
Ormond Beach Concrete is the concrete contractor Deltona homeowners call for slab foundations, driveways, patios, and retaining walls. We have served the greater Volusia County area since 2025, we work in Deltona regularly and know the Central Florida sandy soil conditions that drive most of the concrete problems here, and we reply to every inquiry within 1 business day.

Slab-on-grade foundations are nearly universal in Deltona, and homes built in the 1970s and 1980s are now at the age where original slabs crack, settle, and require replacement. The sandy Central Florida soil under these homes compacts unevenly over decades, and a properly prepared new slab with adequate base stops the settling cycle. See our slab foundation services.
Most driveways in Deltona's original Deltona Lakes neighborhoods are from the 1970s and 1980s, and they show it. Cracks, sunken sections, and surface spalling are the norm in homes of this age. A new poured concrete driveway with correct slope handles Deltona's daily wet-season downpours without sending water toward the garage.
Deltona's owner-occupied neighborhoods are full of families who use their backyards year-round, and a concrete patio gives that outdoor space a stable, durable surface. Concrete holds up to Florida's wet-dry cycles far better than pavers on sandy soil, which tend to shift and develop gaps after the first few heavy rain seasons.
Some Deltona neighborhoods were developed on land near lakes and drainage channels, and properties in those areas deal with soil movement and drainage pressure after heavy rains. A poured concrete retaining wall stabilizes the grade and redirects runoff before it undermines your landscaping or works against your foundation.
Footings are the base that everything else rests on - and in Deltona's sandy soil, undersized or improperly placed footings are one of the most common causes of structural settling in older additions and outbuildings. We pour footings to Florida Building Code specifications and depth requirements for this soil type.
Deltona's established neighborhoods have mature trees whose roots have had 30 to 50 years to grow under sidewalks and push sections up. Replacing lifted sidewalk sections removes trip hazards and brings your property into compliance with Volusia County sidewalk standards.
Deltona is one of Florida's larger cities by population, with around 100,000 residents spread across suburban subdivisions that were developed primarily between the 1970s and 1990s by General Development Corporation. That build history means most of the city's concrete - driveways, patios, foundations, sidewalks - is now 30 to 55 years old and was poured on sandy Central Florida soil with base preparation standards that do not match what we know today. At that age, the original concrete is not just cosmetically tired. It has often cracked, settled, or voided underneath in ways that make repairs less practical than replacement.
Deltona's climate amplifies these aging problems. Daily afternoon thunderstorms from June through September drive water under slabs and gradually wash fine material from sub-bases year after year. Low-lying areas near the city's many lakes deal with additional drainage pressure and softer soil after heavy rain events. Volusia County's Building and Zoning Division requires permits for most new concrete installations, and working within that process correctly protects homeowners both at inspection and at resale.
Our crew works throughout Deltona regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. Deltona is a sprawling city - Interstate 4 runs through the southern part of it, and the neighborhoods spread out in all directions from the original Deltona Lakes core. The original streets near Howland Boulevard and Doyle Road represent the 1970s and 1980s construction era that most of our work here involves. Homes on these blocks are concrete block construction on slab-on-grade foundations with original driveways, patios, and sometimes sidewalks still in place from initial development. We know this housing stock and what it takes to replace aging flatwork correctly.
The newer subdivisions on Deltona's outer edges - areas developed in the 2000s and 2010s near Saxon Boulevard - are a different story. Newer homes in these areas were built to updated code standards with better base preparation requirements. When we work on both a 1980s slab and a 2010 driveway in the same week, we adjust our approach because the conditions are different. Lyonia Preserve, Deltona's 360-acre nature reserve, sits within city limits and is a landmark that long-time residents know as a neighborhood anchor.
Deltona sits between two other areas we serve along the Interstate 4 corridor. DeLand is just to the west and has a distinct character as Volusia County's seat, with its own mix of older homes and historic properties. To the east and northeast, homeowners throughout the greater Daytona Beach area also rely on our crew - and we are on the road between these communities regularly.
We respond within 1 business day. Let us know your project and property address, and we schedule a free site visit at a time that works for you.
We assess drainage, sub-base condition, and the existing concrete, then give you a written estimate that separates demo, base prep, materials, and finish. You know exactly what you are paying for before any work starts.
If your project needs a Volusia County permit, we handle the filing. Most permits take one to two weeks. Once approved, you get a confirmed start date in writing.
We arrive on the scheduled day, complete the work, and clean up. You receive a walkthrough and written curing instructions so you know when the surface is ready for full use.
We work in Deltona regularly and know the soil conditions in every part of the city. No obligation - just an honest written quote for your project.
(386) 284-1728Deltona is one of the largest cities in Florida by population, with around 100,000 residents spread across a wide suburban footprint in Volusia County halfway between Orlando and Daytona Beach. The city grew out of a planned development by General Development Corporation starting in the 1960s, and the core neighborhoods - known as Deltona Lakes - were built out primarily through the 1970s and 1990s. Those original streets have a consistent character: modest single-family concrete block homes on quarter-acre lots in a grid-style layout that makes neighborhoods easy to navigate. The city's high owner-occupancy rate - over 70 percent by Census estimates - means most of the people calling contractors here own the home they live in and are invested in keeping it in good shape. You can read more about the city's history at the Deltona Wikipedia article.
Deltona has grown steadily in recent decades, with newer subdivisions filling in around the original Deltona Lakes core and Interstate 4 giving residents convenient access to both Orlando and Daytona Beach. Lake Monroe forms the southern boundary near Sanford, and Lyonia Preserve - a 360-acre Florida scrub habitat reserve inside the city - is a green space that long-time residents think of as one of Deltona's defining features. Nearby Sanford to the south is another city we serve where similar Central Florida soil conditions apply, and DeLand to the west is Volusia County's seat with its own distinct mix of historic and working-age properties we work on regularly.
Deltona was developed in phases from the 1960s through the 1990s, and the homes in each phase have distinct characteristics. We work across all of these neighborhoods - from the original Deltona Lakes streets to the newer subdivisions near Saxon Boulevard - and we know what to expect in each area.
Our Florida state contractor license is current and verifiable on the DBPR website. We carry general liability insurance and workers compensation on every job in Deltona.
Deltona's sandy soil compacts inconsistently under slabs that are not properly prepared. We compact to the standard appropriate for each project type and soil condition - this is the step that determines whether concrete lasts 5 years or 30.
We pull permits through Volusia County's Building and Zoning Division when the project requires one. Permitted work passes inspection and gives you documentation that protects you when you sell the property.
In a city where most of the concrete work is replacement rather than new construction, the contractor you choose needs to know how to assess what is already there - and price the job honestly. We bring that approach to every project in Deltona, and we back it up with a written estimate, licensed work, and permits handled correctly on every applicable project.
You can verify any Florida contractor's license status at the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation website. It takes less than two minutes and protects you from unlicensed work.
Deltona's 1970s and 1980s homes are at the age where concrete work pays off. Call now or send an inquiry and we will respond within 1 business day.