50β$3.00/sq ft
- Covered lanai/screened enclosure slab: $9β$14/sq ft
- Patio + outdoor kitchen footing: quote after site visit
Prices vary by subgrade condition, root proximity, drainage complexity, HOA documentation requirements, and whether existing concrete must be demolished first. Every Jaxterra quote is written, itemized, and delivered within 24 hours of the on-site assessment β never over the phone.
What You’ll Actually Pay β Every Line Item Visible
These prices are based on 2026 labor and material costs in Duval County. Ready-mix concrete runs $130β$175/cu yd delivered to most Jacksonville addresses in 2026. All prices below include full installation β not just material.
| Patio Type / Service | Typical Size / Notes | 2026 Jacksonville Price |
|---|---|---|
| Broom Finish Concrete Patio | 12Γ16 ft (192 sq ft) Β· Standard residential | $1,536 β $2,112 |
| Broom Finish β Large Patio | 16Γ24 ft (384 sq ft) Β· Entertaining size | $3,072 β $4,224 |
| Exposed Aggregate Patio | 192 sq ft Β· River rock or pea gravel exposed | $1,920 β $2,688 |
| Salt Finish Patio | 192 sq ft Β· Non-slip, popular for pool areas | $1,728 β $2,304 |
| Stamped Concrete Patio | 192 sq ft Β· Pattern + color hardener | $2,688 β $3,840 |
| Covered Lanai / Screened Enclosure Slab | Per sq ft Β· 4β³ standard Β· Indoor-spec finish | $9 β $14/sq ft |
| Patio + Pergola Footing Package | Slab + 4 concrete footings for pergola posts | Patio price + $600β$1,200 |
| Outdoor Kitchen Footing Slab | 12-inch-deep reinforced footing pad | $800 β $2,400 |
| Integral Color Add-On | Per sq ft Β· Mixed throughout full depth | +$1.50 β $3.00/sq ft |
| Patio Extension / Widening | Per sq ft added Β· Expansion joint at seam | $9 β $13/sq ft |
| Existing Concrete Demo + Haul | Per sq ft removed Β· Thickness matters | $1.00 β $2.50/sq ft |
| HOA Documentation Package | Drawings, material board, ARC submission | $0 β included |
| Duval County Permit (when required) | Coordination + permit fee reimbursed | Pass-through cost |
Always included in every Jaxterra patio quote: Site assessment, subgrade probe, root proximity check, drainage slope verification, compacted limerock base (4β³ minimum), rebar on 18β³ centers elevated on chairs, 3,500β4,000 PSI ready-mix pour, finish of your choice, control joints cut within 24 hours, curing compound applied same day. Quoted separately (disclosed in writing before work begins): Tree root removal, existing concrete demolition, retaining walls, French drain installation, HOA-mandated color testing fees, permit fees. Get your written estimate β
Do You Need a Permit for a Concrete Patio in Jacksonville FL?
In unincorporated Duval County, a ground-level concrete patio that does not alter existing drainage patterns and stays within the standard setbacks generally does not require a building permit β but this is not a blanket rule. Permit requirements in Jacksonville depend on several factors:
- Patio size: Larger patios that require site plan review or alter drainage may trigger a permit requirement under the Jacksonville Building Inspection Division (BID).
- Attached structures: Any concrete slab that is part of a screened enclosure, covered lanai, pergola with a permanent roof, or room addition requires a permit. The slab and the structure are reviewed together.
- Drainage alteration: If the patio changes stormwater runoff patterns in a way that impacts neighboring properties, a permit and drainage plan are required.
- Separate municipalities: Properties in Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, Jacksonville Beach, and the Town of Baldwin are NOT under Duval County’s jurisdiction β they each have their own building departments with separate permit requirements.
- St. Johns County (Nocatee, Ponte Vedra): Governed by St. Johns County Building Department, not Jacksonville BID. Ground-level patios under a certain square footage often don’t require permits in St. Johns, but HOA approval is almost always required regardless.
The rule we follow: We determine permit requirements as part of every site assessment. If there is any ambiguity, we contact the relevant building department before quoting. Starting work without first applying for a required permit is unlawful in Jacksonville and subject to a $250 fine per Duval County ordinance β plus potential stop-work orders that delay your project significantly.
Source: Jacksonville Building Inspection Division (BID), Planning and Development Department, 214 N. Hogan St., Jacksonville FL 32202 Β· coj.net/building-inspection
Which Patio Finish Is Right for Your Jacksonville Home?
