How to Install Gravel Driveway?
This step-by-step guide shows you exactly how to install a gravel driveway from scratch β from planning and excavation through to the final surface layer and edging. A properly built 3-layer gravel driveway costs 3β5Γ less than asphalt and lasts 20β30 years with basic annual maintenance. Professional installation runs $1.50β$4.00 per square foot β this guide shows you how to do it yourself for $0.50β$1.50 per square foot in materials only. Includes a complete tools and materials checklist, gravel type guide for each layer, a full 2026 material cost breakdown for a standard 60Γ20 ft driveway, and free calculator links for gravel tonnage and driveway cost comparison.
- Overview & Cost Savings
- Gravel Types β Which to Choose
- Tools & Materials
- Step 1 β Plan & Mark the Driveway
- Step 2 β Excavate & Prepare the Base
- Step 3 β Lay Landscape Fabric
- Step 4 β Add the Base Layer
- Step 5 β Add the Middle Layer
- Step 6 β Add the Top / Surface Layer
- Step 7 β Install Edging
- Step 8 β Grade & Maintain
- Material Cost Breakdown (2026)
- FAQs
How to Install a Gravel Driveway β Overview
A gravel driveway is the most affordable driveway option available β costing 3β5Γ less than asphalt and 5β8Γ less than concrete. When properly installed with a 3-layer system, a gravel driveway can last 20β30 years with minimal maintenance. It's also one of the most beginner-friendly DIY projects for homeowners.
Professional gravel driveway installation costs $1.50β$4.00 per square foot installed β roughly $2,700β$7,200 for a standard 60Γ20 ft double-car driveway. By doing it yourself, you pay only for materials and equipment rental, typically $0.50β$1.50 per square foot β saving $1,000β$4,000+ on a standard project.
Gravel Types β Which to Choose
A proper gravel driveway uses 3 layers of different gravel sizes. Each layer has a specific job. Using the wrong gravel in the wrong layer is the #1 cause of premature driveway failure.
| Layer | Gravel Type | Size | Depth | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base (Bottom) | Recycled concrete or #3 crushed stone | 2β4 inches | 4β6 inches | Structural support, drainage |
| Middle | Crusher run or #57 stone | ΒΎβ1 inch | 3β4 inches | Stability & transition layer |
| Top (Surface) | Pea gravel, #57, or chip stone | β βΒΎ inch | 2β3 inches | Appearance & traction |
For a full comparison of driveway material costs including asphalt, concrete, pavers, and gravel, see our Driveway Cost Calculator.
Tools & Materials You'll Need
π§ Tools
- Tape measure & marking paint
- String line & stakes
- Skid steer or mini excavator (rent)
- Plate compactor (rent ~$80β$120/day)
- Bobcat or tractor with bucket (optional)
- Hand tamper (for edges)
- Rake & landscaping rake
- Wheelbarrow
- Work gloves & safety glasses
- Level & laser level (optional)
πͺ¨ Materials
- #3 crushed stone / recycled concrete (base)
- Crusher run / #57 stone (middle)
- Surface gravel β #57 or chip stone (top)
- Landscape fabric (weed barrier)
- Metal or plastic edging (optional)
- Geotextile fabric (for soft soil)
- Culvert pipe (if crossing drainage ditch)
Good planning prevents costly mistakes. Before breaking ground, decide on the exact path, width, and where drainage will go.
- Standard driveway widths: Single car β 10β12 ft. Double car β 20β24 ft. Passing area β 14 ft minimum. Wider is almost always better β narrow driveways feel cramped and damage lawn edges from tire overhang.
- Mark the edges with stakes and string line or marking paint. Add 6 inches on each side beyond your final width to allow for edging installation.
- Plan your drainage: The driveway surface should be crowned (slightly higher in the center) or sloped to one side to direct water off the driveway. A 2% cross-slope (ΒΌ inch per foot) prevents water pooling. Standing water is the #1 cause of gravel driveway deterioration β see the FHWA guide on low-volume road drainage for engineering principles.
- Call 811 before digging β US law requires notifying utilities at least 3 business days before any excavation. This is free and mandatory.
- Check with your local municipality about driveway permits β most areas require a permit where the driveway connects to a public road.
Proper excavation creates a stable foundation. The goal is to remove all organic material and create a firm, well-drained subgrade for your gravel layers.
- Excavation depth: Remove 8β12 inches of soil for a standard residential driveway (4β6" base + 3β4" middle + 2β3" top). For driveways that support heavy vehicles (trucks, RVs), excavate 12β18 inches.
- Remove all grass, topsoil, roots, and organic material β organic matter decomposes and causes settling.
- After excavation, compact the native subgrade with a plate compactor β make 3β4 passes. Never skip this step.
- If you encounter soft, wet, or clay soil, install geotextile stabilization fabric before adding any gravel. This prevents the gravel from sinking into the soft soil over time.
- Grade the subgrade to your desired cross-slope now β it's much easier to correct grade at this stage than after gravel is placed.
Use our Fill Dirt Calculator to estimate how much excavated soil you'll need to dispose of, and our Cubic Yard Calculator to convert your excavation volume.
Landscape fabric (geotextile weed barrier) serves two purposes: it prevents weeds from growing up through the gravel, and it keeps the gravel layers from mixing with the soil below.
- Use commercial-grade non-woven geotextile fabric β not the cheap thin plastic sheeting sold at discount stores. Good geotextile costs $0.10β$0.25/sq ft and lasts 20+ years. Cheap plastic sheeting degrades in 2β3 years.
- Overlap fabric strips by at least 12 inches at seams to prevent gaps where weeds can push through.
