
Premier Biloxi Concrete is a local concrete contractor serving Biloxi, MS, with driveways, patios, and slab foundations sized right for Gulf Coast conditions. We have been working in this city since 2023, and every crew member on our jobs knows the sandy soil, the rain patterns, and the permit process here firsthand.
Biloxi driveways face sandy soil, heavy rain, and summer heat that pushes concrete to cure faster than it should. We grade every pour to drain away from your foundation and compact the base so the slab stays level through years of wet seasons. See our driveway services.
Biloxi gets over 60 inches of rain a year, and a flat, poorly graded patio sends that water straight toward your back door. We slope every patio away from the house and seal the surface for the salt air and humidity that wears down unsealed concrete fast.
Many Biloxi homeowners refreshed their outdoor spaces after Katrina and want finishes that look intentional, not plain gray. Stamped concrete gives you the look of stone or brick at a fraction of the cost, with textures that stay grippy in the rain.
Pools are common throughout Biloxi, and the pool deck takes a beating from the Gulf Coast sun, heavy foot traffic, and constant moisture. We use slip-resistant finishes designed for wet coastal conditions so the surface stays safe for your family.
The older ranch-style homes near Keesler Air Force Base and inland Biloxi neighborhoods often sit on original 1960s slabs that have shifted over decades. We pour new slabs with the right base preparation for Biloxi's low-lying, moisture-prone ground.
Low-lying lots in Biloxi collect runoff fast after a heavy storm. A concrete retaining wall keeps soil in place and directs water where it belongs, protecting your yard and foundation from the erosion that coastal rain events cause season after season.
Biloxi sits on a narrow peninsula between the Gulf of Mexico and the Back Bay, and almost every neighborhood in the city is close to water. That geography means the soil under your driveway, patio, or foundation is sandy and low-lying, drains poorly in some areas, and can shift after a heavy rainstorm. Concrete poured without the right base preparation on this kind of soil will crack or sink within a few years, regardless of how well the surface was finished. The coastal climate adds another layer of difficulty: over 60 inches of rain per year, summer heat that can cure fresh concrete too fast, and salt air that breaks down unsealed surfaces faster than homeowners expect.
Biloxi also has a wide range of housing types that each create their own concrete needs. Homes rebuilt after Hurricane Katrina are often elevated on concrete pilings and need different foundation work than the older slab-on-grade ranch homes near Keesler Air Force Base. Post-Katrina rebuilds in Point Cadet and other low-lying neighborhoods brought new FEMA flood elevation requirements that affect how concrete work is designed and permitted. A contractor who has worked here knows these differences and factors them in from the first site visit, not as an afterthought.
Our crew works throughout Biloxi regularly, and we pull permits through the City of Biloxi Community Development Department on every job that requires one. We know the city's permit process firsthand - how long it typically takes and what inspectors look for - which helps us set accurate timelines and avoid delays on your project. The City of Biloxi Community Development Department handles permits for concrete work that affects drainage or connects to a public right-of-way, and we manage that paperwork so you do not have to.
We work on homes across the city - from the older cottages and post-Katrina elevated homes in the Point Cadet neighborhood to the slab-on-grade ranch homes in the neighborhoods off Pass Road near Keesler Air Force Base. Whether your address puts you close to the Biloxi Lighthouse on the beachfront or farther inland near Highway 90, the soil conditions, rainfall, and salt air exposure shape every concrete decision we make on your property.
We also serve the communities closest to Biloxi. If you live just across the city line in D'Iberville, our crew works those neighborhoods regularly and understands how the newer subdivisions there differ from Biloxi's older housing stock. We also cover Ocean Springs to the east, where similar coastal soil and drainage conditions apply.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form. We respond within 1 business day and will schedule a site visit at a time that works for you - no need to take a day off.
We visit your property, measure the area, assess the soil and drainage, and give you a written estimate. This is where we address cost, timeline, and any permit requirements specific to your Biloxi address.
We handle all permit applications with the City of Biloxi before the crew arrives. On the job, we prepare the base, set forms, and pour - you do not need to be home for the pour itself.
After the pour, we walk the finished work with you before leaving. Light foot traffic is possible within 48 hours. Plan to keep vehicles off the surface for 7 days while the concrete reaches working strength.
We serve all of Biloxi and respond within 1 business day. Free estimates, no pressure, no surprises on the final invoice.
(228) 250-0610Biloxi is a Gulf Coast city of about 46,000 people built on a narrow peninsula with the Gulf of Mexico to the south and the Back Bay to the north. The city is best known for its casino resort strip along the beachfront, anchored by properties like the Beau Rivage, and for Keesler Air Force Base, one of the largest Air Force training installations in the country. Those two economic drivers shape the city's population mix: long-term homeowners sit alongside military families who rotate in every few years. Neighborhoods range from the older, denser residential streets of Point Cadet on the eastern tip of the peninsula to the mid-century ranch homes on larger lots near the base, to post-Katrina elevated homes built to the new FEMA flood elevation requirements.
The housing stock is diverse in age. More than half of Biloxi's homes were built before 1980, meaning you find original 1950s and 1960s construction alongside homes built after the 2005 storm. Streets near the water, like those in Point Cadet and the beachfront neighborhoods, have a high concentration of elevated pier-and-beam homes. Inland neighborhoods, particularly around Pass Road and the areas flanking Keesler, tend to be slab-on-grade ranch homes from the postwar decades. Both property types have distinct concrete needs, and both are well within our regular service area. For homeowners a short drive away, we also cover Gulfport to the west and Ocean Springs to the east along the coast.
Custom outdoor patios built for comfort and lasting curb appeal.
Learn MoreSturdy retaining walls that control erosion and shape your landscape.
Learn MoreCommercial parking lots built for high traffic and long service life.
Learn MoreCall us or send a message and we will get back to you within 1 business day. We work all across Biloxi and understand exactly what Gulf Coast concrete projects require.