The right finish depends on your HOA rules, sun exposure, barefoot comfort, budget, and intended use. Here’s what each finish actually does in Jacksonville’s subtropical environment β not just what it looks like in a brochure.
Broom Finish
The workhorse of Jacksonville concrete patios. A broom dragged across the surface while the concrete is still plastic creates a linear, slip-resistant texture that holds up exceptionally well in subtropical UV. No HOA in Duval or St. Johns County has ever rejected a broom finish. Lowest maintenance of any finish β sweep or pressure-wash, reseal every 2β3 years inland, every 18β24 months at coastal addresses. The correct choice when durability per dollar matters more than aesthetics.
Stamped Concrete
Patterns pressed into wet concrete before final set β ashlar slate, cobblestone, wood plank, Saltillo tile, and running bond brick are the most-requested in Jacksonville. Critical Jacksonville requirement: color hardener must be UV-stable iron oxide pigment, not organic dye. Organic pigments fade within 18β24 months under Jacksonville’s subtropical sun β this is the most common stamped concrete complaint we see when assessing competitor work. HOA approval in Nocatee CDD, Deerwood, and Sawgrass Players Club typically requires color board and pattern sample submission. Anti-slip sealer additive is non-negotiable on any stamped pool deck or exterior patio.
Exposed Aggregate
River rock, pea gravel, or regional aggregate exposed by surface-washing the cement paste before final hardening. The aggregate texture is naturally slip-resistant without requiring an anti-slip sealer additive. Excellent in heavily shaded areas β like patios under live oak canopy in Mandarin or Riverside β where moss and algae growth on smooth broom-finish concrete becomes a maintenance issue. Hides surface staining better than plain concrete, making it popular for entertainment areas where BBQ grease and red wine are occupational hazards.
Salt Finish
Rock salt pressed into the fresh concrete surface, then washed away before hardening, leaves a subtle pitted texture that is both visually attractive and slip-resistant when wet. Especially popular for pool surrounds in Jacksonville Beach, Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, and Ponte Vedra β the pitted surface stays cooler underfoot than smooth concrete in full subtropical sun. Coastal addresses require a chloride-resistant silane-siloxane sealer regardless of finish type. Not recommended for areas where foot traffic will involve sharp heels that can chip the soft pitted surface over time.
Integral Color
Iron oxide pigment mixed throughout the full slab depth before pouring β color is present from top to bottom, so surface wear never reveals a gray base. The most requested colors in Jacksonville: buff (matches the existing stucco of most Southside and Mandarin homes), charcoal (contemporary; complements Nocatee’s architectural palette), and terracotta (works with the Spanish Mediterranean style common in Ponte Vedra and San Marco). Always specify UV-stable iron oxide β never organic pigment β for exterior Jacksonville applications.
UV-Resistant Sealing at 28 Days
Every patio we install receives a UV-resistant penetrating sealer application at exactly 28 days post-pour β after full design-strength cure. Inland Jacksonville addresses (Mandarin, Southside, Arlington, Riverside, Northside): silane-siloxane penetrating sealer, reapplied every 2β3 years. Coastal addresses (Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, Jacksonville Beach, Ponte Vedra, Sawgrass, and any address within 5 miles of tidal water): chloride-barrier silane-siloxane spec, reapplied every 18β24 months. We provide a written maintenance schedule with every completed project.
The 4 Types of Concrete Patio Design
Beyond finish choice, patios divide into four layout types based on how the space connects to your home and yard.
1. Attached Patio
Poured directly against the home’s exterior wall, most common for standard backyard entertaining space. $8-$11/sq ft.
2. Covered Lanai Slab
Designed for a screen enclosure structure, with anchor bolt placement and drain box coordination. $9-$14/sq ft.
3. Detached/Freestanding Patio
A separate slab elsewhere in the yard β fire pit area, garden seating β not connected to the home’s foundation.
4. Multi-Level Patio
Stepped or terraced design for sloped lots, common in areas like Ortega and San Marco with river-adjacent grade changes.
The Real Benefits and Resale Value of a Concrete Patio
ROI data on patios varies significantly by design scope β we’ll give you the honest range, not just the best-case number.
Strong ROI for Simple Designs
National Association of Realtors data shows simple, well-executed patios can recover 80-95% of installation cost at resale. The 2026 Cost vs Value Report notes upscale/high-end patios show a much lower ~35% ROI β design scope matters more than square footage.
Adds 8-10% to Home Value
Multiple industry sources place a well-designed patio’s value contribution at 8-10% of overall home value, driven by its broad buyer appeal and low ongoing maintenance versus a wood deck.
