Buyers typically pay for trench drain components, installation labor, and site prep. Main cost drivers include trench size, drain grate selection, concrete mix, labor hours, and permitting. This article covers the price range for concrete trench drain systems and related costs in the United States.
| Item | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concrete trench drain kit (precast sections, grate) | $12.00/ft | $22.00/ft | $40.00/ft | Includes trough, grate, seals |
| Labor (installation) | $40.00/hr | $65.00/hr | $95.00/hr | Includes excavation and concrete work |
| Materials (concrete, grout, sealant) | $8.00/ft | $14.00/ft | $25.00/ft | Per linear foot |
| Permits/inspections | $150 | $500 | $1,200 | Varies by locality |
| Delivery/Haul-away | $50 | $150 | $500 | Material dependent |
| Total project (per linear foot) | $70.00/ft | $150.00/ft | $260.00/ft | Assumes mid-range trench length |
Assumptions: region, trench length, grate material, soil conditions, and labor availability.
Overview Of Costs
Cost for a concrete trench drain project spans the trench length, material quality, and labor involved. Typical total ranges are expressed per linear foot and as full project estimates for a standard residential installation. For planning purposes, props like trench length and slope influence both materials and labor.
Concrete trench drain systems generally cost $20–$40 per linear foot for components in mid-range builds, plus $40–$95 per hour for labor, and $150–$1,200 for permits depending on location. A complete residential install often lands in the $150–$260 per linear foot range when including all costs and a moderate scope.
Cost Breakdown
Material and labor mix plays a decisive role. Materials include troughs, grates, seals, and concrete for bedding. Labor covers excavation, trenching, formwork, pouring, and final finishing. A typical breakdown is shown in the table below with total and per-foot references.
| Category | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Materials | $8.00/ft | $14.00/ft | $25.00/ft | Concrete, sealant, bedding |
| Labor | $40.00/hr | $65.00/hr | $95.00/hr | Excavation, pour, finishing |
| Equipment | $5.00/ft | $12.00/ft | $20.00/ft | Forms, compaction, saws |
| Permits | $150 | $500 | $1,200 | Local code requirements |
| Delivery/Disposal | $50 | $150 | $500 | Material dependent |
| Subtotal (per ft) | $70.00/ft | $150.00/ft | $260.00/ft | Includes all above |
Labor hours and trench length strongly affect totals. Per-foot estimates are common for planning; totals depend on site conditions.
Pricing Variables
What drives price includes trench length, slope, material quality, grate design, and site access. Key numeric drivers include trench width and depth, grate material (cast iron vs. polymer concrete), and required drainage capacity.
Per-foot ranges can widen if the trench requires deeper forms, heavy-duty grates, or nonstandard slopes. Concrete mix choice, including backyard pour vs. industrial-grade in-ground installations, adds material cost variance.
Ways To Save
Budget strategies focus on optimizing trench length, standardizing grate choices, and coordinating permits early. Selecting standard sizes, performing some site prep in-house, or scheduling during off-peak seasons can reduce costs.
Planning a straightforward layout and avoiding custom molds or complex transitions cuts both labor and material waste.
Regional Price Differences
Location matters; urban markets typically show higher labor and permitting costs than rural areas, with suburban areas in between. In the Northeast, expect 5–15% higher totals versus the Midwest, and the West Coast often registers a 5–20% premium over national averages.
Labor & Installation Time
Timeframe influences cost because longer installs incur more labor hours and equipment rental. A basic 30–60 linear foot installation may take 1–2 days, while larger or more complex layouts can extend to several days with crew staging.
Additional & Hidden Costs
Hidden costs can include soil spoilage fees, trench backfill stabilization, and resealing after backfill settlement. Drainage slope adjustments and extra joints add incremental price.
Real-World Pricing Examples
Three scenario cards illustrate typical projects. These snapshots assume standard residential installations with mid-range components and local permitting.
Assumptions: region, trench length, grate material, soil conditions, and labor availability.
Basic
Scenario: 20 ft of trench, standard concrete trough, plastic grate, level grade. labor: 8 hours, no excavation beyond minimal site prep. Materials: $14/ft, Labor: $65/hr. Total: about $1,200–$2,000. Low end favors simpler components and straightforward site access.
Mid-Range
Scenario: 40 ft, mid-range trough, metal grate, moderate slope. labor: 16 hours, moderate formwork. Materials: $18/ft, Labor: $65/hr. Permits: typical local inspection. Total: about $4,000–$7,500. Balanced choice for most residential projects.
Premium
Scenario: 60 ft, high-capacity trough, heavy-duty grate, complex transitions, tighter slope control. labor: 24–32 hours, extensive site prep. Materials: $25/ft, Labor: $95/hr. Permits: higher local fees. Total: about $9,000–$16,000. Best for challenging sites with long-term durability.