How Much Does a Patio Cost?
A patio is one of the most versatile outdoor additions — it works as a dining area, a fire pit gathering space, a garden room, or a simple place to sit outside with coffee. Costs in 2026 range from $1,500 for a basic DIY concrete pad to $20,000+ for a large professionally installed natural stone patio.
Patio Cost by Material
Poured Concrete
The most affordable permanent patio material.
- Material cost: $3-6 per square foot
- Installed cost: $8-15 per square foot
- 12×16-foot patio estimate: $1,500-2,900
Pros: Durable, low maintenance, takes any shape including curves. Cons: Can crack over time (especially in freeze-thaw climates), plain appearance, difficult to repair sections.
Stamped or Stained Concrete
Poured concrete with decorative finishing that mimics stone, brick, or tile.
- Material cost: $4-8 per square foot
- Installed cost: $12-22 per square foot
- 12×16-foot patio estimate: $2,300-4,200
Pros: Looks like expensive stone at concrete prices, wide variety of patterns and colors, seamless surface. Cons: Stamped patterns wear over time, requires resealing every 2-3 years, still cracks like regular concrete, slippery when wet unless textured.
Concrete Pavers
Individual interlocking units in various shapes, sizes, and colors.
- Material cost: $4-10 per square foot
- Installed cost: $12-25 per square foot
- 12×16-foot patio estimate: $2,300-4,800
Pros: Individual units can be replaced if damaged, flexible base handles ground movement better than slab, huge variety of looks, excellent DIY option. Cons: Weeds grow between joints (polymeric sand helps), can shift over time without proper base, edging required to prevent spreading.
Brick
Classic clay brick pavers in traditional patterns (herringbone, running bond, basketweave).
- Material cost: $5-12 per square foot
- Installed cost: $14-28 per square foot
- 12×16-foot patio estimate: $2,700-5,400
Pros: Timeless appearance, excellent for traditional and colonial-style homes, very durable, color does not fade. Cons: Limited color range (reds and browns), uneven surface for table legs, moss and algae in shaded areas, more expensive than concrete pavers.
Natural Flagstone
Irregular flat stones (bluestone, limestone, sandstone, slate) set on sand or mortar.
- Material cost: $8-20 per square foot (varies enormously by stone type and region)
- Installed cost: $20-45 per square foot
- 12×16-foot patio estimate: $3,800-8,600
Pros: Unique natural beauty, no two patios look alike, extremely durable, high resale value. Cons: Most expensive option, irregular surface not ideal for furniture, heavy and difficult to transport, requires skilled installation for mortar-set.
Gravel or Decomposed Granite
The budget-friendly alternative for casual patios.
- Material cost: $1-3 per square foot
- Installed cost: $3-8 per square foot (including edging, landscape fabric, and compaction)
- 12×16-foot patio estimate: $600-1,500
Pros: Cheapest option, excellent drainage, easy DIY, casual natural appearance. Cons: Migrates without edging, uncomfortable for bare feet, furniture legs sink in, needs periodic replenishment, not suitable for dining tables.
Labor Costs
Patio installation labor varies by material complexity:
- Poured concrete: $5-10 per square foot labor (forming, pouring, finishing)
- Pavers: $6-12 per square foot labor (excavation, base preparation, laying, compaction)
- Natural stone: $10-20 per square foot labor (fitting irregular shapes takes significantly more time)
Additional labor costs to anticipate:
- Excavation and grading: $2-5 per square foot (removing soil, establishing proper slope for drainage)
- Base preparation: Included in most quotes, but a proper patio needs 4-6 inches of compacted gravel base
- Hauling and disposal: $200-600 for soil removal depending on access
- Drainage solution: $500-2,000 if the patio area has water management issues
The Hidden Cost: Proper Drainage
The most common patio failure is water pooling. Every patio needs a minimum 1-2% slope away from the house (1/4 inch per foot). If your yard slopes toward the house, you may need:
- French drain installation: $1,000-3,000
- Regrading: $500-2,000
- Channel drain at patio edge: $300-800
Skipping drainage planning to save money upfront costs much more when water damage affects your foundation.
DIY vs Professional
DIY paver patio (12×16):
- Materials (pavers, base gravel, sand, edging): $1,200-2,500
- Tool rental (plate compactor, saw): $150-300
- Total: $1,350-2,800
- Time: 2-3 weekends
Professional paver patio (12×16):
- Total: $2,300-4,800
- Time: 2-4 days
Paver patios are among the most achievable DIY hardscape projects because the individual units are lightweight and the work is methodical rather than skill-intensive. The key is spending adequate time on base preparation — a compacted gravel base and leveled sand bed determine whether your patio stays flat for decades or becomes an uneven tripping hazard within two years.
Budget Tips
Consider a smaller patio with a gravel surround. A 10×10-foot paver patio with a 4-foot gravel border gives you 18×18 feet of usable space at 10×10 paver prices.
Buy pavers in bulk. Pallet pricing is typically 15-25% less per square foot than buying by the piece.
Reuse existing material. If you are replacing a concrete patio, broken concrete pieces (urbanite) can be relaid as irregular flagstone-style pavers at zero material cost.
Skip the mortar. Dry-set pavers on a sand base are 30-40% cheaper to install than mortar-set stone, and they are easier to repair.
Planning Your Patio
Before choosing materials, visualize how different patio designs integrate with your existing yard and home style. Arden can generate previews of patio configurations in your actual space — helping you decide between a formal stone patio and a casual gravel gathering area before committing to a material.
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