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Asphalt Prices in Florida 2026

Per ton cost ranges across Florida's major metros, plus seasonality, code requirements, and supplier directories.

Direct Answer

In Florida, asphalt averages $128.70 per ton as of 2026, with metro pricing ranging from $128.70 to $148.01 per ton. Florida pricing runs about 10% above the national midpoint of $117.00 per ton.

How Much Does Asphalt Cost in Florida?

Asphalt averages $128.70 per ton in Florida as of 2026 research, with metro-level pricing ranging from $128.70 (lowest-cost metro) to $148.01 (highest-cost metro). That's a 10% premium over the national midpoint of $117.00 per ton (source; confidence: high). The state midpoint is computed by applying Florida's 1.10× regional adjustment to the national-average dataset documented on our pricing methodology page.

Use the metro table below for finer-grained budgeting — within Florida, the spread between the cheapest and most expensive metro on the same material can run 15-30%.

What Drives Asphalt Pricing in Florida?

Florida pricing runs roughly 10% above the national midpoint, driven entirely by hurricane code requirements rather than labor rates (FL labor is below national). Concrete-block construction is the default residential method statewide, post-Andrew code provisions require epoxy-coated rebar within 1 mile of the coast, and the HVHZ overlay in Miami-Dade and Broward stacks another 10-15% on top.

Climate and supply factors: Hurricane-grade wind requirements drive concrete-block construction over wood-frame on most coastal builds — Florida uses 2-3x the per-house concrete of a comparable mid-Atlantic build. Coastal salt-spray exposure requires epoxy-coated rebar within 1 mile of the ocean per FBC corrosion zones.

Asphalt Prices by Florida's Major Metros

Per-metro estimates apply each metro's population-weighted price tier to the Florida state midpoint. Population figures are 2024 ACS estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau.

MetroPopulationPer Tonvs. State Avg
Miami455K$148.01+15%
Tampa398K$135.14+5%
Orlando316K$135.14+5%
Jacksonville971K$128.70
Fort Lauderdale184K$141.57+10%

When to Buy Asphalt in Florida

Construction season in Florida: Year-round; hurricane season (Jun-Nov) compresses pre-storm deliveries and post-storm rebuild demand creates 20-40% spot-price spikes after named-storm landfall.

Hot-mix asphalt plants typically run April-November and shut down in winter; spring re-opening pricing tends to be the year's lowest while late-summer is the year's highest. For non-emergency work in Florida, ordering during the off-peak window typically saves 5-15% vs. spring/summer peak pricing. Material yards run promotional pricing twice a year — early-spring (Mar-Apr) on bagged products and late-fall (Oct-Nov) on bulk aggregates as plants clear inventory before shutdown.

Climate & Code Considerations for Asphalt in Florida

Frost line: 0 in (statewide — no freeze line per IRC R301.2(3)). Frost line drives footing and base depth on hardscape projects — though it has less direct impact on per-ton asphalt pricing.

State / local code: Florida Building Code (FBC) with the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ) overlay covering Miami-Dade and Broward counties — 175+ mph design wind speed, Notice of Acceptance (NOA) product approvals, and impact-rated openings.

Where to Find Asphalt Suppliers in Florida

Authoritative directories for sourcing ready-mix producers, aggregate quarries, and bagged-product retailers across Florida:

Get quotes from at least three local suppliers — pricing on the same spec varies 10-20% across producers in the same metro. Volume orders (10+ cu yd ready-mix, 20+ tons aggregate, full pallets bagged) typically earn another 5-10% off published quotes.

Calculate Asphalt for Your Project

Use our Asphalt Calculator to estimate quantity, then apply Florida's 1.10× adjustment to the national-average cost displayed on the calculator. The calculator's built-in cost overlay uses national pricing — multiply the displayed total by 1.10 for a Florida-specific estimate, or use the per-metro figures in the table above for tighter budgeting.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does asphalt cost per ton in Florida?

Asphalt averages $128.70 per ton in Florida, with a metro range of $128.70 to $148.01 as of 2026. Florida pricing runs about 10% above the national midpoint.

What is the cheapest Florida metro for asphalt?

Jacksonville typically prices the lowest of the major Florida metros, around $128.70 per ton. Miami typically prices the highest, around $148.01. Differences come from delivery distance to producer plants and metro-area labor rates.

When is the best time of year to buy asphalt in Florida?

Year-round; hurricane season (Jun-Nov) compresses pre-storm deliveries and post-storm rebuild demand creates 20-40% spot-price spikes after named-storm landfall. Hot-mix asphalt plants typically run April-November and shut down in winter; spring re-opening pricing tends to be the year's lowest while late-summer is the year's highest. For non-emergency work, ordering off-peak (late fall in cold-winter states, mid-winter in southern states) typically saves 5-15% vs. spring/summer peak pricing.

What code requirements affect asphalt costs in Florida?

Florida Building Code (FBC) with the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ) overlay covering Miami-Dade and Broward counties — 175+ mph design wind speed, Notice of Acceptance (NOA) product approvals, and impact-rated openings.

Where can I find asphalt suppliers in Florida?

Start with the Florida Concrete & Products Association (FC&PA) member directory, the NRMCA national producer directory filtered to Florida, or the Quikrete dealer locator for bagged products. Get quotes from at least three local suppliers — pricing varies 10-20% across producers in the same metro.

Why is asphalt more expensive in Florida than the national average?

Florida pricing runs roughly 10% above the national midpoint, driven entirely by hurricane code requirements rather than labor rates (FL labor is below national). Concrete-block construction is the default residential method statewide, post-Andrew code provisions require epoxy-coated rebar within 1 mile of the coast, and the HVHZ overlay in Miami-Dade and Broward stacks another 10-15% on top.

Related Pages

Written by Daniel McCarney — AceCalc