
Prescott Asphalt Paving is a licensed asphalt paving contractor serving Chino Valley with driveway paving, sealcoating, crack repair, and gravel-to-asphalt conversions. We have been working throughout the Chino Valley area and know the long driveways, caliche soil, and freeze-thaw winters that local properties deal with every year.

Chino Valley properties often have long driveways on large lots where gravel washes out every monsoon season and ruts form from daily truck traffic. Paving gives you a stable, low-maintenance surface that holds up through the seasons. See our driveway paving services.
At nearly 5,000 feet elevation, Chino Valley gets hard freezes that turn small cracks into serious damage over a single winter. Sealing cracks before the cold arrives is the most cost-effective way to protect a driveway from the freeze-thaw cycle here.
The high-desert sun in Chino Valley is intense year-round, and asphalt binder dries out faster at this elevation than in the Phoenix metro. Sealcoating every two to three years keeps the surface flexible and extends its life considerably.
Many Chino Valley properties have gravel driveways on rural lots that need regrading every year after monsoon washouts. Proper grading corrects the slope so water runs away from your home and stops the recurring erosion problem.
Chino Valley potholes tend to get worse quickly because the freeze-thaw cycle keeps working through winter. A proper full-depth repair - not a cold-patch fill - stops the damage and prevents vehicle suspension damage on a driveway you use daily.
Older ranch homes and agricultural properties in Chino Valley often have aging asphalt surfaces with crumbling edges and low spots that collect monsoon runoff. Section repair and base correction stop the damage without replacing the whole surface.
Chino Valley sits at nearly 5,000 feet in the high desert of central Arizona, and that elevation brings weather that lower-elevation towns never deal with. Hard freezes arrive in late fall and continue through early spring. Water that works its way into a crack or under an asphalt surface expands when it freezes, and it does that repeatedly all winter - widening cracks, heaving edges, and shifting the base material underneath. Caliche, the hard calcium-rich layer that forms just below the surface across much of this valley, can complicate base preparation and make drainage corrections more involved than on softer ground.
The summer monsoon season adds a separate challenge. Afternoon storms roll through from July through September and dump heavy rain on ground that does not absorb water quickly. Long gravel driveways on rural Chino Valley properties erode and rut after every serious storm. Even paved surfaces need proper grading so water runs away from homes and barns rather than pooling against foundations. Add the intense high-altitude UV exposure - which oxidizes asphalt binder and makes it brittle faster than in lower desert cities - and Chino Valley demands more from a paved surface than most homeowners expect before they move here.
Our crew works throughout Chino Valley regularly, and the properties here are different from what you find in Prescott or Prescott Valley. A large share of jobs involve long driveways on multi-acre lots - the kind of rural property where a gravel surface has been washed out by monsoons for years and the owner is ready to pave it once and be done with it. We come prepared for caliche and rocky soil, which means we bring equipment suited for ground that does not yield easily, and we account for that in the estimate rather than discovering it as a surprise on day one. The Town of Chino Valley governs permits and right-of-way work here, and we know what those requirements look like.
State Route 89 runs through the heart of town from south to north, and most of Chino Valley spreads out on either side of that corridor - from older ranch homes on large lots to newer subdivisions built in the 2000s. Whether your property is close to Town Hall near SR-89 or out toward the edges of the valley where the roads turn unpaved, we serve all of Chino Valley. We also work regularly in Paulden to the north and in Prescott to the south, so your project gets the same local knowledge no matter where you are in this part of Yavapai County.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form with a description of the project and your address. We get back to every inquiry within one business day - usually the same day. You do not need dimensions or a full scope ready to get started.
We come out to your Chino Valley property, measure the area, check the slope and drainage, and assess the ground conditions - including any caliche or rocky soil that could affect the base work. You get a written estimate with no obligation, so you know exactly what the project costs before anything starts.
We remove any old material, grade the sub-base, compact the gravel base to the right depth for this climate, and then pave. Most residential Chino Valley driveways are completed in one to two days. You do not need to be home for most of the work.
We walk the finished surface with you before we leave and confirm the drainage is working correctly. We also tell you when to expect the first sealcoat - new asphalt needs several months to cure before sealing, so we give you a specific timeline for Chino Valley conditions.
Serving Chino Valley and all surrounding Yavapai County communities. Free on-site estimates with no obligation.
(928) 582-8132Chino Valley is a small town in Yavapai County sitting in a broad, open valley north of Prescott. It is one of the communities locals refer to as the Quad-Cities area, along with Prescott, Prescott Valley, and Dewey-Humboldt. The town has kept a distinctly rural character - most properties are on larger lots, and a meaningful share of residents have horses, livestock, or small-scale agricultural operations. Farming and ranching have been part of this valley for generations, and that heritage shapes the kind of property work that comes up here. Housing stock ranges from older single-story ranch homes built from the 1960s through the 1980s to newer subdivisions added in the 2000s, with the older homes concentrated on bigger lots and the newer builds platted closer together near Town Hall on State Route 89.
Properties outside the newer subdivisions typically sit on multi-acre lots with long gravel or dirt driveways that stretch a hundred feet or more from the road to the house or barn. Those driveways take a beating from Chino Valley's freeze-thaw winters and from the monsoon season that arrives each July and runs through September. That combination of climate and lot size is what makes paving work here feel different from a standard suburban job. Neighboring communities we regularly serve include Prescott Valley to the southeast and Paulden to the north, both of which share similar soil and climate conditions to what you find in Chino Valley.
Protect your pavement from weather and wear with a durable protective sealcoat.
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Learn MoreFull-scale commercial paving solutions for businesses, plazas, and large properties.
Learn MoreKeep your lot in top shape with regular upkeep and preventive care.
Learn MoreRestore worn pavement to a smooth, safe surface without full replacement.
Learn MoreProper site prep and grading ensures a stable foundation for paving.
Learn MoreDefine your property with clean concrete curbs and safe walkways.
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Learn MoreSpring booking windows fill fast - call today and lock in your project date before the best paving season is gone.