Homeowner's Guide to Types of Driveways

Publish date: 2024-08-22

From dirt-rut wagon tracks to the elegant brick pavers of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, Americans have been balancing cost and appearance when choosing driveway materials for centuries. Today, new materials allow for a staggering variety of choices to accommodate almost every possible budget and driveway design preference. While you’re at it, check out our list of driveway gate ideas!

Here are pros and cons of seven of the most popular driveway options, with a special focus on cost, longevity, maintenance, climate appropriateness and sustainability.

Asphalt Driveway (AKA Blacktop)

Asphalt DrivewayWillowpix/Getty Images

Asphalt pavement is one of the most common materials used for driveways in the U.S. A favorite of homeowners and school builders everywhere, asphalt is affordable and quick to install. It’s a great choice for large areas and creates a smooth, uniform appearance.

Pros

Cons

Concrete Driveway

Concrete Driveway slobo/Getty Images

The other most popular choice for driveway material is concrete. A robust material that can take a beating from the weather, concrete is a great choice for any climate.

Pros

Cons

Brick or Paver Driveway

Paver Driveway dlewis33/Getty Images

Individual bricks or pavers provide a top-end driveway material, combining high durability with aesthetic appeal and easy customization. Clay bricks have a shorter lifespan than concrete or stone pavers. All three types can be easily removed and replaced if damaged. Here, find out the driveway replacement cost.

Pros

Cons

Stamped Concrete Driveway

Stamped Concrete jimkruger/Getty Images

Stamped concrete driveways mimic the look of pavers through the use of imprinted patterns and stains. Providing high durability, they cost somewhere between standard concrete and a full paver driveway.

Pros

Cons

Gravel Driveway

Gravel Driveway RachelDewis/Getty Images

Gravel driveways can look simple, or they can be part of a complex and meticulously designed entryway. A good choice for warmer climates, the gravel stones are likely to outlive your home. But over time the gravel will be spread across the lawn and street, requiring the occasional top-off and leveling.

Pros

Cons

Permeable Paver Driveway

Permeable Pavers BanksPhotos/Getty Images

Permeable pavers are a newer technology that is beginning to catch on with a wider audience. Designed with engineered holes, the pavers allow rainwater and snow melt to flow through to the ground below. This has multiple environmentally beneficial side effects, as well as practical advantages. (There is also permeable concrete and asphalt with tiny pores to allow water penetration, but here we’ll focus on pavers.)

Pros

Cons

Turf Driveway

Turf Pavers Bibica/Getty Images

Another recent innovation, turf driveways use permeable pavers with holes broad enough to permit grass or ground cover plants to grow and flourish. It can have the look of a blend of pavers and turf, or appear to be a normal lawn but with reinforcement to avoid ruts and divots caused when parking on grass.

Best suited to a warm climate where the green grass will last and snow isn’t a problem, a turf driveway is an eye-catching and innovative driveway technology.

Pros

Cons

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