Paver Patios & Walkways in Sinton, TX
Subtropical Gulf Coast climate.
For paver patios & walkways, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Sinton.
Common reasons to call
- A homeowner wants a new backyard patio for seating, grilling, or a fire-pit area
- A worn or cracked concrete slab needs to be replaced with a paver surface
- A muddy or uneven path to a door, gate, or shed needs a solid walkway
- A pool deck or coastal patio is settling or shifting and needs a stable, drainable surface
- A business wants a clean, slip-resistant entry walkway or courtyard for customers
- Weeds, ants, and sinking spots have taken over an old paver area that needs a reset
- A driveway apron or parking pad needs a durable surface that handles vehicle weight
- A yard has poor drainage and the owner wants hardscape that moves water away from the house
Typical work
- Install a new backyard paver patio on a compacted base with edge restraints
- Build a front or side walkway that connects a driveway, gate, and entry
- Tear out a cracked concrete slab and rebuild the area with pavers
- Reset and re-level a sunken or wavy paver area, then re-sand the joints
- Lay a paver pool deck or coastal patio with attention to drainage and slip resistance
- Add a paver driveway apron or parking pad rated for vehicle weight
- Repair a small trip hazard where a few pavers have shifted or heaved
Typical turnaround
Most single-area patios or walkways take one to three working days once the crew starts. Larger projects with tear-out, grading, or drainage can run several days to a week or more, plus a short curing or settling window before heavy use. Weather and wet coastal soil can add time.
Materials and equipment
- Concrete pavers
- Clay brick pavers
- Permeable pavers
- Crushed base rock (road base)
- Bedding sand
- Polymeric joint sand
- Plastic or metal edge restraint
- Landscape fabric / geotextile
- Base gravel for drainage
- Paver sealer (optional)
Job sizes
Minor
A small job like a short walkway, a stoop, or resetting a few sunken pavers. Usually a single crew for a day or less.
Standard
A typical single-area patio or a full front walkway on a fresh compacted base, often a few hundred square feet.
Major
A large or multi-area project such as a big patio plus walkway, a pool deck, a driveway pad, or work that includes grading and drainage.
Replacement
Tearing out an old concrete slab or a failing paver area, hauling it off, rebuilding the base, and laying a new surface.
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good installer digs out and compacts a base of crushed rock in layers before any pavers go down, because the base is what holds the surface flat over time.
- ✓A solid job includes an edge restraint along the borders so the pavers do not spread and drift apart as they are used.
- ✓A careful pro slopes the surface away from your house and plans for where rainwater goes before laying the first paver.
- ✓Polymeric joint sand swept into the seams helps lock the pavers together and cuts down on weeds and ants.
- ✓Because pavers are separate units, a single sunken or stained one can be lifted and reset without redoing the whole area.
- ✓A trustworthy installer carries general liability insurance and workers' compensation and will show proof if asked.
- ✓A written workmanship warranty and clear notes on the base depth and materials help you compare one quote to another honestly.
- ✓On South Texas clay and sandy soil, extra attention to base prep and drainage matters more than the brand of paver on top.
Look for general liability insurance, workers' compensation coverage, and voluntary training such as ICPI (Interlocking Concrete Pavement Institute) certification, plus a written warranty on workmanship.
Common questions
How long does a paver patio last?
A paver patio built on a properly compacted base can last for decades. Because pavers are individual units, a good installer can lift and reset any that shift over time instead of replacing the whole surface. The base and the edge restraint matter more for the long haul than the pavers themselves.
Are pavers better than a poured concrete slab?
Neither is automatically better; they solve different problems. Pavers flex with ground movement and can be repaired one piece at a time, which helps on the shifting clay and sandy soils common near the coast. Poured concrete is one solid surface that can crack and is harder to fix invisibly. Ask a pro to look at your soil and drainage before you decide.
Will weeds and ants come up between the pavers?
Some can, but a good install reduces it a lot. Installers use a compacted base, landscape fabric under the base, and polymeric joint sand that hardens between the pavers to lock them and resist weeds and ants. Sweeping in fresh joint sand every few years keeps it working.
Do I need a permit for a paver patio in South Texas?
A simple ground-level patio or walkway often does not need one, but it depends on your city or county and on the size and location. Work that changes drainage, sits near a setback or easement, or ties into a pool may require a permit. Check with your local building or code office first, and ask if your yard has an HOA rule too.
How do pavers handle drainage and our heavy coastal rains?
Drainage is one of the most important parts of the job here. A pro slopes the surface away from your house and can add base gravel, drains, or permeable pavers that let water pass through. If water is pooling near your foundation, tell the installer up front so they plan the grade for it.
Can pavers go over my existing concrete slab?
Sometimes, if the slab is sound, drains well, and the added height will not block doors or create a trip hazard. Other times it is better to remove the slab and build a fresh base. A good installer will check the slab's condition and drainage before recommending an overlay versus a tear-out.
What should I ask a paver installer before hiring?
Ask how deep the base will be and whether it will be compacted in layers, what edge restraint they use, whether they use polymeric joint sand, how they will handle the slope and drainage, and what workmanship warranty they offer. Ask for proof of liability insurance and to see photos of past local jobs.
Do pavers get slippery or too hot near a pool?
It depends on the paver. Some are made with textured, slip-resistant surfaces and lighter colors that stay cooler underfoot, which many people choose for pool decks and patios. Tell your installer the area is around a pool so they can recommend a suitable paver and finish.