Home/Methodology
Last full source pass · May 2026

Methodology and sources

Every cost band on this site is triangulated against at least three independent publishers and one trade-body or engineering reference. No band rests on a single source. This page documents the source list, the per-section calculation framework, the refresh cadence, the in-scope and out-of-scope boundaries, and the named limitations that constrain any national-pricing reference.

01 · Primary and named sources

Each row identifies the publisher, the cadence at which we re-read the source, and the specific data we draw from it. Sources are independent of the editorial team here; inclusion is descriptive, not endorsement.

SourceRefresh cadenceWhat we use it for
HomeAdvisor (Angi)Quarterly reviewPer-square-foot national averages and project totals by driveway size. Cross-checked against Forbes Home Advisor and HomeGuide.
Forbes Home AdvisorQuarterly reviewRegional adjustment factors and material-versus-labour cost split. Useful for the upper-bound regional uplift in the Northeast.
Bob VilaTwice-yearly review2-car and 3-car example driveway pricing, sealcoating-cost figures. Editorial style is consumer-oriented but the underlying figures track the aggregator data.
HomeGuideMonthly reviewState-by-state regional averages and dimensional cost tables. Primary anchor for the state-level pricing notes on /cost-by-region.
This Old HouseTwice-yearly reviewProject-by-project cost ranges and lifespan expectations. Editorial expertise is the value-add; figures themselves cross-checked against the aggregators.
FixrQuarterly reviewResurfacing-versus-replacement break-even thresholds. Useful for the 30 percent cumulative-damage rule on /repair-cost and /resurfacing.
Asphalt Institute MS-22Static reference (industry manual)Industry-standard thickness and mix specifications for driveway-grade asphalt. The manual itself is paywalled; we cite the specs descriptively (2-inch residential baseline, 3-inch heavy use, 4-inch commercial).
NAPA (National Asphalt Pavement Association)Annual review (industry publications)Driveway-industry guidance, contractor-selection criteria, and base-prep specs. Used descriptively; NAPA is the trade body, not a pricing publisher.
ConcreteSlabCost.com (sister site)Monthly cross-checkCross-check on asphalt-versus-concrete pricing claims for the /vs-concrete and /driveway-materials pages. Same editorial team, same evidence standards.

02 · Sources by category

Consumer publishers

Bob Vila, This Old House, Forbes Home Advisor. Editorial expertise plus broad cost ranges.

Aggregator pricing portals

HomeAdvisor (Angi), HomeGuide, Fixr. Aggregated quote and project-cost data at the per-square-foot and project-total level.

Trade bodies and engineering

NAPA driveway guidance, Asphalt Institute MS-22 thickness and mix specs. Used for the spec assumptions behind the bands, not pricing directly.

Sister-site cross-checks

ConcreteSlabCost.com on the /vs-concrete and /driveway-materials pages. Independent editorial team; descriptive cross-reference only.

03 · Calculation method: by size

National base range is $7 to $13 per square foot for new installation. The anchor is the 600 square foot 2-car standard driveway at $4,200-$7,800 (HomeGuide, Angi, and Forbes Home Advisor cross-checked). Per-square-foot pricing decreases slightly with driveway size (mobilisation cost is amortised across more area), so a 200 square foot driveway runs $13 per square foot at the upper end and a 2,000 square foot driveway runs $7-$9 per square foot.

For each size band on /cost-by-size, the lower bound assumes good base condition (no full remediation required), competitive contractor market, and standard 2-inch asphalt thickness. The upper bound assumes some base prep, regional uplift, and slightly thicker (3-inch) asphalt.

04 · Calculation method: by region

Regional multipliers applied to the national mid-band: Northeast 1.20x, Pacific Northwest 1.15x, West/Mountain 1.10x, Midwest 0.95x, Southeast 0.85x. Multipliers are anchored against HomeAdvisor regional state tables and HomeGuide state-by-state pages.

The Northeast uplift reflects shorter paving season, higher labour rates, and thicker base requirements for the freeze-thaw cycle. The Southeast discount reflects year-round paving, lower labour rates, and proximity to Gulf Coast petroleum refineries. State-level pricing within a region varies by 10-15 percent from the regional midpoint; the /cost-by-region page documents the state-level deltas.

