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Asphalt Prices in New York 2026

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

Direct Answer

In New York, asphalt averages $146.25 per ton as of 2026, with metro pricing ranging from $131.63 to $190.13 per ton. New York pricing runs about 25% above the national midpoint of $117.00 per ton.

How Much Does Asphalt Cost in New York?

Asphalt averages $146.25 per ton in New York as of 2026 research, with metro-level pricing ranging from $131.63 (lowest-cost metro) to $190.13 (highest-cost metro). That's a 25% premium over the national midpoint of $117.00 per ton (source; confidence: high). The state midpoint is computed by applying New York's 1.25× regional adjustment to the national-average dataset documented on our pricing methodology page.

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

What Drives Asphalt Pricing in New York?

New York pricing runs roughly 25% above the national midpoint, but the state has the widest in-state spread of any covered jurisdiction — NYC and Long Island run 30-40% over upstate Buffalo and Rochester. The 36-48 in frost line drives deeper footings statewide, NYC Construction Codes add prevailing-wage and special-inspection costs that don't apply elsewhere, and Local Law 97 is starting to push embodied-carbon premiums on commercial concrete.

Climate and supply factors: Frost line of 36-48 in drives footings deeper than the national 24 in standard, adding 30-50% concrete on perimeter footings vs. southern states. Cold-weather curing per ACI 306 (heated enclosures, accelerator admixtures, insulating blankets) adds $20-40/cu yd Nov-Mar. NYC five-borough metros run 30%+ over upstate due to delivery logistics and labor.

Asphalt Prices by New York's Major Metros

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

MetroPopulationPer Tonvs. State Avg
New York City8.34M$190.13+30%
Buffalo276K$131.63-10%
Rochester211K$134.55-8%
Albany98K$138.94-5%
Syracuse146K$131.63-10%

When to Buy Asphalt in New York

Construction season in New York: April-November downstate; May-October upstate. Cold-weather concrete (ACI 306) protection adds cost Nov-Mar; Dec-Feb pours rare without enclosures.

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 New York, 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 New York

Frost line: 36-48 in (NYC/Long Island 36 in, upstate/Adirondack 48-60 in). Frost line drives footing and base depth on hardscape projects — though it has less direct impact on per-ton asphalt pricing.

State / local code: New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code (based on IRC/IBC), with the New York City Construction Codes (2022) as a separate stricter overlay for the five boroughs — including special inspections, energy code, and Local Law 97 carbon limits on commercial.

Where to Find Asphalt Suppliers in New York

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

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 New York's 1.25× 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 1.25 for a New York-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 New York?

Asphalt averages $146.25 per ton in New York, with a metro range of $131.63 to $190.13 as of 2026. New York pricing runs about 25% above the national midpoint.

What is the cheapest New York metro for asphalt?

Buffalo typically prices the lowest of the major New York metros, around $131.63 per ton. New York City typically prices the highest, around $190.13. Differences come from delivery distance to producer plants and metro-area labor rates.

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

April-November downstate; May-October upstate. Cold-weather concrete (ACI 306) protection adds cost Nov-Mar; Dec-Feb pours rare without enclosures. 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 New York?

New York State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code (based on IRC/IBC), with the New York City Construction Codes (2022) as a separate stricter overlay for the five boroughs — including special inspections, energy code, and Local Law 97 carbon limits on commercial.

Where can I find asphalt suppliers in New York?

Start with the New York Construction Materials Association (NYCMA) member directory, the NRMCA national producer directory filtered to New York, 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 New York than the national average?

New York pricing runs roughly 25% above the national midpoint, but the state has the widest in-state spread of any covered jurisdiction — NYC and Long Island run 30-40% over upstate Buffalo and Rochester. The 36-48 in frost line drives deeper footings statewide, NYC Construction Codes add prevailing-wage and special-inspection costs that don't apply elsewhere, and Local Law 97 is starting to push embodied-carbon premiums on commercial concrete.

Related Pages

Written by Daniel McCarney — AceCalc