Lower Maintenance Than Wood Decking
No staining, no board replacement, no rot risk β a concrete patio’s maintenance burden is limited to periodic sealing, a genuine advantage over wood in Jacksonville’s humidity.
Foundation for Higher-ROI Additions
Outdoor kitchens built on a properly engineered patio slab can see 100-200% ROI per multiple industry sources β the patio itself is often the necessary first step for these higher-return additions.
Design Versatility
Broom, stamped, exposed aggregate, and salt finishes let a patio match any architectural style, unlike the more limited palette of composite decking.
Usable Living Space Addition
A patio functionally extends your home’s livable square footage for entertaining β a factor buyers consistently value even where it isn’t formally counted as interior square footage.
Why Concrete Patios Fail Faster in Jacksonville
Jacksonville’s combination of geological, climatic, and biological factors creates four documented concrete failure modes. Most out-of-market contractors and even some local ones don’t engineer against all four β because they’ve never had to explain to a homeowner in Mandarin why their patio cracked in Year 3.
β¬ Failure Mode 1 β Sandy Silica Subgrade (The Foundation of the Problem)
Jacksonville sits atop fine silica sand β Ortega Formation and Hawthorn Group geology β that is inherently unstable as a concrete subbase. Unlike the clay-dominated soils of Central and North Florida, Jacksonville’s sand offers almost no bearing capacity in its native state. Under load cycles from foot traffic, vehicle overhang, and rain infiltration, it migrates, creates voids, and allows slabs to bridge over empty space before cracking under their own weight.
The fix: Minimum 4 inches of compacted Florida limerock (crushed limestone, the regional standard) in two lifts, compacted to 95% Modified Proctor density before any concrete is placed. This is mandatory on every Jaxterra patio β it is not optional and it is not a cost we negotiate away.
π³ Failure Mode 2 β Live Oak and Southern Magnolia Root Systems
Jacksonville’s urban canopy is dominated by Live Oak (Quercus virginiana) and Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora), both of which have aggressive, shallow lateral root systems β the most damaging in the Southeast United States. Live oak roots routinely extend 2β3 times the drip line radius and grow at depths of 12β24 inches, directly within the zone where concrete patios are founded. Neighborhoods with the highest root heave risk: Riverside, Avondale (historic live oak canopy), Mandarin (established live oak corridors along Mandarin Road and San Jose Boulevard), and San Marco.
Our protocol: Root proximity assessment at every site visit. We measure from tree trunk to patio edge and assess root exposure depth. In high-risk zones, we recommend root barriers at the slab perimeter and document our assessment in writing for the homeowner.
βοΈ Failure Mode 3 β Subtropical UV at 30.3Β° North Latitude
Jacksonville sits at 30.33Β° North β the same latitude as Cairo, Egypt and Lhasa, Tibet. At this latitude, UV Index regularly reaches 9β11+ from April through September, which is “Very High” to “Extreme” on the WHO scale. This UV intensity degrades concrete sealers 40β60% faster than temperate US climates. Low-grade acrylic sealers fail in 12β18 months in Jacksonville’s outdoor exposure.
The consequences: Failed sealer lets water in, which softens the surface, accelerates carbonation, and allows chloride ions to reach rebar at coastal addresses. Our spec: UV-resistant penetrating silane-siloxane sealer applied at 28 days β not brushable acrylic, not a spray-on coating. A penetrating sealer that chemically bonds to the concrete and provides 24β36 months of effective protection inland, 18β24 months coastal.
What Every Jaxterra Patio Includes to Counter This
- 4β³ minimum compacted limerock base in two lifts β verified with compaction testing
- Root proximity assessment documented in writing before quote is issued
- Root barrier recommendation (and installation option) in high-risk zones
- 3,500β4,000 PSI ready-mix concrete β PSI specified in every written quote
- #3 rebar on 18β³ centers elevated on chairs β never resting on soil
- Drainage slope set to minimum 1/8β³/ft, verified with transit level before pour
- Curing compound applied immediately after finishing β never skipped in Jacksonville’s heat
- Control joints cut within 6β24 hours of pour at maximum 8β10 ft spacing
- UV-resistant sealer at 28 days (chloride-barrier spec for coastal addresses)
- Written maintenance schedule provided on project completion
Concrete Lanai Slabs and Screened Enclosure Floors in Jacksonville FL
The covered lanai β screened-in outdoor living space β is the dominant outdoor living format in Jacksonville FL homes. Builders typically pour a minimal slab as part of original construction. Homeowners adding a screen enclosure, expanding an existing lanai, or replacing a cracked lanai floor have specific requirements that differ from open patio work.
