Cheap Concreting in Hove
In SA, Hove is part of the Adelaide metro and grouped here with the Coastal South West area. The operators you contact through this page are filtered for concreting, so you can ask about concrete driveways and concrete slabs without starting from a blank search.
Your business, right here
NearMe AdsReach customers searching for concreting near them. Pay per lead, no lock-in.
Concreters covering Hove
We're onboarding providers in your area
Our directory of concreters covering Hove is growing. Leave your details in the quote form and we'll connect you as soon as a provider is available.
Common jobs in Hove
The practical question is not just who is cheapest. It is which concreter has quoted the actual work in Hove: concrete slabs and exposed aggregate, access, timing, materials and clean-up all change the final invoice.
Local concreters in the Coastal South West
For concreting work in Hove, clear local details beat broad promises. Share the suburb, state, service needed and any access issue, then compare the response rather than just the first advertised price.
Popular services in Hove
Related local services in Hove
Some concreters jobs in Hove overlap with nearby home services. If the scope touches another trade, compare the related local options for the same suburb before booking.
Quick answers
How much does a concrete driveway cost?+
Plain concrete driveways commonly run $65 to $90 per square metre, with exposed aggregate and decorative finishes closer to $100 to $150, so a standard driveway often lands between $4,000 and $12,000. Site access, excavation and reinforcement drive the price. Get the thickness and steel specified in the quote.
How thick should a concrete driveway be?+
A residential driveway is typically 100mm thick with reinforcement, and thicker where heavier vehicles are involved. Thickness, a compacted base and steel reinforcement are what stop a driveway cracking under load. Be wary of a cheap quote that skimps on base preparation or steel.
How long before I can use new concrete?+
You can usually walk on new concrete after 24 to 48 hours, but wait about seven days before driving on a new driveway and around 28 days for it to reach full strength. Rushing vehicle traffic onto fresh concrete is a common cause of early cracking.
Do I need council approval for concreting?+
Paths and driveways on private land often do not need approval, but slabs for structures, work in easements, and changes to stormwater or crossovers can require council or water-authority approval. Ask your concreter to confirm before pouring, since removing non-compliant work is expensive.