- Pin the fabric to the ground with landscape staples every 3β4 feet along edges and seams.
- Fold fabric up against the edges and staple it to your edging stakes β this prevents it from shifting when gravel is added.
- Note: Landscape fabric is optional on well-draining sandy soils. It's most important on clay or loam soils where weeds are aggressive.
The base layer is the structural foundation of your driveway. It bears the load of vehicles and provides drainage. Use large angular crushed stone β #3 stone (2β4 inch pieces) or recycled crushed concrete.
- Spread base gravel to 4β6 inches depth using a tractor, Bobcat, or rake. For long driveways, a dump truck spreading as it drives forward is the most efficient method.
- Compact in 2β3 inch lifts β never try to compact more than 3 inches at once. Each lift needs 3β4 plate compactor passes in different directions.
- After full compaction, the base should feel firm underfoot with minimal give.
- Check your cross-slope with a level β make corrections now before the middle layer goes on.
Use our Gravel Calculator with 4β6" depth to calculate base layer tonnage. For a 60Γ20 ft driveway at 5" depth, you'll need approximately 18β22 tons of base gravel.
The middle layer β typically crusher run or #57 crushed stone β bridges between the large base rock and the fine surface layer. It adds stability and prevents the top layer from sinking into the base.
- Spread crusher run or #57 stone to 3β4 inches depth over the compacted base.
- Compact thoroughly β crusher run especially compacts very well and creates an almost solid surface when properly compacted with a plate compactor.
- After compaction, this layer should feel almost as hard as a packed dirt road.
- Re-check your cross-slope and make any final grade corrections β this is your last chance before the decorative top layer goes on.
Calculate tonnage for this layer using the Gravel Calculator at 3β4" depth. A 60Γ20 ft driveway at 3.5" depth needs approximately 13β16 tons of middle layer gravel.
The top layer is what you see and drive on every day. Use smaller, attractive gravel β #57 crushed stone, pea gravel, or chip stone in a color that complements your home.
- Spread surface gravel to 2β3 inches depth.
- Rake evenly and maintain your cross-slope for drainage.
- Lightly compact with the plate compactor β don't over-compact the top layer or it becomes too hard and loses its loose gravel appearance.
- Best surface gravel options:
- #57 crushed stone β versatile, compacts well, excellent drainage. Best overall choice.
- Pea gravel β attractive, rounded, comfortable underfoot. Tends to migrate more than angular stone β needs edging to contain it.
- Chip stone / chat gravel β small angular chips, very stable, low migration. Great for high-traffic driveways.
- Marble chips / white gravel β decorative, brightens the entry. Higher cost, $60β$100/ton.
For the full breakdown of gravel types and pricing, see our Pea Gravel Calculator and Gravel Calculator.
Edging keeps your gravel contained and prevents it from migrating into the lawn. Without edging, even well-installed gravel driveways gradually lose gravel to the sides over time.
- Metal landscape edging ($1β$2/ft) β clean, professional look, very durable. Best for straight runs.
- Plastic edging ($0.30β$0.60/ft) β flexible for curves, affordable, less durable than metal.
- Timber or railroad ties ($3β$8/ft) β rustic look, defines edges well, doubles as a retaining wall on sloped sites.
- Concrete or stone border β most permanent and attractive option. Higher cost but eliminates gravel migration permanently.
- Drive edging stakes into the ground at least 6β8 inches deep and space them no more than 12 inches apart on straight sections, 6 inches on curves.
A gravel driveway requires periodic maintenance to stay looking good and performing well. The good news β it's simple and inexpensive compared to repairing cracked concrete or potholes in asphalt.
Annual Maintenance Tasks:
- Re-grade in spring β after winter freeze-thaw cycles, rake and re-level any rutted or uneven areas. A tow-behind box grader ($30β$60/day rental) makes this fast on longer driveways.
- Top up gravel every 3β5 years β add 1β2 inches of fresh surface gravel as the existing layer compacts and migrates. A single ton of gravel covers about 80 sq ft at 2 inches deep.
- Fill potholes immediately β add gravel and compact. Ignored potholes get worse quickly.
- Manage edges β rake gravel back onto the driveway from lawn edges every spring.
- Control weeds β spot-treat with a non-selective herbicide (EPA-registered herbicides) or apply a pre-emergent in early spring.
Material Cost Breakdown (2026)
Here's a typical material cost breakdown for a standard 60Γ20 ft double-car gravel driveway (1,200 sq ft). Use our calculators to get exact quantities for your specific dimensions.
| Material / Item | Quantity | Unit Cost | Total Est. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base Layer β #3 crushed stone (5") | ~22 tons | $28β$45/ton | $616 β $990 |
| Middle Layer β Crusher run (3.5") | ~15 tons | $28β$45/ton | $420 β $675 |
| Top Layer β #57 stone (2.5") | ~10 tons | $35β$55/ton | $350 β $550 |
| Landscape Fabric | ~150 sq yd | $0.10β$0.25/sq ft | $130 β $330 |
| Metal Edging | ~160 linear ft | $1β$2/ft | $160 β $320 |
| Plate Compactor Rental | 1β2 days | $80β$120/day | $80 β $240 |
| Delivery (3 loads) | 3 truckloads | $50β$150/load | $150 β $450 |
| Total Materials (DIY) | $1,906 β $3,555 | ||
| Professional Install | $1.50β$4.00/sq ft | $1,800 β $4,800 | |
*Based on 1,200 sq ft (60Γ20 ft) driveway with 3-layer system. Gravel prices fluctuate β always get current quotes from local suppliers. Excavation costs not included if hiring out.
