
Hudson Concrete is your local concrete contractor in Hudson, NH, handling driveways, patios, and foundation work throughout the area. Our crew has served Hudson homeowners since 2016, and we pull all required permits from the Town of Hudson Building Department before any project begins.

Hudson homes built in the 1960s through 1990s are hitting the point where original driveways are cracking, flaking, or settling unevenly after decades of freeze-thaw cycles. We build new driveways with air-entrained concrete mixes and properly compacted gravel bases designed for New Hampshire winters - you can learn more on our concrete driveway building page.
Most Hudson properties are single-family homes with a yard and no defined outdoor living space. A properly graded concrete patio redirects rainwater away from your foundation while giving you a low-maintenance surface that holds up through four seasons of southern New Hampshire weather.
Hudson homeowners who want the look of natural stone or brick without the cost of loose pavers choose stamped concrete for patios, walkways, and pool surrounds. Stamped surfaces are poured as one continuous slab, so there are no individual pieces to shift or settle during spring frost heaves.
Many Hudson lots have uneven grades or slopes that erode every spring when snowmelt saturates the Merrimack Valley's sandy and loamy soils. A concrete retaining wall stabilizes those slopes permanently and creates usable, level space that lawn grading alone cannot hold.
Hudson's full-basement homes are common, and those basements face real stress from deep frost and clay-heavy soils every winter. Whether you need a new foundation for an addition or repairs to an existing one that has shifted, we work on residential foundations throughout Hudson and the surrounding towns.
Cracked front steps and heaved sidewalks are a safety issue, especially in winter when ice settles into gaps and uneven sections. Hudson's freeze-thaw cycles are hard on entry concrete, and replacing failing steps or walkways with a properly reinforced pour removes the hazard and improves your home's curb appeal.
Hudson sits in USDA Hardiness Zone 5b-6a, and the ground freezes to a depth of two feet or more every winter. That repeated freezing and thawing is the single biggest threat to any concrete surface in this area. Water finds its way under a slab, freezes, expands, and pushes the concrete up - then releases it when temperatures climb again. Over years, that movement cracks driveways, heaves patio sections, and puts stress on foundation walls. A contractor who does not account for this builds surfaces that look fine in May and show serious damage by April.
Hudson's housing stock adds another layer of complexity. Most homes here were built between the 1960s and 1990s, which means original driveways, foundations, and flatwork are 30 to 60 years old and were often poured without today's freeze-resistant concrete mixes. The Merrimack River valley's sandy and silty soils can shift unevenly if not properly compacted before a pour. Add the fact that road salt from winter maintenance gets tracked onto every residential surface, and you have conditions that punish shortcuts quickly. Homeowners here need a contractor who knows this terrain, not one who quotes the same spec they use in a warmer climate.
Our crew works throughout Hudson regularly, and we pull permits directly from the Town of Hudson Building Department for every applicable project. We know the setback rules, the inspection timeline, and what the building department expects - which means your project stays on schedule and stays compliant without you having to navigate town hall yourself.
Hudson is a town of about 25,000 people spread across wooded, suburban neighborhoods, with most homes sitting on single-family lots off quieter streets near commercial corridors like Route 102 and Lowell Road. From neighborhoods near Benson Park to the newer subdivisions on the east side of town, the properties we work on range from mid-century ranches and split-levels to larger Colonials in more recent developments. We know what each part of town looks like, what kind of concrete work each generation of home typically needs, and how the sandy Merrimack Valley soils behave during base prep.
We also serve the towns and cities right around Hudson. If you have a neighbor or family member in Nashua or the surrounding region, we cover those areas as well and apply the same local knowledge about soils, climate, and permit requirements to every job.
Call or submit the contact form and we will respond within one business day to schedule a time to see your property in person. We measure the area, check the grade, and ask how you use the space so the quote covers exactly what your project needs.
A crew member walks your property, checks soil conditions, and identifies any drainage or grading issues before we price the work. You receive a written quote that spells out what is included - no low-ball number that climbs once the job starts.
We handle the Town of Hudson building permit application before anything is ordered or scheduled. Once approved - typically within a week or two - we place you on the calendar and confirm your start date.
The crew removes the old surface if needed, compacts a gravel base, then pours and finishes your concrete. After curing, we do a final walkthrough with you and tell you exactly when the surface is ready for full use.
We serve Hudson and the surrounding area. Tell us what you need and we will get back to you within one business day.
(603) 471-5233Hudson is a town of about 25,000 people in Hillsborough County, sitting directly on the New Hampshire-Massachusetts state line with the Merrimack River forming its western border with Nashua. The town grew quickly as a postwar suburb, and roughly 80 percent of its housing units are owner-occupied, well above the national average. Most homes are detached single-family ranches, split-levels, and Colonials on wooded or suburban lots, with attached garages and full basements that are standard for New Hampshire suburban construction from this era.
The bulk of Hudson's housing stock dates from the 1960s through the 1990s, putting most homes in the 30-to-60-year range where original concrete work - driveways, patios, steps, and foundation surfaces - is reaching the end of its useful life. A busy commercial corridor runs along Route 102 and Lowell Road, while residential neighborhoods fan out on quieter streets, many of them shaded by mature trees. Local landmarks like Benson Park and Alvirne High School anchor different corners of town, and many families have lived here for decades because of Hudson's lower taxes and short commute to Nashua and Greater Boston jobs. We also work throughout the surrounding communities, including Merrimack to the north.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreAdd beauty and texture to surfaces with decorative stamped concrete.
Learn MorePrecision concrete floor installs for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade concrete parking lots built to handle heavy use.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit the contact form and we will respond within one business day - before the spring season fills up.