You do not need exact measurements, photographs, plans, or technical concrete knowledge to start. Tell us the city, what you want the concrete to do, and anything obvious about the existing area. A request may be shared with an independent concrete professional who can ask useful questions, confirm service availability, and discuss whether an on-site visit makes sense.

What happens after you submit
The form sends your information for review. If there is an available professional suited to the location and scope, that professional may contact you directly using the email address or phone number you provide. The first follow-up commonly confirms the intended use, property location, general size, existing conditions, access, and desired timing. Submission is not acceptance of a project, a scheduled appointment, or a binding estimate.
Some projects can be discussed initially by phone or email. Others need a site visit to evaluate elevations, drainage, demolition, subgrade, utilities, access, or structural requirements. The professional will identify what is needed. You should never feel that you must design the slab or select reinforcement before asking for help.
A short description is enough
Plain language is useful: “replace a cracked two-car driveway,” “add a shaded backyard patio,” “pour a small pad for equipment,” or “create a walkway from the gate to the back door.” If you know about narrow gates, existing concrete, a steep grade, irrigation, or a deadline tied to other construction, mention it. If you do not know, leave it for follow-up.
Photos are not required with this form, and there is no upload field. If a professional later believes an image would help, you can decide whether to share one directly. Approximate dimensions are welcome when already known, but do not delay your request to measure the property.
How estimates are developed
A concrete estimate should reflect the actual scope rather than an unsupported online price. Factors can include access, demolition and disposal, excavation, base preparation, slab thickness, load-based design, reinforcement, drainage, forms, finish, joints, placement conditions, curing, permits, and cleanup. Read the concrete cost guide for a fuller explanation.
A professional may provide an initial range before a visit, but a final proposal should state its assumptions and exclusions. Ask what is included and verify details before authorizing work. Changes discovered after demolition or requested after an agreement should be documented.
Coverage and timing
Requests are considered for Yuma, Fortuna Foothills, Mesa Del Sol, Yuma Mesa, and Yuma Valley, subject to availability. Somerton, San Luis, and Wellton are considered only when coverage is confirmed. See the service-area guide for context. Availability depends on location, scope, current workload, weather, and project requirements.
For a general question that is not yet a project request, use the contact page. Project-specific details belong in the request form above.
There is no obligation to proceed
Starting a request is simply a way to begin a conversation. You can ask questions, review the professional’s proposed scope, and decide whether the project and timing suit you. Do not authorize work based only on a verbal summary. A useful written proposal identifies the work area, preparation, concrete design assumptions, finish, exclusions, payment schedule, and responsibilities. If more than one proposal is available, compare those details rather than assuming every total represents the same work.
If your plans change, explain that before scheduling. A change in use, dimensions, access, finish, or demolition can change the recommended design and scope.
Before work begins
Review the written scope, schedule, payment terms, permit responsibilities, and warranty information provided by the professional. Confirm that the design suits the expected use and applicable requirements. Keep direct records of project decisions. This website facilitates an initial request; the independent professional is responsible for discussing and contracting their own work.