Lanai Slab Thickness β 4β³ Standard, 5β³ for Enclosure Loads
A standard open patio runs 4 inches of concrete. A screened enclosure slab in Jacksonville should be 4β5 inches to carry the weight of the aluminum screen enclosure structure and resist the racking loads from 130 mph inland wind speed requirement (150 mph within 1 mile of tidal water). The enclosure contractor will require a certain slab thickness and bearing capacity β confirm this before your concrete contractor quotes. We coordinate with enclosure contractors regularly.
Drain Box Placement β Critical Inside Screened Enclosures
Inside a screened enclosure, rainfall accumulates differently β screen panels direct water to the frame’s drip edge, which can dump large volumes onto the slab perimeter. We install drain boxes at enclosure corner posts and at downspout termination points within the lanai footprint. Failing to plan drainage inside a screened enclosure is the #1 reason homeowners call us to repair a builder-poured lanai slab that’s been holding water for years.
Anchor Bolt Placement for Enclosure Posts
Screen enclosure contractors require anchor bolt placement in specific locations within the concrete slab β typically J-bolts or anchor bolts at post locations per the engineered enclosure drawings. This means the concrete contractor and enclosure contractor must coordinate before the slab is poured. We attend this coordination call or meeting as part of every lanai slab project β post locations are marked on the slab before pouring begins.
Finish Selection for Covered vs Open Lanai Areas
Covered lanai areas protected from direct rain get a different finish recommendation than open patio areas exposed to the elements. Covered areas can use a broomed finish or even a troweled finish if interior-style appearance is desired. Open areas adjacent to pool decks get slip-resistant finishes β broom, salt, or exposed aggregate. We match the finish to the use zone and discuss this during the site assessment.
Permit Requirements for Screened Enclosure Slabs
Any concrete slab associated with a permitted screened enclosure structure in Jacksonville requires a building permit as part of the enclosure permit. The slab is inspected as part of the enclosure inspection sequence β foundation inspection before pour, final inspection after enclosure completion. We coordinate with the Building Inspection Division on every lanai slab project that involves a screened structure.
Lanai Slab Cost in Jacksonville FL 2026
A covered lanai slab in Jacksonville FL costs $9β$14 per square foot installed in 2026, slightly higher than open patio work due to the anchor bolt coordination, drain box placement, and permit coordination involved. A standard 16Γ24 ft lanai slab (384 sq ft) runs $3,456β$5,376. Expanding an existing lanai adds $10β$13/sq ft for the new area, with an expansion joint placed at the connection to the existing slab.
Do You Need HOA Approval for a Concrete Patio?
If your property is in any community governed by a Homeowners Association in Jacksonville FL, yes β virtually always. HOA Architectural Review Committee (ARC) approval is a separate requirement from any Duval County or municipal building permit. Both may be required on the same project. HOA approval must typically be obtained and documented before work begins.
- What HOAs review: Patio footprint and setbacks from property lines, finish type and color (many specify only broom or exposed aggregate; stamped concrete often requires color board submission), drainage impact on adjacent lots, any attached structures (pergolas, outdoor kitchens), and whether the project connects to or modifies the existing landscaping plan.
- Typical review timelines: Most Jacksonville HOA ARC committees meet monthly. Nocatee CDD (Ponte Vedra) and Sawgrass Players Club have monthly cycles β missing a submission deadline means waiting the full following month. Deerwood, Deercreek, and Bartram Park HOAs typically review within 2β3 weeks. Fleming Island Plantation (Clay County) runs 3β4 weeks. Always allow 3β6 weeks from submission to approval before scheduling your pour.
- What happens without HOA approval: HOAs can require mandatory removal of unapproved concrete improvements at the homeowner’s full expense, plus ongoing fines while the violation exists. We’ve seen homeowners pay $4,000β$8,000 to demolish a patio they just paid to install because they skipped the ARC process.
- What Jaxterra provides: HOA documentation package including site plan with patio dimensions, finish specification sheet, and material color samples β all included in our project cost at no additional charge. We’ve submitted to ARC committees at Nocatee CDD, Deerwood, Deercreek, Fleming Island Plantation, Bartram Park, Julington Creek Plantation, Eagle Landing, Osprey Cove, Oakleaf Plantation, and Sawgrass Players Club.
Jaxterra Concrete Contractors handles HOA documentation as part of every project. We prepare the site plan, finish spec sheet, and material color board β you submit it to your ARC or we can submit on your behalf. This is included in your project price, not a separate fee.
