Santa Clara County
Driveways & Drainage in Santa Clara
All-weather access in, and the water out.
Building and repairing gravel driveways and the drainage that keeps them — and your property — from washing out: french drains, culverts, swales, and proper crowning so rural access holds up year-round. Across Santa Clara County — from San Jose, Gilroy, Morgan Hill, and Los Gatos — around Gilroy and Morgan Hill it's ag and ranch land clearing, while up in the Los Gatos and Saratoga foothills it's defensible space and fuel reduction for hillside homes.
Driveways & Drainage Pricing
What driveways costs in Santa Clara
Local terrain, slope, and site access in Santa Clara all move the final number — steep or hard-to-reach parcels run higher than the ranges above.
Local context
Why Santa Clara landowners need driveways
The western foothills around Los Gatos and Saratoga are wildland-urban interface country with oak woodland and chaparral, while the dry grass hills of South County add their own grass-fire exposure each summer.
Local operators
Pros serving Santa Clara
JPM Landscape
42+ yrs
Licensed landscape contractor creating CAL FIRE–compliant defensible space and fire-resilient landscapes, plus hillside stabilization, erosion control, and driveways across the Santa Clara foothills. Since 1984.
Serves: Santa Clara
Harris Excavation
Local operator
Excavation and grading contractor providing site prep, trenching, drainage, and erosion control across Santa Clara and San Mateo. CSLB #1117960 and Licensed Timber Operator.
Serves: Santa Clara · San Mateo
Crestline Construction
Local operator
Family-owned earthwork contractor handling excavation, structural site prep, retaining walls, and concrete driveways for complex South County sites near Morgan Hill and Gilroy.
Serves: Santa Clara
Farr Construction Co.
Local operator · CSLB #444117
Santa Rosa A & B licensed general engineering contractor: grading, excavation, lot clearing, road construction, underground utilities, foundations, and fire cleanup.
Serves: Sonoma · San Mateo · Santa Clara
Independent Contractor Inc.
Local operator
Excavation, demolition, and grading contractor experienced in hillside/steep-lot grading, vineyard lot clearing, and tight-access site work across the Bay Area.
Serves: Santa Clara · San Mateo · Sonoma · Napa
Rocha Construction & Earthworks
Local operator · CSLB #838772
Half Moon Bay earthwork contractor serving the coastal San Mateo Peninsula (Pescadero, La Honda, Woodside, Portola Valley) and into Santa Clara: land clearing, grading, excavation, erosion control, culverts, and dirt/gravel roads.
Serves: San Mateo · Santa Clara
Common questions
Driveways & Drainage FAQs
How much does a gravel driveway cost?+
Roughly $1–$3 per square foot installed, with a typical driveway landing between $600 and $1,800. Gravel itself runs $10–$100 per ton depending on the rock type and how far it's hauled. Length, grade, how much base prep is needed, and site access are the main cost drivers.
Why does my driveway keep washing out?+
Almost always drainage. If water has nowhere to go but down the road, it carves ruts and strips gravel every wet season. The fix is a proper crown plus drainage — french drains, culverts at crossings, and swales to route runoff off the surface. Rebuilding gravel without fixing the water just buys you another year.
What's a french drain and do I need one?+
A french drain is a gravel-filled trench with a perforated pipe that collects and redirects groundwater and surface water away from where it's causing problems. They run $10–$100 per linear foot. You need one anywhere water is pooling against a driveway, structure, or low spot — they're the workhorse of residential drainage.
When do I need a culvert?+
Wherever your driveway crosses a drainage path, ditch, or seasonal creek, a culvert carries that water under the road instead of over it. A typical install averages around $4,500 once you include the pipe, headwalls, and earthwork. Road and creek crossings often have permit requirements, so check locally.
Gravel or paved — which is right for me?+
For most rural properties, gravel. It's far cheaper to install and repair, drains naturally, and handles heavy equipment and seasonal movement better than asphalt on unstable rural ground. Paving makes sense for short, finished approaches near the house, but for long rural runs, well-built gravel with good drainage is the smarter spend.
Driveways & Drainage in other counties
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