Professional gravel driveway repair for rural homeowners, acreage owners, and cabin owners across Minnesota. Potholes, washouts, drainage problems — we fix it right so it stays fixed.
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Minnesota winters are hard on gravel driveways. If you're dealing with any of these, you're not alone — and there's a real fix.
Freeze-thaw cycles destroy gravel driveways every April. Water gets into the base, freezes, expands, and collapses — leaving craters that get worse with every car that drives through.
Heavy spring runoff and summer thunderstorms wash gravel off the crown and carve channels through your driveway. No crown, no drainage = no driveway surface left by June.
Even a careful snowplow pass can scrape off 2–3 inches of surface gravel each winter. By spring, the edges are gone and the base is exposed.
Flat driveways without crown hold water like a tray. That standing water softens the base, breeds mosquitoes, and turns into an ice rink the moment temperatures drop below freezing.
When the frost leaves the ground in March and April, driveways with poor base turn to mush. You're either stuck or digging ruts deeper with every pass.
Without defined edges and a proper crown, gravel migrates sideways over time — into your lawn, your garden beds, your ditch. You lose material and surface every season.
Minnesota's deep frost penetration can push sections of driveway up, then leave depressions as it settles in spring. Uneven surfaces that worsen every cycle.
A washboarded, rutted, potholed driveway beats up vehicles and frustrates everyone who drives it. You shouldn't dread pulling into your own property.
We specialize in gravel driveway repair, grading, and resurfacing for rural homeowners across Scott County and the southern Twin Cities area. If your driveway took a beating over winter, we've got the equipment and the experience to fix it right — not just fill it with a few loads of rock and hope for the best.
The difference between a repair that holds and one that doesn't is what happens underneath. We address the crown, the base, the drainage, and the surface material all at once. Gravel on top of a bad base doesn't solve anything. We regrade before we resurface so water has somewhere to go.
We work on rural acreage driveways, long farm lanes, cabin access roads, and suburban gravel driveways. Whether it's a 60-foot driveway that needs a few potholes filled and regraded, or a 600-foot rural lane that needs full resurfacing and drainage correction, we give you a straight price before we start and we show up when we say we will.
Every gravel driveway repair job in Minnesota starts the same way: we look at the drainage first. A driveway that holds water will never hold its surface material, no matter how much fresh gravel you add. The crown — the slight rise from edge to center — is what sheds water off the driveway and into the ditches or swales where it belongs. When the crown disappears through years of traffic and frost heaving, the whole driveway becomes a water trap.
We use a skid steer, grader blade, or compact track loader depending on the job. For tight driveways and access lanes, a compact machine gets in and out without tearing up the surrounding turf. For longer rural driveways and farm lanes, we use a grader setup that moves material efficiently over distance. We build the crown back into the driveway profile, cut drainage swales where needed, and install or clean out culverts to keep water moving through instead of across the surface.
For new gravel, we recommend Class 5 crushed limestone for the driving surface — it compacts well under traffic and stays put better than round pea gravel or decorative stone. For base stabilization on driveways with significant soft spots, we may recommend a geotextile fabric layer before new material is added. This prevents base material from migrating up through the driving surface and keeps the repair stable for years instead of months.
After grading and material placement, we compact the surface so it's travel-ready, not loose and shifting. We don't leave a job that looks rough from the road. If there's something that still needs attention — a low corner, a wet spot, a section that needs a second pass — we don't leave until it's right.
Gravel driveway repair pricing in Minnesota depends on the length of the driveway, the severity of the damage, whether new gravel material is needed, and whether drainage work is involved. A straightforward regrade with pothole filling on a standard suburban driveway might run $300–$700. A longer rural driveway that needs full resurfacing, drainage correction, and 10–20 tons of new Class 5 gravel might run $1,500–$4,000. New installation on a long acreage lane is priced per linear foot after we assess the site.
We don't quote gravel driveway jobs over the phone without seeing the property — too many variables affect the price. What we do is provide free on-site estimates where we walk the driveway, assess the drainage, measure the length, and give you a flat written price before any work begins. No surprises, no change orders after the fact. If you can text us photos first, we can give you a ballpark range before scheduling the site visit.
The most expensive gravel driveway repair is the one you keep doing without fixing the underlying drainage problem. We see it constantly: homeowners who add gravel every year without regrading, and end up spending more over five years than a proper repair would have cost once.
Call, text photos, or fill out the form below. We respond same day and can usually schedule your estimate within the week.
(612) 563-7055 Text Photos for Pricing Get Free EstimateWe rebuild the crown profile and regrade the surface so water sheds properly. Proper grading is the foundation of every driveway repair — everything else depends on it.
Get a QuoteWe don't just fill potholes — we address the base failure that caused them. Filled and compacted properly with the right material so they don't come back next spring.