05 · Calculation method: by project type

New installation: $7-$13 per square foot. Resurfacing (1.5-2 inch overlay over a sound base): $2-$5 per square foot, 40-60 percent of new install. Sealcoating professional: $0.88-$2.10 per square foot. Sealcoating DIY materials only: $0.10-$0.25 per square foot (labour is yours). Crack filler: $0.40-$1.00 per square foot of damaged area. Pothole patching: $100-$400 per pothole. Edge repair: $200-$800 per edge run.

Ranges cross-checked against Bob Vila, Fixr, and Angi. The resurfacing-vs-replacement break point is the 30 percent cumulative-damage rule: if total repair cost over the last 3 years exceeds 30 percent of resurfacing cost, resurface instead.

06 · Calculation method: thickness and base

Thickness multipliers anchored on the Asphalt Institute MS-22 industry-standard specs: 2-inch residential baseline at 1.0x, 3-inch heavy-use residential at 1.25x, 4-inch commercial-grade at 1.50x. Base-prep adder runs $1.00-$2.50 per square foot depending on existing-base condition, drawn from NAPA driveway guidance.

On the calculator, the base-condition input maps to a multiplier band rather than a single number: "good base" applies 1.0x, "fair base" 1.1x, "needs prep" 1.25x. Thickness defaults to 2 inches for the residential 2-car case and can be stepped to 3 inches for heavier vehicle traffic.

07 · In scope

08 · Out of scope

  • Out of scopeNamed-contractor pricing. We do not publish, recommend, or rank specific local paving contractors.
  • Out of scopePer-mile delivery surcharges from individual asphalt plants. Plant proximity is one of the named limitations of national-band pricing.
  • Out of scopeDecorative finishes such as stamped, coloured, or chip-and-seal asphalt. These are commercial / boutique installations outside the residential band.
  • Out of scopeCommercial parking lot or municipal road pricing. Different specs, different bid market.
  • Out of scopeHeated-driveway hydronic system manufacturer pricing. The /heated-driveway page quotes installed-system cost bands rather than equipment SKUs.
  • Out of scopePermit fees by municipality. Permits range from $50 to $500 and are a local-government variable, not a contractor-pricing one.

09 · Refresh cadence

The first business week of each month we re-walk the source list, refresh the per-square-foot bands where the underlying publishers have moved, and roll LAST_VERIFIED forward only when something actually changed. A single ISO date constant in the codebase drives the footer text, the hero badge, and the Article schema dateModified, so the surface text and the schema cannot drift apart.

Out-of-cycle triggers (we refresh outside the monthly cadence when any of these fire):

  • Crude oil $/bbl swing greater than $15 over a 30-day window. Asphalt cement is a refining co-product, so large oil moves rebase the mid-band within a quarter.
  • Asphalt-cement spot-price index revision from the Asphalt Institute or state DOT publications.
  • FHWA or state DOT pricing-bulletin update. State-DOT bid books are the closest public proxy for current contractor pricing.
  • Sister-site cross-check delta greater than 10 percent on asphalt-vs-concrete comparisons (the /vs-concrete page).

10 · Limitations

Four drivers of quote variance the national-band calculator does not model. These are why every page on this site states the bands as planning anchors rather than binding quotes.

  • Local asphalt-plant proximity. Rural and remote sites face per-mile delivery surcharges that the national band cannot model.
  • Contractor crew availability in peak season. May through August demand routinely pushes Northeast and West-coast pricing toward the upper bound.
  • Site-specific drainage and old-surface removal complications. Older driveways with failed base require remediation that adds $1.00-$3.00 per square foot.
  • Asphalt-cement spot-price volatility. Driveway-grade hot-mix is roughly 5-7 percent asphalt-cement by weight; large oil-price swings flow into per-square-foot pricing within 60-90 days.

11 · Corrections process

Flag a number that disagrees with your local quote, or a source we should add, at [email protected]. Acknowledgement within one business day; verified factual corrections turned around within five business days. Verified corrections roll LAST_VERIFIED forward on the affected pages.

For the full editorial position, who runs the site, and the sister-site cross-reference list, see the about page.

Updated 2026-05-11