
Premier Yuma Concrete is Yuma's concrete contractor for driveways, patios, and sidewalks — with crews who know Yuma's caliche soil and extreme heat, and a track record of projects completed across the Yuma metro.

Yuma's flat lots and stucco-exterior ranch homes are natural fits for a fresh concrete driveway. Our crews account for caliche soil conditions and schedule pours in the early morning hours during summer so the slab cures at full strength before the desert heat arrives. If your driveway has started to spall, crack, or pond water near the garage, it may be time to look at concrete driveway building as a long-term fix.
Yuma gets more than 300 sunny days a year, and most homeowners use their outdoor space year-round. Whether you have a bare dirt backyard or a shade structure with no usable floor, a properly graded concrete patio gives you a surface that handles monsoon runoff, outdoor furniture, and the daily heat without cracking or shifting over time.
Older neighborhoods near downtown Yuma and military housing areas around MCAS Yuma often have aging walkways that have buckled or cracked after decades in the desert sun. We build sidewalks to ADA slope requirements and factor in Yuma's occasional monsoon runoff so water moves off the path instead of sitting on it.
HOA communities in the Foothills and newer Yuma subdivisions often want a finished look that matches the neighborhood style. Stamped concrete lets homeowners choose patterns that mimic stone, slate, or tile at a fraction of the cost of natural materials, and it holds up in Yuma's UV-intense climate when properly sealed.
Pools are common in Yuma because of the relentless summer heat, and a pool deck that absorbs and radiates heat can make the area around your pool uncomfortable. We pour heat-reflective, slip-resistant pool deck surfaces designed for the desert Southwest, and we build them to drain toward the street or yard rather than back toward the pool equipment.
Yuma's growth has pushed new construction into areas with variable caliche and sandy desert soil — conditions that make a properly engineered slab foundation critical. We pull the required City of Yuma permits, coordinate the pre-pour inspection, and place the reinforcing steel correctly for the soil conditions on each specific site.
Yuma averages around 4,000 hours of sunshine per year, placing it among the sunniest cities in the world according to the National Weather Service Yuma. That UV load breaks down surface sealers, fades color, and accelerates hairline cracking on any concrete that has not been properly mixed, poured, and sealed. Concrete contractors who work primarily in cooler or wetter markets often do not design for this level of solar exposure, which is why sealing schedules and mix designs for Yuma projects should look different from the national standard.
Below the surface, Yuma's caliche soil presents a condition most contractors outside the Sonoran Desert have never encountered. Caliche is a calcium carbonate hardpan that can improve base stability in some spots and block drainage in others — on the same property. Monsoon storms, which can drop a significant amount of rain in under an hour on ground that is bone-dry and nearly impermeable, make drainage planning essential for every concrete flatwork project. A poorly graded patio or driveway becomes a water management problem every July and August.
Our team pulls permits through the City of Yuma Development Services office regularly for concrete driveway, patio, and structural projects across the city. We know the review timelines, what inspectors look for at the pre-pour stage, and how to schedule work so permit delays do not push a project past the cooler months. Navigating local permitting efficiently is one of the practical differences between working with a local crew and hiring out.
Yuma's residential areas run from older neighborhoods near the Yuma Territorial Prison State Historic Park on the west end of town, where ranch-style homes from the 1960s and 1970s need concrete updates, to newer master-planned subdivisions extending toward the Fortuna Foothills on the east side, where HOA finish requirements apply. We have worked on driveways and flatwork across all of it — on Military Highway near MCAS Yuma, along 32nd Street, and throughout the residential corridors off Avenue B and Pacific Avenue.
We also serve homeowners in neighboring El Centro, CA, just across the California border — a market with similar desert climate challenges and mid-century housing stock that benefits from the same soil and heat expertise.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and you will hear back within one business day. We do not require a deposit or commitment to schedule a site visit.
We visit your property, assess the soil conditions and drainage, and give you a written estimate with a clear scope of work. The estimate is free, and we walk you through what we found so you understand exactly what you are paying for and why.
Once you approve the estimate, we pull any required City of Yuma permits and schedule the work around the permit timeline and the best seasonal window. Summer jobs get early-morning pour times to protect slab quality.
We complete the work, give you a walkthrough of the finished surface, and explain the curing timeline so you know when to use the space again. You receive guidance on sealing intervals specific to Yuma's UV exposure.
We serve homeowners all across Yuma — from older neighborhoods near downtown to newer subdivisions in the Foothills. No commitment to get a quote, and we reply within one business day.
(928) 955-4994Yuma is a city of roughly 100,000 residents in southwestern Arizona, situated along the Colorado River where it forms the border with California. The city grew steadily through the latter half of the 20th century, and most of its housing stock dates from the 1970s through the 2000s, with older neighborhoods concentrated near downtown and newer subdivisions spreading east toward the Fortuna Foothills and south along the Foothills Boulevard corridor. Yuma is known nationally as one of the sunniest cities on earth, and that identity shapes everything from the landscaping choices homeowners make to the materials contractors use on exterior projects. Single-story stucco ranch homes on flat, gravel-landscaped lots are the dominant residential form throughout the city.
Yuma's economy is anchored by agriculture — Yuma County produces a large share of the nation's winter lettuce and leafy greens — and by Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, which brings a steady rotation of military families to the housing market. The Yuma Crossing National Heritage Area along the riverfront, the Yuma Territorial Prison State Historic Park, and the stretch of Historic Route along the old downtown core give the city a distinct character that residents take pride in. We serve homeowners across all of Yuma's neighborhoods, including areas near the Yuma Palms Regional Center and properties along 4th Avenue and 16th Street. Our neighboring coverage extends to Calexico, CA, another desert border city where similar climate and soil conditions apply.
Professionally poured concrete patios designed for outdoor living.
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Call Premier Yuma Concrete today or submit a free estimate request — we respond within one business day and schedule site visits at your convenience.