Planning a patio cover, pergola, or roof? We pour the slab that carries it, with footings, reinforcement, and thickness sized for the load. Free written estimate.
Tell us about your project and we will get right back to you.
A covered patio slab does more work than a plain patio. It has to carry the posts and roof load, tie those posts down against wind, and shed water away from your house. We pour it for that job from the start.

Tell us the cover or pergola you are installing and we set footing locations and anchors to match it.
Post anchors can be set while the concrete is wet, giving a stronger tie-down than drilling in later.
Depth, footings, and reinforcement are sized for the structure so it passes inspection where a permit applies.
Other patio and slab work we handle across Dayton.
Ballpark ranges for planning. Your exact, itemized price comes after we see the site.
$6,500
$4,000 to $10,500
$450
$250 to $750
A standard patio slab is poured about 4 inches thick to carry foot traffic and furniture. A covered patio adds concentrated loads at the posts plus wind uplift on the roof, and a thin, unfooted slab can crack or let a post punch through over time. The support has to be built in where the posts land.
That is why we ask about the cover before we pour. Knowing the post spacing, the roof size, and how it anchors lets us place footings, size the reinforcement, and set anchor bolts in the right spots. Poured this way, the slab and the cover work as one system instead of a structure sitting on a slab that was never meant to hold it.
We review your patio cover or pergola, the post spacing, and how it anchors, then quote in writing.
We dig footings at the post points, compact the base, and form the slab with the right pitch for drainage.
Rebar or wire mesh goes in, footings and slab are poured to the sized depth, and anchor bolts are set wet.
Control joints are cut, the slab cures, and we walk it with you so it is ready for your cover to go up.
The main patio area is often poured around 4 inches, but the slab is thickened or footed where the cover posts land so those loads have real support. The exact depth and footing size depend on the structure, which is why we plan it with you first.
Yes. When we know the post layout, we can set anchor bolts while the concrete is still wet. That gives a stronger, better-aligned tie-down than drilling anchors into cured concrete later.
A permit is often required once you add a roof or cover, since it becomes a structure. Requirements vary by jurisdiction in the Dayton area. We pour the slab, footings, and reinforcement to code so the foundation is not the holdup.
One quick form and we will call you back to talk it through. Prefer to talk now? Call (937) 892-4388
A local concrete crew serving Dayton and the Miami Valley. When a patio has to carry a cover or pergola, we pour the footings, depth, and reinforcement the structure needs and set the anchors in the pour. Done right so the slab and the cover last together.