Your driveway and your utility runs are two of the most important and most under-discussed pieces of a new home build. They're also two of the biggest sources of "surprise" cost when they aren't planned for up front.
Below we will go over how we build driveways, what your options are, how utilities get run to your new home, and the things a buyer should think about before signing a contract.
Our standard pricing includes a 50-foot asphalt driveway, meaning we do the grading, the base, compaction, and the asphalt itself. Anything beyond 50 feet is price at $135 per linear foot for additional driveway length, which covers the additional base, asphalt, and the utility extension that usually runs alongside it.
An asphalt driveway is only as good as what's underneath it. The work below the surface is what determines whether the driveway lasts five years or twenty-five.
Grading. We cut and shape the driveway to make sure water sheds off of it.
Some buyers ask whether they can save money by going with a gravel driveway instead of asphalt.The honest answer:
We still do base work either way. Grading, sub-grade prep, class-5 base, and compaction happen regardless. The only step you'd be skipping is the asphalt itself.
Concrete is the other option some buyers ask about. Both work in Minnesota, but they behave differently in our climate:
| Asphalt | Concrete | |
| Up-front cost | Lower | Typically 50% higher |
| Lifespan | 10-20 years | 15-40 years |
| Frost Heave | Flexes - small cracks/ depressions normal | Cracks if heaved or undermined |
| Salt & Deicers | Tolerates it |
Salt should not be used on concrete, it can cause spalling (surface flaking) |
| Snow Melt | Dark color absorbs sun, melts faster | Lighter color, melts slower |
| Maintenance | Sealcoat every 2-3 years, occasional crack fill | Minimal - occasional join sealing |
| Repair | Easier, less expensive, patches are visible | Harder and more expensive, patches are visible |
Our default recommendation is for its better frost-heave behavior, and faster snow melt. Concrete is the right call for buyers who specifically want the longer lifespan and lighter look and are comfortable with the higher up-front cost and understand the effects and damage that salt can do to concrete.
Wait 1 year after install before the first sealcoat, fresh asphalt needs a full warm season to cure.
Length.First 50 feet are included, beyond that is $135 per linear foot (covers base, asphalt, and utility extension).
If your driveway crosses a road ditch ,a culvert is required. The county or township set the spec, usually a specific diameter and length of corrugated pipe. Culvert cost is not included in the standard driveway allowance because it varies by site if one is needed or not.
Bringing utilities to a new home is half engineering, half scheduling. Each utility: electric, natural gas, and communications comes from a different source and is run by a different contractor. The path the utilities take depends on the lot but typically they follow the driveway. When placing the home farther from the road and utilities added costs from the power and gas company are incurred due to the cost of trenching and material needed.
Where the service comes from. The local utility brings power to a point near the property line (the point of service). From there, the wire from that point into the. house is the homeowner's responsibility, which is built into our scope of work. When the house is placed more than 50' from the road added costs are incurred.
If natural gas is available at your lot, it's usually the cheapest source of heat and hot water in Minnesota. If gas isn't available which can be common on acreage, your practical option is propane (a tank on the lot, typically leased).
| Item | Typical Cost |
| Standard 50-ft Asphalt Driveway | Included in Base |
| Extended Driveway w/ Utilities (beyond 50-ft) | $135/ Linear ft |
| Culvert (when required) | Typical cost is $3,500 |
| Concrete Driveway Upgrade | Quoted by lot 45% over asphalt |
Your driveway is the road you drive everyday, in every weather, for the life of the home. Your utilities are the systems that make the home work. Both deserve to be planned, priced, and built carefully, not added in as an afterthought.
Our promise is to put these number on the table up front, build them right the first time, and explain the trade-offs so you can make the call that fits your lot, your home, and your budget.