
Prescott Valley Asphalt Paving handles asphalt paving, driveway installation, and crack sealing for Chino Valley properties, from newer subdivision lots to large rural driveways on caliche ground. We have served the Prescott area since 2017 and know exactly what this high-desert climate does to pavement.

Chino Valley properties cover a wide range - from compact subdivision lots near Town Hall to rural parcels with long driveways stretching several hundred feet. Our asphalt paving service includes full base preparation to handle caliche and rocky soil before any surface is laid.
Many Chino Valley homeowners have long gravel or dirt driveways that erode and rut every monsoon season. Replacing gravel with asphalt removes the ongoing grading and regravel cost and gives you a stable, low-maintenance surface that handles Arizona weather without washing out.
Freeze-thaw cycles at nearly 5,000 feet elevation widen small cracks into large ones over just a few winters. Sealing cracks early is the most affordable way to protect existing pavement on Chino Valley properties and prevent water from getting into the base.
The intense high-desert sun at Chino Valley's elevation oxidizes asphalt faster than in lower-elevation towns. Sealcoating every 3 to 5 years blocks UV damage, slows surface brittleness, and extends the useful life of your driveway or parking lot significantly.
Rural Chino Valley properties often have grading needs before any paving can happen - especially on lots where monsoon runoff collects in low spots or where caliche sits close to the surface. We handle full grading and excavation as part of the paving process or as a standalone job.
Hard-packed soil and caliche across Chino Valley do not absorb water well, and monsoon storms can move a lot of water fast. Correcting drainage before or during paving protects your investment and prevents the most common cause of early pavement failure on rural properties.
Chino Valley sits at nearly 5,000 feet in the high desert of Yavapai County, and that elevation creates conditions that contractors working only in the Phoenix metro rarely deal with. Winters here bring genuine hard freezes and occasional snow. The freeze-thaw cycle - water entering pavement cracks, freezing overnight, expanding, and thawing repeatedly through late fall, winter, and early spring - is the primary driver of accelerated asphalt deterioration in this town. A driveway that might last 30 years in lower-elevation Arizona can fail in 10 to 15 years if it was installed without accounting for this climate.
The mix of housing stock here adds another layer of complexity. Newer subdivision homes near SR-89 have standard paved driveways that need routine maintenance. Older ranch-style homes on larger lots - many of them built before the 2000s - often have long gravel driveways with poor drainage and caliche soil that was never properly prepped for paving. Agricultural and horse properties need extra-durable surfaces that can handle heavier vehicle loads without cracking. A contractor who shows up without knowing any of this will underestimate the base preparation needed and produce a job that fails ahead of schedule.
Our crew works throughout Chino Valley regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect asphalt paving work here. State Route 89 runs north through the center of town and is the road we travel to reach nearly every job in the valley. Whether your property is a newer build in one of the subdivisions near the town center, an older ranch home on a multi-acre lot, or an agricultural property out toward the edge of the valley, we have worked on properties like yours. Chino Valley is one of the faster-growing communities in the Prescott Quad-Cities area, and that growth brings a mix of first-time paving jobs on raw lots and maintenance work on driveways installed a decade or two ago.
The terrain here also means digging and grading jobs often hit caliche a foot or two below the surface. We come to Chino Valley jobs prepared for that, with equipment and a process that does not skip the base work even when the ground is hard. We also serve the neighboring community of Paulden, AZ, which shares much of the same rural character and soil conditions as Chino Valley. If you have questions about whether we cover your specific address, call us and we will confirm.
Contact us by phone or through the estimate form on this page. We respond within one business day and can usually schedule a site visit within the same week.
We visit your Chino Valley property, assess the existing surface and base, check drainage, and identify any caliche or soil issues. You receive a written estimate with no obligation before any work is scheduled.
We handle grading, base compaction, and any drainage corrections before laying asphalt. On most residential driveways in Chino Valley, the paving work is completed in one day once the base is ready.
We walk the finished work with you before we leave. New asphalt needs 24 to 48 hours before regular vehicle traffic, and we provide curing and maintenance guidance specific to Chino Valley's climate.
Serving all of Chino Valley, AZ - from SR-89 subdivisions to rural lots. No obligation. Free written estimates.
(928) 582-8831Chino Valley is a small town in Yavapai County set in a broad, open valley north of Prescott, at an elevation of roughly 4,700 to 5,000 feet. It sits along State Route 89, which runs the length of the community and connects residents to Prescott to the south and to Interstate 40 to the north. The town has a well-established agricultural and ranching heritage, and that history is still visible in the large-lot properties, horse pastures, and farm outbuildings scattered across the valley floor. Newer residential subdivisions have grown up along and near the SR-89 corridor, adding more conventional suburban homes to a community that was previously almost entirely rural and large-lot.
Most of Chino Valley's commercial activity clusters near Town Hall on SR-89, with residential neighborhoods spreading out across the valley in both directions. Properties range from compact subdivision lots to multi-acre parcels used for horses and small-scale farming. The Prescott National Forest sits nearby to the east and south, shaping the landscape and contributing to the rural feel the community is known for. Chino Valley is part of the greater Prescott Quad-Cities region, alongside Prescott, Prescott Valley, and Dewey-Humboldt. Residents of all four towns often travel between them for work and services, and contractors who work here need to know the roads and conditions across the whole region.
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