
El Dorado Hills Asphalt Paving brings asphalt paving, driveway replacement, and pavement repair to El Dorado Hills homeowners and businesses. We know the sloped lots, clay soils, and El Dorado County permit process that every job here involves.

El Dorado Hills sits on sloped, clay-heavy terrain, so new asphalt paving here requires proper grading and drainage prep before a single shovel of base rock goes down. We handle asphalt paving for driveways, private roads, and commercial lots throughout the El Dorado Hills villages, with full attention to the slope and water flow that define every property in this area.
Most driveways in El Dorado Hills are long, steep, or curved to follow the natural contour of a hillside lot. That shape requires a crew that understands foothill grading rather than treating every driveway as a flat slab. We replace and install asphalt driveways across all of the El Dorado Hills neighborhoods, from the original villages near the Town Center to the newer streets closer to Latrobe Road.
Clay soil that swells in wet winters and shrinks in dry summers is the main reason El Dorado Hills driveways crack faster than pavements in flatter areas. Getting cracks sealed before the rainy season prevents water from reaching the base, which is what turns a small crack into a slab failure over the course of a single winter.
El Dorado Hills summers regularly push above 100 degrees, and that prolonged UV exposure dries out the binder in asphalt faster than in cooler climates. Sealcoating every few years restores a protective layer that slows oxidation and keeps the surface flexible enough to absorb minor movement from the clay soil below.
Potholes in El Dorado Hills often appear after a wet winter, when saturated clay pushes up and breaks through the surface layer. A quick patched repair that does not address the drainage and base conditions underneath will fail again within a season or two. We fix the cause, not just the hole.
Commercial properties in the El Dorado Hills Town Center and along El Dorado Hills Boulevard deal with heavy vehicle traffic and the same clay soil and drainage challenges as residential lots. We pave and maintain commercial parking lots throughout the area, including proper grading to prevent pooling in a climate that sees heavy rain in short windows.
El Dorado Hills is built on rolling Sierra Nevada foothills, and that terrain shapes every paving project here. Flat ground is genuinely rare. Most homes sit on sloped lots with curved or steep driveways, and the soil beneath them is clay-heavy - the kind that swells when it absorbs the heavy winter rains that fall between November and April, then contracts as the summer heat settles in. That seasonal movement is the single most common reason driveways and parking lots in El Dorado Hills crack, shift, and deteriorate faster than properties in flatter parts of the Sacramento region. A contractor who does not understand foothill drainage will pour a base that looks fine in October and fails by March.
The climate creates a second set of challenges. El Dorado Hills summers are long and hot, with daytime temperatures regularly above 95 degrees Fahrenheit and stretches above 100 during heat waves. That sustained heat and UV exposure dries out the oils in asphalt, making it brittle and prone to cracking. Then the rains come. Because the community is unincorporated, all permits run through El Dorado County, not a city building department. Working with a contractor who knows the county process avoids delays and keeps your project compliant.
Our crew works throughout El Dorado Hills regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect asphalt paving work here. We pull permits through the El Dorado County Development Services Department, which is the authority for all construction in this unincorporated community. That process is different from working in a city like Folsom or Sacramento, and knowing it means no surprises on your timeline.
We work on all sides of El Dorado Hills - from the original 1970s and 1980s villages near the center of the community, where driveways are aging and clay soil movement has taken a toll, to the newer neighborhoods out toward Bass Lake Road and Latrobe Road. Our crews travel El Dorado Hills Boulevard, Silva Valley Parkway, and Green Valley Road every week. We know how the terrain changes between the neighborhoods near Folsom Lake and the steeper ridgelines further east. Homeowners in Cameron Park just to the east and in Folsom to the west face similar foothill conditions, and we serve both communities the same way we serve El Dorado Hills.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day. There is no commitment required to schedule an estimate.
We visit your property to assess the surface, base condition, slope, and drainage before quoting. Sloped El Dorado Hills lots sometimes reveal base or drainage issues that change what the right solution is - you will know the full picture and the price before any work starts.
Once you approve the estimate, we schedule the job and handle any required permits through El Dorado County. You do not need to be present during the work, though we will coordinate access with you in advance.
We clean up the job site when we are done and walk you through the work before we leave. For new asphalt, we give you curing time guidance - typically 24 to 48 hours before foot traffic, a few days before vehicles.
No obligation. We respond within one business day and come to you anywhere in El Dorado Hills.
(916) 269-0714El Dorado Hills is an unincorporated master-planned community in El Dorado County, California, located along U.S. Highway 50 between Folsom to the west and Cameron Park to the east. With a population of around 50,000, it is the most populated community in El Dorado County and one of the higher-income areas in the Sacramento region. The community was developed starting in the early 1960s and is organized into distinct neighborhoods called villages - including Ridgeview, Park, Crown, Governors, Saint Andrews, and Lake Forest - each built out across different decades. Homes in the original villages date from the 1970s and 1980s, while outer neighborhoods were built through the 2000s. That range of construction ages means housing stock that is anywhere from 20 to 50 years old, with driveways and paved surfaces at many different stages of their service life. El Dorado Hills sits adjacent to Folsom Lake, which forms part of the community's northern boundary and provides a visible landmark for neighborhoods throughout the area.
The town is almost entirely single-family residential, with a planned commercial center near the intersection of El Dorado Hills Boulevard and Highway 50. Most residents are homeowners rather than renters, and the community draws families who have relocated from Sacramento, the Bay Area, and Southern California in search of larger lots, good schools, and a foothill setting. Neighboring Shingle Springs to the east shares similar terrain, building stock, and seasonal conditions. We serve both communities and the area in between as part of our regular service territory along the Highway 50 corridor.
Protect your pavement and extend its life with professional sealcoating.
Learn MoreCommercial-grade paving solutions for businesses and large properties.
Learn MoreComprehensive maintenance programs that keep your lot in top condition.
Learn MoreProper grading and excavation for a stable, drainage-ready foundation.
Learn MoreQuality concrete curbs and sidewalks that define and protect your property.
Learn MoreCustom drainage systems that prevent flooding and protect your pavement.
Learn MoreProfessionally installed speed bumps that improve safety in any lot.
Learn MoreCall us today or submit a free estimate request - we work throughout El Dorado Hills and respond within one business day.