Gravel Driveway Repair in Milledgeville, GA

Milledgeville Gravel provides gravel driveway pothole and washout repair in Baldwin County, GA — fixing ruts, filling potholes, and addressing the base issues that cause damage to return on existing gravel driveways.

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Gravel Driveway Repair for Baldwin County Properties

How much does gravel driveway repair cost in Milledgeville, GA?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, gravel driveway repair typically costs between $200 and $800 for pothole filling and rut correction on a standard residential driveway. Extensive washout repair or base restoration on long rural driveways can range from $1,000 to $3,000 or more depending on damage scope. Baldwin County red clay subgrade softens when saturated, so repairs that address the base layer rather than just surface patching last significantly longer through middle Georgia rain seasons.

Milledgeville Gravel provides gravel driveway repair throughout Baldwin County, Georgia — from simple pothole filling and rut correction to more involved washout repair and base restoration. The most important thing to understand about gravel driveway repair is that surface patching alone rarely holds if the underlying cause is not addressed. Whether you need pothole repair on a gravel driveway or need to fix ruts in a gravel driveway, the holes that refill with water after every rain are telling you the base is soft or the drainage is wrong — not just that the surface needs gravel added.

Middle Georgia's combination of heavy seasonal rain and red clay soil creates predictable failure patterns. Red clay under the base layer becomes soft when saturated, and vehicle tires punch through the surface into the wet clay beneath. This is how most potholes on rural Middle Georgia driveways form. Our repair process identifies the cause first — soft base, drainage failure, or simple surface wear — and addresses it before adding new material, so repairs hold through the next rain season rather than failing within weeks.

For driveways with widespread pothole or rut damage, gravel driveway resurfacing of the whole surface at once is often more cost-effective than patching individual spots. If your driveway has reached the point where potholes are appearing faster than patches can keep up, it may be time for full driveway restoration — a complete resurfacing that resets the surface layer across the full length. For driveways that just need surface material redistributed and the crown restored, driveway grading addresses the pattern without requiring new material delivery.

What Causes Most Gravel Driveway Damage

In middle Georgia, the primary causes of gravel driveway damage are heavy rain events washing material away, vehicle tire tracks creating persistent ruts where the base has softened, and gradual surface displacement where gravel migrates to the edges over time. A driveway that loses its crown — the slight center-high profile that sheds water — starts collecting water on the surface, and standing water is the accelerant for all other damage. Annual assessment after storm season catches most issues before they escalate. Rural property owners who want gravel delivered to maintain their own driveway surface can also request gravel delivery and spreading without a full repair service call.

Milledgeville Gravel Driveway Repair That Holds Through Georgia Rain Seasons

Base Issues Fixed First

We identify whether a pothole is a surface wear issue or a base failure before adding new material. Filling a pothole over soft base means it returns after the next rain. Our repairs address the cause, not just the symptom.

Matched Gravel Materials

Repair material is matched to your existing driveway surface — crusher run, #57 stone, or mixed — so repaired areas blend with the surrounding surface instead of standing out as obvious patches.

Drainage Restored with Repairs

Every repair visit includes an assessment of the driveway's crown and drainage profile. If the surface has lost its pitch, we reshape it while we're there — restoring drainage is the single most important thing you can do to extend time between repair calls.

Honest Assessment — No Upsell

Some driveways need a patch; some need a full regrade; some need new base material. We'll tell you which category yours falls into and what it will cost. If a patch is the right answer, that's what we'll quote — not a full restoration you don't need.

How Gravel Driveway Repair Works in Milledgeville

1

Damage Assessment

We walk the driveway to identify all damage locations, test base softness at pothole and rut sites, and evaluate the drainage crown. This determines whether repairs need base work below the surface or only surface material replacement.

2

Base Stabilization & Fill

At pothole and rut sites with soft base, the area is excavated to stable material, compacted, and refilled with crusher run before surface gravel is applied. At surface-wear-only sites, matched material is placed directly and compacted in place.

3

Crown Restoration & Final Grade

After individual repairs, the full surface is evaluated for crown profile. If gravel has migrated to the edges and the center is low, we redistribute material and regrade to restore proper drainage pitch before leaving.

Gravel Driveway Repair Costs in Middle Georgia

Repair costs vary significantly based on the extent and cause of the damage. Spot patching a few potholes costs far less than full regrading with base repair. We assess before quoting — always free, no obligation.

$200 to $800
Pothole and rut repair (scope-dependent)
$500 to $2,000
Washout repair with base correction
$1,000 to $4,000
Full regrading and resurfacing (restoration-level repair)

Prices reflect typical Baldwin County and middle Georgia market rates for gravel driveway repair in Milledgeville. Driveway length, damage extent, and base condition determine final cost. All assessments are free.

Gravel Driveway Repair in Milledgeville — Common Questions

How do you fix potholes in a gravel driveway?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, fixing potholes in a gravel driveway requires removing loose material from the hole, addressing any soft base underneath, and refilling with properly compacted crusher run before adding matched surface gravel. Simply filling a pothole with surface stone without fixing the underlying base results in the pothole returning after the next rain. Middle Georgia's red clay sub-base is particularly prone to softening under standing water, which is what causes most potholes in the first place.

How do you fix ruts in a gravel driveway?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, ruts form when vehicle tires repeatedly track in the same path and displace surface gravel while compressing the base below. Fixing them requires redistributing or replacing displaced gravel, re-grading the surface to restore crown, and in severe cases, adding fresh base material where the sub-base has been compressed. If ruts are deep or recurring, it usually signals a drainage problem — water is softening the base along the tire tracks and the underlying issue needs to be corrected at the same time.

How do you stop gravel driveway erosion?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, gravel driveway erosion is primarily caused by water flowing down the surface rather than draining off it. The most effective fix is regrading the crown so water runs to the sides and into drainage swales rather than channeling down the center. For sloped driveways, geotextile fabric under the base layer helps hold material in place. Topping up surface gravel after heavy rain events and maintaining proper crown grading are the two most effective long-term erosion controls in middle Georgia's rain climate.

How often does a gravel driveway need to be regraded?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, most gravel driveways benefit from regrading every 1–3 years depending on traffic volume and weather exposure. Heavy rain seasons accelerate gravel displacement and crown loss. A driveway that sees daily heavy vehicle traffic may need annual attention, while a lightly used rural driveway might go 2–3 years between service calls. Signs that regrading is overdue include standing water on the surface, gravel displaced to the edges, and visible ruts or washboard corrugation.

What is the difference between #57 stone and crusher run?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, #57 stone is a clean, uniformly sized crushed granite or limestone — the angular particles interlock well for a stable surface layer but do not compact into a structural base. Crusher run (also called processed gravel or crush-and-run) is a mix of crushed stone and fine stone dust that compacts tightly, making it the standard base material for driveways in Georgia clay conditions. #57 is best for the top 2–3 inch surface layer; crusher run is what goes beneath it.

How long does a gravel driveway last?

In Baldwin County, Georgia, a properly installed gravel driveway with a compacted crusher run base and good drainage grading can last indefinitely with periodic maintenance. The surface layer typically needs top-dressing every 3–7 years depending on traffic and weather. What ends gravel driveway life early is neglected drainage — water that sits on the surface saturates the base and causes progressive failure. Annual inspection and prompt repair of potholes and erosion spots are the most cost-effective maintenance strategy for rural Georgia driveways.

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Milledgeville, GA 31061 — Serving all of Baldwin County

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Milledgeville & Baldwin County, Georgia

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