"How much for a gravel driveway?" is the most common first sentence we hear on the phone, and it's also the hardest one to answer in a sentence. The honest answer is it depends on three things โ and once you know what those three things are, you can read any quote and tell whether it's reasonable.
This is a 2026 cost guide for gravel driveways in central Illinois โ Coles, Cumberland, Douglas, Effingham, Champaign, Macon, Moultrie, Shelby, Vermilion counties, and the eastern edge of Indiana. Numbers below are real ranges from real jobs. Your driveway will land somewhere in here.
The Three Things That Drive The Price
Length matters less than people think. What you're starting with matters more than anything.
1. What's already under there
If there's a real base โ six to eight inches of compacted CA-6 or coarser stone โ you're paying for top-dress or regrade work. If it's dirt with some scattered rock pressed into it, you're paying for a real driveway, not a refresh. We can usually tell within the first 50 feet of walking it. So can you, once you know what to look for: tap the surface with a steel toe. If it gives, the base is gone.
2. How much rock you actually need
This is the biggest single line item, and the place where homeowners get talked into too much or too little. A solid rule of thumb for a fresh build:
- Stone goes about 1 cubic yard per 100 square feet at 4 inches deep.
- A typical residential drive 12 ft wide ร 200 ft long is 2,400 sq ft โ so figure ~24 yards of stone for a 4-inch lift, ~36 yards if you want a real 6-inch base course.
- Long farm lanes can hit 80โ150 yards. Short suburban drives often run 8โ15 yards.
2026 delivered prices for CA-6 limestone in central Illinois have been running roughly $28โ$38 per ton depending on quarry, distance, and load size, with 1.4โ1.5 tons per yard typical. That's $40โ$57 per yard delivered. Coarser base stone (CA-1, CA-3) runs a few dollars cheaper; finer surface stone (CA-7, CM-11 screenings) runs a few dollars more.
3. How much earthwork the driveway needs
This is everything besides the stone โ and it's where quotes spread the most.
- Crowning and grading a worn surface: a few hours of a track loader and a dozer.
- Subgrade prep for a new lane: stripping topsoil, cutting to grade, possibly adding fabric, compacting. A day to two days for a typical residence.
- Drainage: reshaping ditches, installing a culvert at the road, swaling water away from the running surface. Highly variable.
- Tear-out: if there's old asphalt or unsuitable fill that has to come out, that's its own line item.
2026 Ballpark Ranges (Central Illinois)
Numbers below assume average access, no major drainage corrections, and a residential driveway 200 feet long, 12 feet wide. Your number will move up or down based on the three things above.
| Job | Typical Range | What's In It |
|---|---|---|
| Top-dress only | $600 โ $1,400 | One delivery of fresh stone, spread, restore crown |
| Regrade + top-dress | $1,200 โ $3,200 | Rip surface, reshape crown and shoulders, fresh top course |
| Full rebuild on existing path | $3,500 โ $7,500 | Cut to subgrade, base course, surface course, crown, ditch work |
| Brand-new driveway, virgin ground | $5,500 โ $14,000+ | Strip topsoil, subgrade prep, base, surface, culvert, ditch |
| Long farm or pole-barn lane (300โ600 ft) | $6,000 โ $20,000+ | Same as new build, scaled to length, often two-day job |
If somebody quotes you well below the bottom of these ranges, ask what stone, how deep, and whether they're including grading. If they quote well above the top โ same questions. Both ends of the spectrum usually mean a quote that doesn't match the actual scope.
The Four Numbers To Ask For
Any quote worth signing tells you these four things. If a quote is just one big number with no breakdown, that's a red flag โ not because the contractor's dishonest, but because they may not have scoped it carefully either.
- How many tons (or yards) of rock, and what spec? CA-6 surface stone? CA-3 base? CM-11? Different stones, different prices, different jobs.
- How deep, in inches. A 4-inch top course over an existing base is a different animal than a 6-inch base + 4-inch top on virgin ground.
- How many hours of equipment time, and what equipment. A bulldozer day and a skid steer day aren't the same. Excavator time for ditch work is its own line.
- What's not included. Often a culvert, a fabric layer, soft-spot remediation, or removal of old asphalt is left out โ fair game, but you should know.
If a contractor can answer those four questions on the phone or after a 10-minute walk, they've actually scoped the job. If they can't, the price they quote is a guess.
Where People Overspend (and Where They Cheap Out)
Two patterns we see all the time in central Illinois:
Overspending: too much top stone, not enough base.
A pretty driveway with 6 inches of fresh CA-6 over soft ground will look great in May and have potholes in October. The base is what carries the truck. Skipping a real base course to put more pretty rock on top is the most common form of money down a hole.
Underspending: skipping the crown.
A driveway with no crown holds water in the middle. Water in the middle softens the base. Soft base shifts under tires. Tires push fines and small stone to the edges. Within a season or two you've got washboarding, ruts, or potholes โ exactly the problem you paid to avoid. The crown is free in the sense that any halfway-grading equipment can build it; what costs money is the time to do it carefully.
Underspending: skipping the ditch.
Same logic, one step further out. If the ditch on either side of the driveway is full of grass, sediment, or has a culvert that doesn't drain, the driveway can't dry out after a rain. We almost always quote ditch work alongside any driveway over 150 feet, because the math doesn't work otherwise.
Maintenance Math: What It Costs To Keep One Right
A well-built gravel driveway in central Illinois holds up roughly like this:
- Years 1โ2: almost nothing โ maybe a small top-dress to lock in the base.
- Years 3โ5: one regrade and a top-dress, especially if you got a hard winter or a wet spring.
- Years 6โ10: typically another regrade plus enough rock to bring the surface back. This is usually still a fraction of a rebuild.
- Years 10+: if drainage was right and the base was solid, you might still be on the original lane with periodic regrades. If either was skipped, you're looking at a rebuild.
Budgeted out, that's roughly $200โ$600/year in maintenance for a typical residential driveway done right the first time โ way less than the cost of a rebuild every five years because the base never set.
Free Estimates โ Real Numbers, Not Ballpark
We do free estimates across the 60-mile radius from Mattoon, IL. You walk the driveway, take a couple of photos, send them to (217) 809-0779, and we'll usually give you a real range right there. If we need to drive out to scope it carefully, we will โ and that's still free. The number on the phone is the same shape as the number on the quote.
Cities we run gravel driveway work in regularly: Mattoon, Charleston, Effingham, Champaign, Decatur, Urbana, Tuscola, Arcola, Sullivan, Shelbyville, Pana, Tower Hill, Findlay, Lovington, Toledo, Newton, Greenup, Casey, Marshall, Robinson, Westfield, Dalton City, Bethany, Windsor, Trilla, Dorans, Atwood, Hammond, Cerro Gordo, Bement, Ivesdale, Tolono, Sidney, Philo, Pesotum, Camargo, Villa Grove, Hindsboro, Oakland, Paris, Terre Haute IN.
Learn more about our gravel driveway service or check the projects page for recent driveway builds.