Get a QuoteAdd 2–4 inches of fresh Class 5 crushed gravel over a properly regraded surface. Compacted and ready to drive on. Makes an old driveway look and ride like new.
Get a QuoteWe repair the channels and ruts created by runoff and rebuild the surface so it drains correctly instead of washing out again after the next big rain.
Get a QuoteCulvert installation, swale cutting, and grading to redirect water away from your driveway. Fixes the standing water and mud problems that keep coming back every spring.
Get a QuoteFull installation on a new driveway or full replacement on an existing one. We handle site prep, base gravel, fabric if needed, and Class 5 surface material.
Get a QuoteWe don't just dump gravel on top of a bad driveway and call it done. We address drainage, crown, and base — so the repair actually holds through the next Minnesota winter.
We respond to calls and texts the same day. You won't be waiting a week for a callback on a driveway estimate. Text us photos and we'll give you a ballpark before we even visit.
Free on-site estimates. One price that covers the whole job — labor, equipment, and material. No surprises after we start, no add-ons that weren't discussed upfront.
We understand rural Minnesota properties. Long lanes, seasonal access issues, soft spring ground — we've worked on all of it. We're not a big-city contractor figuring it out on your property.
Compact track loaders, grader blades, and dump trailers. We bring the right machine for your driveway size and access situation — no excuses about equipment limitations.
Fully licensed and insured for work in Minnesota. You're covered on every job, every visit.
"Our gravel driveway was completely destroyed after last winter. Giant potholes everywhere, gravel spread into the yard, it was a mess. They came out, regraded the whole thing, and added fresh Class 5. Looks brand new. The drainage is actually better than it's ever been."
"I texted them photos on a Monday afternoon and had a quote by Tuesday morning. They showed up that Friday. Our long driveway had a serious washout problem — they fixed the drainage, regraded it, and it handled the next two weeks of rain with no issues at all."
"Fair price, showed up on time, did exactly what they said they'd do. Our driveway had been rough for three years and I kept putting it off. Wish I'd called sooner. The whole job took about four hours and the driveway looks and drives better than it ever has."
We serve rural homeowners, acreage owners, cabin owners, and property owners throughout Scott County and the southern Twin Cities metro area. If you're not sure we cover your location, just call — we likely do.
Gravel driveway repair in Minnesota typically runs $300–$900 for a standard single-family driveway with pothole repair and light regrading. Larger rural driveways with significant washout damage, drainage issues, or full resurfacing can run $1,500–$4,000+. New gravel installation on a long rural driveway is priced per job based on length, width, depth, and material needed. We provide free on-site estimates so you know the exact cost before we start — text us photos for a ballpark range first.
Most Minnesota gravel driveways benefit from regrading every 1–3 years depending on traffic volume, drainage quality, and how severe the winter was. Heavy freeze-thaw cycles, spring snowmelt, and heavy vehicle traffic all accelerate gravel displacement and pothole formation. A driveway that is properly crowned and drains well will hold up much longer between gradings than one that holds water or sits flat.
Potholes in gravel driveways are caused by Minnesota's freeze-thaw cycles, water infiltrating the base, heavy vehicle traffic, and gravel displacement over time. When water gets into the subbase and freezes, it expands and heaves the surface. When it thaws, the disturbed material collapses into a hole. Without a stable base and proper drainage, potholes come back every spring no matter how many times you fill them. The fix is addressing the base and drainage, not just adding gravel on top.
Yes — and simply adding more gravel without fixing the drainage is the wrong approach. Washouts happen when water flows across or through the driveway surface faster than it can drain off the sides. The fix involves correcting the crown profile so water sheds to the sides, installing or cleaning out culverts, cutting drainage channels, and using the right compactable gravel material. We assess the drainage situation on every washout repair job and address the root cause, not just the symptom.
The most common and effective driveway gravel in Minnesota is Class 5 crushed limestone — a compactable mix of crushed rock and fines that binds together well under traffic. For the base layer, larger Class 3 or Class 2 road base gravel provides stability and drainage. Pea gravel and decorative round stone are not recommended for driveways because they don't compact and shift under tire pressure. We source and install Class 5 for most residential driveway projects.
Yes — rural driveways and acreage properties are our specialty. We work on long rural driveways, farm lanes, cabin access roads, and private rural roads throughout Scott County and the surrounding area. We bring the right grading equipment for the job and can handle everything from a 60-foot suburban driveway to a 1,000-foot rural property lane.
Spring and summer book up fast for gravel driveway work in Minnesota. The longer you wait, the more damage each rain does. Call or text now for a same-day response — or fill out the form and we'll get back to you today.
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Text us a photo of your driveway and we'll give you a ballpark price today — no commitment, no pressure.