✓ The Decision
- Long rural driveway → gravel. Nothing else makes financial sense past ~50 metres.
- Typical suburban double, staying 5–15 years → asphalt. Half the cost of concrete, friendlier to frost, easy to patch.
- Forever home, quality installer, 15+ year horizon → concrete. It earns its premium over 30 years — but only with a proper base.
- Rural with a garage → the hybrid: gravel run + paved apron at the garage. Best of both for less than full paving.
- Selling within 2 years → don't replace a serviceable driveway at all; resurface or top up.
The driveway question comes down to a three-way trade between upfront cost, lifetime maintenance, and how much you value convenience under snow. There's no universal winner — but there's almost always a clear winner for your situation. Here's the honest comparison.
Compare in the Driveway Calculator
Head-to-Head (2026 Canadian Averages)
| Gravel | Asphalt | Concrete | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Installed cost/sq ft | $2.50–$5.50 | $3.50–$8.50 | $10–$17 |
| Double driveway (18×6 m) | $4,500–$9,000 | $7,000–$13,500 | $16,000–$27,000 |
| Lifespan | Indefinite with top-ups | 15–25 years | 25–40 years |
| Maintenance | Regrade/top-up every 1–3 yrs | Seal every 3–5 yrs; crack filling | Minimal; joint sealing |
| Snow clearing | Awkward (blades catch stones) | Easy | Easy |
| Repairability | Trivial and cheap | Easy to patch | Difficult; repairs show |
| Time before use | Immediate | 2–3 days | 7 days |
| Resale look | Rural-appropriate | Clean, standard | Premium |
Gravel: The Value Play
Cheapest to install, cheapest to fix, and the only surface that actually improves with intelligent maintenance — each regrading re-compacts the crust. The trade: dust in summer, stones in your lawn after plowing, and ruts if the base was built badly. On long rural runs it's rarely a contest; nothing else makes financial sense at 200 metres. Our gravel driveway guide covers the build layers in detail.
Choose gravel if: the driveway is long, the budget matters, or the setting is rural. Skip it if: you hate dust, plow frequently, or your municipality requires a hard surface (some urban zones do).
Asphalt: The Canadian Standard
Asphalt is flexible — literally. It tolerates frost movement better than concrete, which is why it dominates Canadian residential streets. It needs sealing every 3–5 years ($200–$500 a visit) and softens in extreme heat, but patches blend in and full resurfacing (rather than replacement) is possible at end of life for roughly half the cost of new.
Choose asphalt if: you want a hard surface at a livable price and plan to stay a while. Skip it if: your driveway is steep and south-facing (summer softening) or you can't commit to sealing.
Concrete: The Long Game
Highest upfront cost, longest life, best curb appeal — and the least forgiving in a freeze-thaw climate. Quality matters enormously: proper base, air-entrained concrete, correct joints, and no de-icing salt in the first winters, or you'll get surface scaling. Repairs are the weak point: patched concrete never matches, and a heaved slab section is a replacement, not a fix.
Choose concrete if: you're staying 15+ years, want the premium look, and will hire a quality installer. Skip it if: budget is tight or your soil is frost-heave prone without engineered drainage.
The Canadian Winter Test
- Frost heave: gravel shrugs it off, asphalt flexes with it, concrete cracks if the base or drainage is wrong. Whatever the surface, the granular base underneath is what wins or loses the winter war.
- Plowing and shoveling: hard surfaces win clearly. Gravel owners learn to leave a snow "skin" or raise the blade.
- De-icing: salt is fine on asphalt, hard on young concrete, irrelevant to gravel. Sand works everywhere.
- Spring: gravel may need a regrade after a wet thaw; asphalt and concrete just need the cracks checked before water works on them.
✗ Deal-Breakers — Check Before You Choose
- For concrete: frost-heave-prone soil without engineered drainage. A cracked, heaved concrete driveway is the most expensive mistake on this page.
- For asphalt: a steep south-facing grade — summer softening plus braking torque tears it up — or no willingness to seal every 3–5 years.
- For gravel: a municipal hard-surface requirement. Some urban zones mandate paving; one call settles it.
- For any surface: a failed base. Repaving over ruts or settling transfers the problem to the new surface at full price.
The Safest Path Forward
- Check the bylaw — confirm gravel is allowed (urban) or what entrance standards apply (rural).
- Diagnose your base: ruts, heaving, or drainage problems get fixed before any new surface goes down.
- Price all options for your dimensions in the calculator — the compare table does it in one shot.
- Match the surface to your honest horizon: years you'll stay, tolerance for maintenance, and snow-clearing habits.
- Get three quotes with base prep itemized — that line, not the surface price, is where good and bad contractors separate.
The Verdict
Long rural driveway: gravel, and it's not close. Typical suburban double: asphalt is the value sweet spot — half the cost of concrete and friendlier to frost. Forever home, premium street: concrete earns its price over 30 years. And the hybrid is underrated: gravel for the run, with a paved apron at the garage for clean parking and easy shoveling where it counts.
Run your own numbers in the Driveway Cost Calculator — it compares all four surface options (including stamped concrete) for your exact dimensions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which driveway surface is cheapest in Canada?
Gravel, at $2.50–$5.50 per square foot installed in 2026 — roughly half the cost of asphalt and a quarter the cost of concrete for the same footprint.
Is concrete worth the extra cost over asphalt?
If you'll own the home 15+ years and the installer does quality base and drainage work, usually yes — concrete lasts 25–40 years vs 15–25 for asphalt with less maintenance. Over shorter horizons, asphalt's lower cost wins.
How long does an asphalt driveway last in Canada?
Typically 15–25 years with sealing every 3–5 years and prompt crack filling. Neglected asphalt in freeze-thaw climates can fail in under 10.
Can I pave over my existing gravel driveway?
Often yes — a well-compacted, well-drained gravel driveway is most of the base asphalt needs. The contractor will assess depth and grading; thin or rutted gravel needs topping up first.