What Are the Economic Risks of a Bad Patio Decision in Jacksonville?
A patio’s ROI depends heavily on getting the fundamentals right β get them wrong, and the same square footage can become a liability instead of an asset.
π 1. Over-Designing Erodes ROI
The 2026 Cost vs Value Report shows high-end/upscale patios recover roughly 35% of cost β dramatically less than the 80-95% simple patios achieve. Elaborate multi-level designs with premium stone-look stamping can cost 2-3x a simple broom-finish patio while adding proportionally less resale value.
βοΈ 2. HOA Fines for Unapproved Footprint or Finish
Most Jacksonville HOAs require ARC approval for patio size, setback, and finish/color β skipping this can trigger mandatory removal at the homeowner’s expense plus ongoing fines, the same $4,000-$8,000 pattern documented across other concrete projects.
π³ 3. Root Heave Repair Costs Compound Over Time
A patio poured too close to a live oak without root barrier installation will need root heave repair within 5-10 years β a $1,500-$5,000 correction that a $15-30/linear ft root barrier at installation would have prevented.
π§ 4. Drainage Mistakes Damage the Home Foundation
A patio sloped toward the house instead of away from it directs water against your foundation β a mistake that can escalate from a cosmetic patio issue into a structural foundation repair costing far more than the original patio.
Why Jacksonville Homeowners Trust Jaxterra With Their Patio
A patio is a long-term investment in how you use your home. Trust comes down to whether the drainage and root assessment are done right.
Drainage Verified with a Transit Level
Slope away from the structure confirmed before any concrete is placed β not estimated by eye.
Root Proximity Assessed On-Site
Live oak and magnolia root risk evaluated during the free assessment, with root barrier recommendations in writing.
Written Quote, HOA Documentation Included
Site plan, finish spec, and color board prepared at no additional charge for HOA ARC submission.
Licensed Florida Contractor, DBPR
Direct employees only β no subcontractors β eliminating lien risk under Florida Chapter 713.
10-15% Deposit Cap
Compliant with Florida Statute 489.126 β full payment only after you inspect and approve completed work.
Since 2017 in Northeast Florida
Years of Jacksonville-specific patio, lanai, and HOA experience across Duval, St. Johns, and Clay Counties.
Concrete Patio vs Pavers vs Wood Deck β Compared
Most concrete contractors will tell you concrete wins every comparison. We’ll tell you the truth β including the scenarios where concrete is not the right answer for your specific Jacksonville property.
| Factor | Concrete (Jaxterra) | Concrete Pavers | Wood / Composite Deck |
|---|---|---|---|
| Installed cost (Jacksonville 2026) | $8β$15/sq ft | $15β$30/sq ft | $20β$38/sq ft composite |
| 30-year total cost (material + maintenance) | Lowest β one pour, 2β3yr sealing | Medium β unit replacement, polymeric sand every 3β5yr | Highest β wood replaces in 15β20yr, composite fades & warps |
| Jacksonville sandy subgrade suitability | Excellent with limerock base | Excellent β units flex with movement | N/A β elevated |
| Root heave in Mandarin / Riverside | Risk β slab cracks if roots grow under | Better β pavers can be lifted and reset | N/A β elevated above roots |
| HOA acceptance in Jacksonville communities | Universal β no HOA has ever rejected concrete | Universal β widely accepted | Varies β some HOAs restrict decks |
| Coastal chloride resistance | With chloride-barrier sealer | Excellent β no steel to rust | Poor β salt air degrades wood/composite faster |
| Flood zone suitability (AE zones) | Permitted concrete has specific requirements | Similar permit requirements | Elevated decks may be preferred |
| Outdoor kitchen integration | Best β monolithic slab carries full appliance loads | Good β needs reinforced pad under appliances | Requires separate footing penetration |
| Heat underfoot (JulyβAugust) | Hot β use light-colored finish | Similar to concrete | Composite stays cooler |
| Repair if damaged | Crack repair visible; partial replace possible | Individual pavers lifted & replaced β invisible | Board replacement visible but DIY-able |
| DIY maintenance | Easy β pressure wash, reseal every 2β3yr | Medium β polymeric sand reapplication | Medium to high β annual sealing/staining |
Our Honest Take
Concrete is the best value patio surface for most Jacksonville properties with manageable root proximity and standard drainage. If your lot has significant root heave history, is in an AE flood zone, or is heavily shaded causing consistent moss growth on flat surfaces, we will tell you that during the site assessment β even if it means recommending pavers or a raised deck instead. Our reputation is built on honest assessments, not on selling concrete to every situation.
