Wild West Concrete pours regulation-spec pickleball court pads across Utah County and Salt Lake County. Built right the first time. No callbacks. No cracks where they shouldn't be.
A pickleball court isn't just a slab of concrete. The grading has to be dead flat for true ball bounce. The base has to drain so it doesn't heave in the spring. The reinforcement has to keep it from cracking when the ground freezes. We've poured private home courts and HOA amenity courts all over Utah Valley. Every one was built right.
4-inch compacted road base over engineered subgrade. Laser-graded to within 1/8 inch over the full court for true ball bounce.
4-inch concrete pad with #3 rebar grid on chairs. Saw-cut control joints to manage shrinkage cracking. Optional fiber-mesh add for extra crack resistance.
Hard troweled finish or broom finish depending on your coating plan. Coordinated with your acrylic surfacing crew so the court coating bonds clean.
| Standard court size | 30 ft × 60 ft (1,800 sq ft) — regulation single court with safety margin |
|---|---|
| Doubles play area | 20 ft × 44 ft (court lines) inside the larger pad |
| Pad thickness | 4 inches concrete on 4 inches compacted base |
| Reinforcement | #3 rebar grid 18 in. o.c. on chairs (or #4 grid for HOA / commercial) |
| Concrete strength | 4,000 psi mix, 4–6 inch slump |
| Slope | 1% slope across the short axis for drainage (or zero slope with edge drains for tournament-grade) |
| Saw cuts | Cut within 6–12 hours of pour, depth 1¼ in., on a calculated grid |
| Cure time | 7 days minimum before surfacing crew applies acrylic |
Most home pickleball court pads (single court) run between $15,000 – $24,000 for the concrete portion — depending on grading, base depth, rebar spec, and access. Multi-court HOA installations price differently — call for a site visit and detailed quote.
Site evaluation and elevation shoot. Excavation and base prep. Forming and rebar. Concrete supply and pour. Finishing, control joints, sealing. Cleanup. 1-year workmanship warranty.
Acrylic surfacing / paint / lines. Net posts and net hardware. Fencing. Lighting. We'll recommend trusted partners for any of these and coordinate scheduling.
For a single private court: 1 day grading, 1 day forms & rebar, 1 day pour, 7 days cure before surfacing. Total concrete portion: about 10 days from break-ground to surfacing-ready.
All concrete cracks — it's how we manage the cracking that matters. We use saw-cut control joints on a calculated grid to direct the cracks where they won't affect play. With proper rebar, base prep, and joint cuts, your court won't develop random surface cracks during normal use.
Yes, with cold-weather mix and blanket cure protection above 25°F. We don't pour during active freeze events. Most clients prefer April–October pours for best cure conditions.
We pour the concrete pad and install post sleeves if you order them. Acrylic surfacing (paint and lines) is done by a specialty crew — we work with two trusted partners and can coordinate the schedule for you.
We've done these. Pricing scales differently than single residential courts. Call for a walkthrough and proposal — (385) 225-5252.
Tell us about your site. We'll come look, measure, and put a number on it. No-obligation, no high-pressure pitch. Asher will personally text you back within an hour.
Or call us directly
(385) 225-5252