Precision Sun City West Concrete is the concrete contractor Peoria homeowners call for pool decks, driveways, patios, and slab foundations. We have served the northwest Phoenix metro since 2017, and our crews understand the caliche soil, the HOA approval process in master-planned communities, and the heat management that concrete poured in Peoria demands.

Peoria has one of the highest rates of backyard pool ownership in the Phoenix metro, and the intense UV exposure here degrades pool decking faster than many homeowners expect. We build slip-resistant, heat-reflective pool decks designed to handle the wet-dry cycles that Peoria pools see every year. Learn more about our pool deck service for finish options and what to expect on installation day.
Homes in Peoria built during the 1990s and 2000s are now at the age where original driveways crack, flake, and shift as the caliche below contracts and expands. We replace aging driveways with properly reinforced slabs graded to push monsoon runoff away from your garage.
Peoria homeowners get nine to ten months of usable outdoor weather each year, and a well-built patio pays for itself in that kind of climate. We pour patios with light-tinted finishes that reflect heat and texture that stays non-slip even when wet from a late monsoon.
Many Peoria homeowners in master-planned communities want a more polished look than plain gray concrete but want to avoid the weed growth and shifting that comes with pavers. Stamped and colored concrete gives driveways and patios a premium appearance with no added maintenance burden.
Caliche soil in Peoria drains poorly, and monsoon storms regularly send water across flat backyard lots where it has nowhere to go. A properly built concrete retaining wall redirects runoff, holds grade on sloped lots, and prevents the soil erosion that wrecks landscaping beds year after year.
Room additions and outbuildings in Peoria need a concrete slab that is sized and reinforced to meet City of Peoria permit requirements and that accounts for the caliche beneath the surface. We handle permit drawings and inspections so you are not guessing what the city inspector needs.
Most of Peoria was built during the suburban boom years of the 1990s and 2000s. That means the bulk of the city's housing stock is now 15 to 30 years old - old enough for original driveways, patio slabs, and pool decks to show real wear. The caliche layer that runs beneath most Peoria lots does not absorb water well, so monsoon rains from July through September cause water to pool against foundations and saturate the subgrade under flatwork. Contractors unfamiliar with caliche will underprepare the base, and the resulting slab will crack or heave within a few years.
Summer temperatures in Peoria regularly exceed 110 degrees, which is hard on both new and existing concrete. Fresh concrete poured at midday in July will lose moisture from the surface before it has cured properly, leaving a weak top layer that dusts and flakes under foot traffic. Experienced local contractors schedule summer work for early morning and keep the surface wet during the first curing days. The University of Arizona Cooperative Extension has documented how desert soil conditions and extreme heat interact with concrete flatwork across the Phoenix metro - and Peoria is squarely in that zone.
Our crew works throughout Peoria regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Peoria Development Services office for residential concrete projects here. We encounter single-story ranch-style homes with stucco exteriors and concrete tile roofs on nearly every job - the standard format for neighborhoods built across the city from the mid-1990s through the late 2000s.
Peoria covers a large area - over 170 square miles - and the neighborhoods look very different depending on where you are. Vistancia in the far north is a newer, more spread-out desert community near Lake Pleasant Regional Park. The older neighborhoods closer to the Loop 101 and Peoria Avenue corridor are more densely built and have a mix of single-family homes and commercial strips. We have worked on concrete projects throughout both zones and know the soil and drainage differences between them.
We serve several communities that border Peoria. Homeowners in Glendale, AZ to the south are a regular part of our service area, and the concrete conditions there are similar to south Peoria. We also cover Surprise, AZ, which shares much of the same soil profile and housing stock as the neighborhoods along Peoria's northwest edge.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will respond within one business day. A brief conversation about the project type helps us schedule the right crew for the estimate visit.
We visit your Peoria property, measure the area, assess the soil and any existing concrete, and provide a written estimate with no obligation. We flag any caliche or drainage issues during this visit so there are no surprises on pricing later.
Once you approve the estimate, we handle any required City of Peoria permits and schedule the pour for the right time of day. Summer jobs are scheduled for early morning to protect curing quality - your crew will be on site before the heat sets in.
We complete the pour, finish the surface, and leave the site clean. We walk you through the curing timeline before we leave - including when you can walk on it and when it is ready for vehicle traffic.
We serve homeowners throughout Peoria, AZ. No obligation, no pressure - just an honest look at your project and a clear price.
(623) 320-0846Peoria is one of the largest cities in the northwest Phoenix metro, covering more than 170 square miles and home to over 190,000 residents. The city grew rapidly through large master-planned communities built in the 1990s and 2000s, and Vistancia in the far north - one of the largest master-planned communities in Arizona - remains one of its most recognized neighborhoods. The southern end of Peoria, closer to Glendale, has a mix of older established neighborhoods and commercial corridors that have been there for decades. You can read more about the city on the Peoria, Arizona Wikipedia article.
The community is known for the Peoria Sports Complex, the spring training home of the San Diego Padres and Seattle Mariners, and for easy access to Lake Pleasant Regional Park in the city's far north. Most homes here are single-story stucco ranch-style houses on modest lots, with attached garages, backyard patios, and - for a large share of properties - in-ground pools. Nearby communities in our service area include Glendale to the south and Surprise to the northwest, both of which we serve regularly.
Add texture and pattern to any concrete surface with stamped finishes.
Learn MorePrecision-poured interior and exterior floors for any application.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots designed for heavy traffic and durability.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit a request online - we respond within one business day and serve homeowners throughout Peoria and the northwest Phoenix metro.