What Happens on Patio Pour Day β Hour by Hour
Most contractors describe the installation process as 6 generic steps. What homeowners actually want to know is what pour day looks, sounds, and feels like β and what they should and shouldn’t do. Here’s the real timeline for a standard Jacksonville concrete patio installation.
Best Time of Year to Pour a Concrete Patio
Jacksonville’s subtropical climate makes timing your concrete patio pour more consequential than in most US markets.
| Month(s) | Conditions | Rating | Jaxterra Protocol |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan β Feb | High 60sβlow 70s. Low humidity. No thunderstorm window. Occasional freeze risk. | IDEAL | 7 AM start. Monitor overnight lows β use insulating blankets below 36Β°F. Extended cure: add 2β4 days per milestone. |
| Mar β Apr | Warming quickly. 70sβlow 80s. Humidity climbing. | EXCELLENT | 7 AM start. Watch Weather.gov for fronts β reschedule if storm within 48 hrs. |
| May | 80s daily. Humidity high. Afternoon storm window beginning. | GOOD | 6:30 AM start. Watch afternoon radar from 11 AM forward. |
| Jun β Sep | 89β94Β°F highs. Afternoon thunderstorms 2β5 PM most days. Tropical potential AugβSep. | MANAGEABLE | 6:30 AM mandatory start. Concrete + curing compound done by 12β1 PM. No pour if tropical watch within 72 hrs. |
| October | Transition month. Thunderstorm frequency declining. | VERY GOOD | 7 AM start after Oct 15. Most productive month β book early. |
| Nov β Dec | 60sβ70s daily. Minimal thunderstorm risk. Low humidity. | EXCELLENT | 7 AM start. Slow cure = less bleed water, more working time. |
Outdoor Kitchen, Pergola, and Fire Pit Footings
A concrete patio is rarely just a slab β it’s the foundation for the outdoor living space that gets built on and around it.
Outdoor Kitchen Footings
A full outdoor kitchen weighs 800β2,500 lbs. A standard 4-inch slab is designed for foot traffic, not concentrated point loads. We pour a thickened-edge or separate pad β typically 6β8 inches thick with #4 rebar β as part of the patio installation.
Pergola Post Footings
A pergola must meet Florida Building Code wind resistance β 130 mph inland, 150 mph within 1 mile of tidal water. Footings run 12β18 inches diameter, 24β36 inches deep. Post spacing and footing size should be specified by the pergola designer before we quote.
Fire Pit Ring Pads
A concrete fire pit ring sits on a separate pad, typically 6 ft diameter and 6 inches thick, poured monolithically with the patio. We maintain a 6-inch clearance with an expansion joint for thermal movement. Gas or electrical conduit is sleeved through the slab before the pour.
Concrete Seat Walls
Seat walls require a continuous footing poured below the slab β typically 8 inches wide and 12 inches deep β separate from the patio slab to carry masonry loads. We coordinate seat wall and patio construction simultaneously when both are planned.
Patio-to-Pool-Deck Transition
When a patio abuts a pool deck, the two slabs must be separated by an expansion joint β never monolithically connected, since differential thermal movement and pool chemistry cause cracking otherwise. We seal with polyurethane joint filler that flexes while remaining watertight.
Outdoor Shower Pads
Popular at Beaches addresses. Requires a center drain, slight slope, and an open aggregate finish to prevent slipping. We coordinate with the plumbing contractor on drain placement before the pour β the rough-in must be in place first.
Our 6-Step Concrete Patio Installation Process
Free On-Site Assessment β Not a Phone Quote
We visit your property. Probe the subgrade for void depth and consistency. Measure root proximity and identify tree species. Verify existing drainage patterns with a hand level. Note HOA community and setback requirements. Measure the patio footprint accurately. Send you the written quote within 24 hours.
HOA and Permit Coordination
We determine permit requirements by contacting the relevant building department β not guessing. We prepare your HOA documentation package: site plan, finish spec sheet, color board, and drainage narrative. We track the ARC review calendar and notify you of the approval timeline before scheduling the pour.
Excavation, Subgrade Prep, and Limerock Base
Excavate to design depth, remove organic material, compact the native subgrade. Place limerock base in two lifts, compacting each to 95% density. Set grade stakes to verify drainage slope. Call Sunshine State One-Call (811) at least 72 hours before excavation β required by law.
Form Setting and Rebar Placement
Forms set to design perimeter, level-checked and braced. #3 rebar placed on 18-inch centers in both directions, elevated on plastic chairs. Thickened edges formed at perimeter if required. Anchor bolts or conduit sleeves set for pergola, outdoor kitchen, or electrical circuits.
