Concrete Contractor Website Design: Show Your Slabs, Book More Pours
Concrete contractor website design succeeds or fails on job photos: a homeowner cannot judge a pour over the phone, so the site has to prove your finish work before they call. We build that site from your Google Business Profile in minutes, photos included, and host it for a flat monthly price of $75.
Your finished slabs do the selling
The photos you already uploaded to your Google Business Profile become the backbone of the site. Concrete is one of the few trades where the after photo closes the job by itself: a cracked, heaved driveway next to a clean broom-finished replacement says everything a paragraph cannot. WebCitz's audit of the 12 best concrete company websites keeps landing on the same point: the sites that win are photo-forward and fast. So every gallery on your site is real work, compressed to load instantly on a phone, and captioned with the town where you poured it, because that caption is what local search reads.
One page per pour type
Driveways, patios, stamped and decorative work, sidewalks, slabs and foundations. Each gets its own page, because "stamped concrete patio [your town]" is its own search, and a page built for it beats a services list every time. The stamped and decorative page matters most: it is the highest-margin work, the most photogenic, and the search where homeowners shop hardest. Pair the service pages with a page per town you pour in, and the site catches searches your Google profile alone never will.
What else ranks for this search
Mostly niche agencies and design galleries. Shops like Hook Agency build custom concrete and hardscaping sites, and if you run a multi-crew operation that wants a bespoke brand and a marketing retainer behind it, an agency is the right buy. What none of them puts on the page is a price. We do: $75 a month covers design, build, hosting, a branded domain, lead capture, and edits, and the draft exists before you finish your coffee.
A concrete guy's portfolio is sitting in his truck camera roll and his Google profile. Our job is to turn those photos into a site with a page for every pour he sells, without him typing a word.
The site is half the job
A website catches the homeowner who is already searching; the rest of the pipeline is referrals, builders, and repeat pours. We wrote up how to get concrete jobs as its own guide, and this page is one trade in our contractor website design lineup. If your crew is ready for the half a website handles, start here.