Asphalt Driveway Replacement Cost in Ohio (2026)

Asphalt Driveway Replacement in Ohio runs $3.15–$7.20 per sq ft, with most projects landing near $4.50. Ohio prices run 10% below the national median of $5.00, making it one of the more affordable states for this service.

Ohio 2026 pricing

TierPrice per sq ftWhat you get
Budget $3.15 Entry-tier materials, contractor lower hourly rate
Typical $4.50 Mid-tier materials, established local contractor
Premium $7.20 Premium materials, top-rated installer, custom work

Source: National median $5.00 × BLS Regional Price Parity (2022) applied to Ohio. Last updated 2026-05-25.

Why Ohio pricing looks like this

Midwestern states like Ohio run close to or below national average pricing, with freeze-thaw cycles being the main climate cost driver.

Specific factors that move Ohio pricing relative to the national baseline:

Pricing by major metro in Ohio

Within Ohio, metro-level pricing varies by labor market and cost of living. Multipliers below are applied to the state typical of $4.50.

MetroTypical priceRangeNotes
Columbus $4.59 $3.21–$7.34 Close to state average
Cleveland $4.37 $3.06–$6.98 Close to state average
Cincinnati $4.46 $3.12–$7.13 Close to state average
Toledo $4.14 $2.90–$6.62 8% below state avg
Akron $4.23 $2.96–$6.77 6% below state avg

Metro multipliers from BLS metro-level Regional Price Parity. Always verify with 2–3 local quotes — actual contractor pricing varies ±15% within a metro depending on specific neighborhood, season, and contractor availability.

Estimate your specific asphalt driveway replacement cost in Ohio

Asphalt Driveway Replacement Cost Calculator

Enter your project size and specifics — we'll estimate the total range a local contractor is likely to quote.

Single-car drive ≈ 500–700 sq ft. Double = 1,000–1,400. Long single = 800–1,000.
Estimated total project cost

Calculator defaults to National average. Switch the "Your State" dropdown to Ohio to apply local pricing.

Frequently asked questions about Asphalt Driveway Replacement in Ohio

How long does an asphalt driveway last?
A properly installed and maintained asphalt driveway lasts 15–20 years in temperate climates, 12–15 years in regions with hard winters or hot summers. Seal coating every 2–3 years extends life by 30–40%. Skip seal coating and you're looking at premature cracking within 8 years.
Resurface (overlay) or full replacement — when?
Overlay (2" of new asphalt on top of old) works if cracks are surface-level and the base is solid: $1.50–$3.00/sq ft, saves 50–60% vs full replacement. Full replacement is required if you see alligator cracking, deep potholes, edge crumbling, or pooling water — those signal base failure that no overlay will fix.
How thick should an asphalt driveway be?
Residential standard is 2" of asphalt over a 4–6" compacted gravel base. Heavy vehicles (RV, boat trailer, work trucks) need 3–4" of asphalt and 6–8" of base. Going thicker than spec wastes money — the base depth matters more than asphalt depth for longevity.
When should I seal coat after install?
Wait 6–12 months for the asphalt to fully cure before the first seal coat. After that, reseal every 2–3 years in temperate climates, every 1–2 years in regions with freeze-thaw cycles. A seal coat job runs $0.15–$0.35/sq ft DIY or $0.40–$0.80/sq ft hired.
Asphalt vs concrete — which is better?
Concrete lasts longer (30+ years vs 15–20) but costs $4–$12/sq ft installed — roughly double asphalt. Concrete cracks are harder to repair invisibly; asphalt cracks fill cleanly. In freeze-thaw climates, asphalt flexes better. In hot southern climates, asphalt softens. Choose by climate first, budget second.

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About this data. National baseline of $5 derives from aggregated 2026 quote data across major lead-gen platforms. State-level figures apply Bureau of Labor Statistics Regional Price Parity (2022, all-items) to the national baseline. We refresh quarterly and welcome corrections — email [email protected] if a local quote you received falls materially outside our state range. See full methodology.