Pour, Finish, and Curing Compound β Same Day
3,500β4,000 PSI ready-mix slump-tested on arrival. Placed by chute or pump, screeded, bull-floated, edged, and finished to spec. Curing compound applied immediately after finishing. Control joints saw-cut within 6β24 hours. 6:30 AM start mandatory JuneβSeptember.
Final Walkthrough, Lien Waiver, and 28-Day Sealing
You inspect the completed patio with us before final payment. Signed lien waiver confirming all materials and labor paid in full. Sealer appointment scheduled at 28 days. Written maintenance schedule delivered via email.
Concrete Patio Installation Across Jacksonville FL
Every Jacksonville neighborhood has its own soil profile, tree canopy, HOA requirements, and permit jurisdiction. Our site teams have worked in all of them.
Mandarin (32223, 32257)
Live oak root assessment on every project Β· Highest root heave risk in Jax
Southside / Deerwood (32256)
Deerwood HOA ARC experience Β· Monthly review cycle
Nocatee / St. Johns (32081)
Nocatee CDD ARC monthly cycle Β· St. Johns County permits
Ponte Vedra Beach (32082)
Sawgrass Players Club Β· Chloride spec sealer Β· St. Johns licensed
Atlantic Beach (32233)
Separate municipal permit office Β· Chloride-barrier sealer mandatory
Neptune Beach (32266)
Neptune Beach Building Dept Β· Salt finish popular for pool decks
Jacksonville Beach (32250)
Jax Beach Building Dept Β· 150 mph wind spec near tidal water
Riverside & Avondale (32204)
Historic Preservation Commission Β· Dense live oak canopy Β· Root barriers often needed
San Marco (32207)
Southbank premium market Β· Older lot profiles Β· Root assessment critical
Arlington (32211, 32225)
High replacement rate Β· Many 1960sβ1980s original slabs
Northside / Oceanway (32218)
NAS Jacksonville area Β· Standard Duval County permits
Orange Park / Fleming Island
Clay County licensed Β· Fleming Island Plantation HOA experience
Ortega (32210)
Waterfront properties Β· Chloride consideration for river proximity
Bartram Park / Durbin Crossing
St. Johns County Β· Active HOA review processes
Oakleaf Plantation (32065)
Clay County Β· Oakleaf Plantation HOA ARC experience
Amelia Island / Fernandina Beach
Nassau County Β· Coastal spec sealer Β· Call for availability
Can I Pour My Own Concrete Patio, or Do I Need a Professional?
Small patios are more DIY-feasible than driveways, but the fundamentals still determine 25-year performance.
β Reasonable DIY Scope
A small (under 100 sq ft), simple broom-finish patio with no drainage complexity or root proximity concerns is achievable for an experienced DIYer with proper base compaction equipment.
β οΈ Requires Careful Planning
Anything near a tree, on a slope, or larger than 200 sq ft benefits from professional drainage and root assessment β mistakes here aren’t visible until years later.
π« Requires a Professional
Covered lanai slabs (anchor bolt coordination with the enclosure contractor), any HOA-regulated community, and stamped or decorative finishes all require professional experience and equipment.
What Factors Affect Concrete Patio Cost in Jacksonville?
If two Jacksonville patio quotes differ significantly, here’s what’s actually driving the difference.
π΄ Factors That Increase Cost
- Stamped or exposed aggregate finish (+$2-9/sq ft)
- Root barrier installation near mature trees
- Existing concrete demolition
- Multi-level or terraced design
- Covered lanai anchor bolt coordination
- Coastal chloride-barrier sealer spec
- HOA-mandated design resubmission after rejection
- Outdoor kitchen footing integration
π’ Factors That Reduce Cost
- Simple broom finish, single level
- New construction pour β no demolition
- No trees within root-risk proximity
- Standard rectangular footprint
- Inland address β standard sealer
- Combining with an adjacent driveway pour
- Off-peak season scheduling (Nov-Feb)
- No HOA color board resubmission needed
Where This Page’s Data Comes From
Every technical, legal, and ROI claim on this page is sourced to a named standard or study.
