Concrete Contractors email list
Access 38,909 concrete contractors across the U.S. — from solo operators to commercial crews. Selling equipment, materials, or services? This database reaches contractors who pour foundations, driveways, and commercial slabs.
Licensed concrete contractors specializing in foundation work, driveways, sidewalks, patios, and commercial concrete placement
Ready-to-contact leads
Unique email records
Monthly demand
Avg. Google searches
Growth trend
Industry trajectory
Avg. annual revenue
Per firm
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Preview the exact data you'll receive.
| Company | Location | Phone | Website | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jeremy Mcquillen Outdoor Living & Designs | Lakeland, FL | +18638606311 | jeremy@jmdesignsfl.com | jmdesignsfl.com |
| Residential And Commercial Concrete Polishing LLC | Knoxville, TN | +18653338790 | residentialccp1@gmail.com | residentialccp1.biz |
| In On And Around Home Services | Chattanooga, TN | +14234887230 | inonaround9@gmail.com | inonaroundhomeservice.com |
| Enduro Custom Homesteads LLC | Lander, WY | +13073499706 | admin@airodigital.com | customhomesteads.com |
| Brian Luedtke Design Group | Rothschild, WI | +17152419042 | brian@brianluedtke.com | www.brianluedtke.com |
| Legacy renovation pros | Indio, CA | +17606682585 | legacyrenovationpros@gmail.com | legacyrenovationpros.com |
| NYC SKYLINE CONSTRUCTION CORP | Bronx, NY | +13479922284 | info@nycskylineconstruction.com | www.nycskylineconstruction.com |
| Greenwood Contractors Inc. | Bronx, NY | +13478888924 | support@greenwoodgcny.com | greenwoodgcny.com |
| Mr. Contractor | Philadelphia, PA | +12154235525 | 20info@mrcontractor.com | www.mrcontractor.com |
| My Jack of All Trades Inc | Chesapeake, VA | +17578635225 | amkryukov@gmail.com | myjackofalltrades.us |
+ 38,899 more verified contacts | ||||
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Database Overview
What You Get
- Full CSV/Excel export
- Location & specialization filters
- Verified contact information
- Company business profiles
Coverage Statistics
Top Cities
- Houston, TX127 firms
- San Antonio, TX68 firms
- Denver, CO59 firms
Top States
- Texas1,157 firms
- California1,176 firms
- Florida717 firms
What they do
Concrete contractors pour foundations, driveways, patios, and commercial slabs. Most handle 15-30 cubic yards per project and work seasonally due to weather constraints.
Daily responsibilities
- Prepare job sites by excavating, grading, and setting forms for concrete placement
- Calculate concrete quantities, order ready-mix, and coordinate delivery timing
- Pour, level, and finish concrete using screeds, floats, and specialized finishing tools
- Install reinforcement materials including rebar, wire mesh, and expansion joints
- Monitor concrete curing process and apply appropriate surface treatments and sealers
- Remove forms, clean equipment, and ensure job sites meet quality and safety standards
Required skills
- Concrete contractor licensing and knowledge of concrete mix designs and curing requirements
- Proficiency with concrete tools: screeds, floats, trowels, power buggies, and finishing equipment
- Understanding of concrete chemistry, weather effects on placement, and proper reinforcement techniques
- Physical stamina for heavy lifting, kneeling, and working in various weather conditions
- Mathematical skills for calculating volumes, grades, and material quantities accurately
How they get started
Construction laborer → Concrete finisher → Crew leader → Concrete contractor
- Minimum education: High school diploma plus on-the-job training or concrete finishing apprenticeship
- Time to get started: 6 months-2 years training plus 2-5 years experience for contractor licensing
Required certifications
- State contractor license (for business owners, varies by state)
- ACI (American Concrete Institute) certifications preferred
- OSHA 10 or 30-Hour construction safety training
- Concrete contractor bonding and general liability insurance
- CDL (Commercial Driver's License) often required for equipment operation
Licensed concrete contractors specializing in foundation work, driveways, sidewalks, patios, and commercial concrete placement
Peak season
April-October when temperatures stay above freezing for proper curing
Most buyers close deals here
Slow season
November-March when cold weather prevents pouring and curing
Great for nurturing and demos
Monthly demand
6,000
Average Google searches
Growth
+5% annually
Year-over-year trend
Business focus
21,011 operate primarily in this category, with 64.7% running no more than two service lines.
Best time to reach out
Monday-Wednesday, 6-8 AM or 6-8 PM, avoiding active pour hours and equipment operation
Subject lines that get replies
- Pour 40% faster with new lightweight concrete screeds
- $15K annual savings: direct ready-mix delivery scheduling app
- Winter equipment storage: heated shop rental for contractors
- Prevent costly callbacks with concrete moisture testing equipment
- Double your stamped concrete revenue with training certification
Value props to highlight
- Professional concrete finishing and placement equipment
- Concrete supplier coordination and scheduling software
- Equipment financing tailored to seasonal concrete work
Pain points you can solve
- Lost revenue from weather delays and winter shutdowns
- Ready-mix trucks arriving too early or late affecting pour quality
- Concrete pump breakdowns during critical pours causing expensive delays
- Difficulty finding experienced finishers willing to work in harsh conditions
- Large contractors underbidding projects with ready-mix supplier volume discounts
- Customer complaints about cracking and settlement requiring warranty callbacks
Ideal company size
- Solo concrete contractors (2-4 pours/week): Need mobile estimating, weather tracking, and equipment scheduling tools
- Small concrete crews (3-8 workers): Require project scheduling, material calculation software, and equipment coordination
- Mid-size concrete companies (10-20 employees): Focus on commercial projects, multiple crew management, and heavy equipment tracking
- Large concrete contractors (20+ employees): Need comprehensive project management, concrete plant relationships, and commercial bidding systems
Budget indicators
- Investment in concrete equipment: mixers, pumps, finishing tools, laser levels ($25K-150K+)
- Heavy-duty trucks, trailers, and concrete transport equipment
- Concrete contractor licensing, bonding, and specialized liability insurance
- Established relationships with concrete suppliers, rebar suppliers, and aggregate providers
Discovery questions
- Do you specialize in residential driveways/patios or commercial concrete work?
- How many cubic yards of concrete do you typically pour monthly?
- What types of concrete work generate the most revenue (foundations, flatwork, decorative)?
- Do you have your own concrete mixing capabilities or rely on ready-mix suppliers?
- How do you handle weather delays and project scheduling around concrete curing times?
Who signs off
Business owners make equipment decisions ($10K-100K). Foremen choose tools and supplies. Larger companies involve operations managers in supplier contracts.
Average firm size: Most concrete contracting businesses operate with 3-12 workers including operators and finishers.