How Much Does Concrete Cost in Pennsylvania?
Concrete averages $173.25 per cubic yard in Pennsylvania as of 2026 research, with metro-level pricing ranging from $159.39 (lowest-cost metro) to $190.58 (highest-cost metro). That's a 5% premium over the national midpoint of $165.00 per cubic yard (source; confidence: high). The state midpoint is computed by applying Pennsylvania's 1.05× regional adjustment to the national-average dataset documented on our pricing methodology page.
Use the metro table below for finer-grained budgeting — within Pennsylvania, the spread between the cheapest and most expensive metro on the same material can run 15-30%.
What Drives Concrete Pricing in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania pricing runs roughly 5% above the national midpoint — well below neighboring New York (1.25) and New Jersey (1.20) — but with a wide east-west spread: Philadelphia (union labor, NJ/DE metro logistics) runs about 10% over Pittsburgh and 15%+ over rural central PA. Deep 30-42 in frost footings add concrete statewide, while PA's position as a top-tier crushed-stone and cement-producing state keeps raw aggregate and ready-mix competitively priced. There is no statewide local sales tax except the Philadelphia (+2%) and Allegheny County (+1%) add-ons.
Climate and supply factors: Frost line of 30-42 in drives footings well below the national 12-24 in standard, adding 25-45% concrete on perimeter footings vs. southern states. Freeze-thaw cycling across central and western PA requires air-entrained, durable-aggregate mixes (PennDOT Class AA / durability-rated coarse aggregate). Mine subsidence in the anthracite (northeast) and bituminous (southwest) coal regions can require special foundation engineering or DEP subsidence-insurance mapping checks. Erie sees heavy lake-effect snow loads.
Concrete Prices by Pennsylvania's Major Metros
Per-metro estimates apply each metro's population-weighted price tier to the Pennsylvania state midpoint. Population figures are 2024 ACS estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau.
| Metro | Population | Per Cubic yard | vs. State Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia | 1.58M | $190.58 | +10% |
| Pittsburgh | 305K | $173.25 | — |
| Allentown | 126K | $176.72 | +2% |
| Reading | 95K | $164.59 | -5% |
| Erie | 94K | $159.39 | -8% |
When to Buy Concrete in Pennsylvania
Construction season in Pennsylvania: April-November across most of the state; cold-weather concreting (ACI 306 heated enclosures, accelerators, insulating blankets) adds cost Dec-March. Erie and the northern-tier/mountain counties run a shorter May-October window with lake-effect snow disruptions.
Ready-mix pricing peaks in May-July when residential and commercial demand stack; cold-weather pours add curing-protection cost in northern states. For non-emergency work in Pennsylvania, 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 Concrete in Pennsylvania
Frost line: 30-42 in (Philadelphia 30 in, Pittsburgh 36 in, Erie / north-central mountains 42 in). Pennsylvania's frost line drives footings and bases below the frost depth, adding 25-50% more concrete (or aggregate base) to perimeter foundations vs. southern states with no frost requirement.
State / local code: Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (UCC), administered by the Department of Labor & Industry, adopts the International Codes (IRC, IBC, IECC, IPC) statewide — the 2021 I-Codes took effect January 1, 2026, after PA spent years on the 2015/2018 editions. Municipalities either enforce the UCC locally or defer to state / third-party inspection agencies, and may add amendments that don't weaken UCC minimums. Philadelphia (Dept. of Licenses & Inspections) and Pittsburgh (Permits, Licenses & Inspections) run their own code departments under the UCC umbrella.
Where to Source Ready-Mix Concrete in Pennsylvania
Authoritative directories for sourcing ready-mix producers, aggregate quarries, and bagged-product retailers across Pennsylvania:
- Pennsylvania Aggregates & Concrete Association (PACA) member directory
- NRMCA ready-mix producer directory (filter by state)
- Quikrete dealer locator
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 Concrete for Your Project
To budget accurately for your pour, calculate how many cubic yards you need, then apply Pennsylvania's 1.05× 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 1.05 for a Pennsylvania-specific estimate, or use the per-metro figures in the table above for tighter budgeting.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does concrete cost per cubic yard in Pennsylvania?
Concrete averages $173.25 per cubic yard in Pennsylvania, with a metro range of $159.39 to $190.58 as of 2026. Pennsylvania pricing runs about 5% above the national midpoint.
What is the cheapest Pennsylvania metro for concrete?
Erie typically prices the lowest of the major Pennsylvania metros, around $159.39 per cubic yard. Philadelphia typically prices the highest, around $190.58. Differences come from delivery distance to producer plants and metro-area labor rates.
When is the best time of year to buy concrete in Pennsylvania?
April-November across most of the state; cold-weather concreting (ACI 306 heated enclosures, accelerators, insulating blankets) adds cost Dec-March. Erie and the northern-tier/mountain counties run a shorter May-October window with lake-effect snow disruptions. Ready-mix pricing peaks in May-July when residential and commercial demand stack; cold-weather pours add curing-protection cost in northern states. 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 concrete costs in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code (UCC), administered by the Department of Labor & Industry, adopts the International Codes (IRC, IBC, IECC, IPC) statewide — the 2021 I-Codes took effect January 1, 2026, after PA spent years on the 2015/2018 editions. Municipalities either enforce the UCC locally or defer to state / third-party inspection agencies, and may add amendments that don't weaken UCC minimums. Philadelphia (Dept. of Licenses & Inspections) and Pittsburgh (Permits, Licenses & Inspections) run their own code departments under the UCC umbrella.
Where can I find concrete suppliers in Pennsylvania?
Start with the Pennsylvania Aggregates & Concrete Association (PACA) member directory, the NRMCA national producer directory filtered to Pennsylvania, 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 concrete more expensive in Pennsylvania than the national average?
Pennsylvania pricing runs roughly 5% above the national midpoint — well below neighboring New York (1.25) and New Jersey (1.20) — but with a wide east-west spread: Philadelphia (union labor, NJ/DE metro logistics) runs about 10% over Pittsburgh and 15%+ over rural central PA. Deep 30-42 in frost footings add concrete statewide, while PA's position as a top-tier crushed-stone and cement-producing state keeps raw aggregate and ready-mix competitively priced. There is no statewide local sales tax except the Philadelphia (+2%) and Allegheny County (+1%) add-ons.
Related Pages
- All concrete prices by state
- All construction material prices in Pennsylvania
- Concrete prices in New Jersey
- Concrete prices in New York
- Concrete prices in Ohio
- Concrete Calculator
- Pricing methodology & sources
Estimates only. Always verify with your supplier before ordering.
Written by Daniel McCarney — AceCalc