- National Association of Realtors β Remodeling Impact Report: Outdoor Features
- 2026 Cost vs Value Report (Zonda/costvsvalue.com)
- ACI 318/360R β slab-on-ground design standards
- ASTM C143 β concrete slump testing standard
- Florida Statute 489.126 β contractor deposit law
- Florida Statutes Chapter 713 β Construction Lien Law
- ISA (International Society of Arboriculture) β root pruning standards
- Florida Building Code β permit and drainage provisions
How Jaxterra Compares to a Typical Jacksonville Patio Contractor
Not a knock on every contractor in Duval County β but these are the specific gaps we see most often when homeowners show us a competitor’s quote for patio work.
| What to Check | Typical Jacksonville Contractor | Jaxterra Concrete Contractors |
|---|---|---|
| Quote method | Phone estimate or drive-by guess | On-site assessment, always |
| PSI specified in writing | Often omitted | Always β 3,500β4,000 PSI |
| Limerock base depth stated | Rarely specified | 4″ minimum, written into quote |
| Root proximity assessment | Not typically done | Standard on every site visit |
| Lanai / enclosure coordination | Rarely addressed | Anchor bolts & drain boxes coordinated |
| HOA documentation package | Homeowner’s responsibility | Prepared & included at no charge |
| Coastal chloride sealer spec | Rarely differentiated | Coastal vs. inland spec, always |
| Deposit required | Sometimes 30β50%+ | Capped at 10β15% |
| Subcontracted labor | Common | Direct employees only |
| Lien waiver on completion | Rarely offered proactively | Signed & provided every time |
Tools and Equipment on Every Jaxterra Patio Project
Transit Level
Verifies drainage slope away from the home before any concrete is placed.
Slump Cone (ASTM C143)
Tests concrete consistency on every truck delivery.
Plate Compactor
Compacts limerock base to 95% Modified Proctor density.
Bull Float & Darby
Embeds aggregate and brings cement paste to the surface for finishing.
Early-Entry Concrete Saw
Cuts control joints within 6-24 hours of pour.
Laser Distance Meter
Measures exact square footage on-site for accurate written quotes.
A Real Jaxterra Patio Quote β Start to Finish
A composite example based on a typical Southside covered lanai project.
| 4″ limerock base, #3 rebar, 3,500 PSI broom finish | $2,563 |
| Anchor bolt coordination with enclosure contractor | Included |
| Drain box at enclosure corner post | $280 |
| Deerwood HOA ARC documentation | Included |
| Total Installed Price | $2,843 |
Concrete Patio Terms Every Jacksonville Homeowner Should Know
Contractors use these terms in quotes. Knowing what they mean helps you evaluate any bid β not just ours.
PSI (Pounds per Square Inch)
The compressive strength rating of concrete. Jacksonville patios need 3,500 PSI minimum; enclosure and kitchen-load areas need 4,000 PSI.
Limerock Base
Compacted crushed limestone placed beneath concrete to stabilize Jacksonville’s sandy silica subgrade. 4β³ minimum for residential patios.
Control Joint
An intentional groove cut into concrete to direct where shrinkage cracks form, rather than letting them appear randomly across the slab.
Silane-Siloxane Sealer
A penetrating, UV-resistant sealer that chemically bonds to concrete β the spec we use over cheaper brushable acrylic coatings.
DBPR License
Florida’s Department of Business & Professional Regulation contractor license. Verifiable at myfloridalicense.com before hiring anyone.
Florida Chapter 713
The state’s Construction Lien Law β allows unpaid subcontractors to lien your property even if you paid the general contractor in full.
ARC Approval
Architectural Review Committee approval β required by most Jacksonville HOAs before any visible patio or hardscape work begins.
Chloride-Barrier Sealer
A coastal-spec sealer that resists salt-air chloride penetration β required at addresses within 5 miles of tidal water.
Curing Compound
A liquid membrane sprayed on fresh concrete to retain moisture, allowing proper strength development over the 28-day cure period.
Explore Our Other Jacksonville Concrete Services
Building a full outdoor living space or need adjacent concrete work? Here’s what else we cover.
Concrete Driveway Installation
$6β$12/sq ft. Full pricing, permit rules, and 9-step process for Jacksonville driveways.
Concrete Pool Deck Installation
$8β$15/sq ft. Chloride-resistant sealer specs and slip-resistant finishes for Jacksonville pool decks.
Concrete Repair & Assessment
Honest repair-vs-replace guidance, void detection, and crack diagnosis for Jacksonville concrete.
Stamped Concrete Installation
$14β$20/sq ft. Pattern gallery, color science, and DCOF slip-safety data.
Concrete Patio Jacksonville FL β Everything Homeowners Ask
Get Your Free Concrete Patio Estimate β Jacksonville FL
We visit your property, probe the subgrade, check root proximity, verify drainage, note your HOA requirements, and deliver a written itemized quote within 24 hours. No pressure. No deposit until you approve every line item.
