Licensed and Insured

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Riverton, UT

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Riverton, UT

Hiring a concrete contractor in Utah should be straightforward. You need a driveway, patio, or RV pad — you find someone, get a quote, and get it done. But the reality of the Utah contractor market in 2026 is more complicated, and homeowners are getting burned at an alarming rate.

We've heard the stories firsthand — not from the internet, but from customers who called us after being victimized. Deposits taken and never returned. Jobs left half-finished. Work so poorly done it had to be torn out and replaced entirely. In one case, a homeowner in Eagle Mountain paid a 50% deposit, had the contractor abandon the job, and was then threatened by that same contractor when she asked for her money back.

This post exists because we believe Utah homeowners deserve to know what they're dealing with before they sign anything or hand over a dime.

The Lead Generation Problem

When you search "concrete contractor near me" or "concrete driveway Salt Lake City" and click on a result from Angi, HomeAdvisor, or Thumbtack, you are not hiring a contractor. You are submitting your contact information to a lead generation company that will sell it — sometimes to multiple contractors simultaneously.

Here's how it works: these platforms charge contractors a fee every time a homeowner's information is passed along as a "lead." The contractors paying for these leads are often not established local businesses. They're often new operators, out-of-state companies, or individuals building a client base by purchasing access to homeowners who are actively looking for work.

What this means for you:

  • You may get calls from 4–6 different "contractors" within minutes of submitting your information
  • The person calling you may have never done a concrete job in your neighborhood
  • You have no way of knowing how long they've been in business, whether they're licensed and insured, or whether they've done quality work locally
  • The platform takes no responsibility for what happens after the lead is sold

Angi, HomeAdvisor, and Thumbtack are advertising businesses. They are not contractor vetting services, no matter how their marketing presents them. The "background checks" and "pro verified" badges they display are surface-level screening that does not verify licensing, insurance, crew quality, or business longevity.

The Individual Lead Flippers

Beyond the large platforms, there's a second layer of the problem that most homeowners never see: individual operators who advertise concrete services, collect your information and project details, and then sell your job to whoever will pay them the most for it.

These aren't contractors. They don't own a truck, a mixer, or a single stamp tool. They run a website or a social media page that looks like a legitimate concrete company, collect leads from homeowners, and sell those leads to actual contractors — or to other lead flippers who do the same thing again. The homeowner has no idea this is happening. You think you're talking to a concrete contractor. You're actually talking to a salesperson whose only interest is getting your deposit or selling your contact information for a fee.

How to spot a lead flipper:

  • Their website has no physical address, no photos of actual crew or equipment, and no verifiable local history
  • They can't answer specific technical questions about mix design, base preparation, or finishing methods
  • They're extremely focused on getting a deposit quickly before you've met anyone who will actually do the work
  • Their Google reviews are thin, recent, and vague — no detail about specific projects or crew members
  • When you ask to meet the crew or see the equipment, they deflect or go quiet
  • They have no BBB listing or license number they can provide

The deposit is often the entire point. Once they have your money, your leverage is gone — and so, often, are they.

The Day Labor Problem

A significant number of "concrete contractors" operating in Utah's Wasatch Front do not have permanent employees. They have a truck, some tools, and access to day labor — workers hired by the day, often with no concrete experience, no continuity between jobs, and no accountability to the business owner beyond that day's pay.

This is not speculation. We have replaced work from these operations. We have seen the results: inconsistent finishing, improper subgrade preparation, wrong mix designs, control joints placed incorrectly or not at all, and sealer applied over uncured concrete.

Signs you may be dealing with a day labor operation:

  • The contractor can't tell you who specifically will be on your job site
  • Different workers show up each day with no clear foreman or supervisor
  • Nobody on site seems to be in charge or able to answer questions
  • The estimate was given by someone who never reappears during the project
  • No one on site speaks to you about what they're doing or why

The Deposit Scam

This is the one that causes the most financial harm, and it's more common in Utah than most homeowners realize. The pattern is predictable: a contractor quotes a job, asks for a 50% deposit "for materials," collects the money, and then disappears — or shows up once, does minimal work, and walks off the job.

In the most troubling cases we've encountered, homeowners who pushed back were met with intimidation. One customer in Eagle Mountain paid a 50% deposit on a concrete project. The contractor abandoned the job. When she asked for her money back, she was threatened. She eventually called us — not just to redo the work, but because she felt unsafe.

Protecting yourself from deposit scams:

  • Never pay more than 10–20% upfront on a residential concrete project
  • Get a written contract before any money changes hands
  • Verify the contractor's license with the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (DOPL) at secure.utah.gov/llv/search
  • Verify insurance — ask for a certificate of insurance naming you as an additional insured
  • Check BBB accreditation and Google reviews — not just the star rating but the volume and recency
  • Pay by check or credit card, never cash

What a Legitimate Concrete Contractor Looks Like

After 17 years in business across the Wasatch Front, here's what every legitimate concrete contractor should provide without hesitation:

Licensing and insurance
A Utah residential contractor license and current general liability insurance. Ask for both before signing anything.

Permanent employees
Real concrete contractors have a crew — people who show up together, work together, and are accountable to the business. Ask directly: "Are these your employees or day labor?"

Owner or foreman on every job
On every Dirty Boys Concrete project, either Tyler Thayer, Jadon Thayer, or one of our permanent foremen is on site from start to finish. When the owner or a trusted foreman is present, quality is consistent and the homeowner has someone accountable to talk to.

A local track record
How long have they been operating in your area? A contractor with 146+ five-star Google reviews and 17 years of local projects has something to lose if they do bad work. A new operation buying leads on Angi does not.

A reasonable deposit structure
Industry standard for residential concrete is 0–20% down, with the balance due on completion. Any contractor asking for 50% or more upfront is asking you to take on significant financial risk.

10 Questions to Ask Before Hiring Any Concrete Contractor in Utah

  1. Are you licensed with the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing?
  2. Can you provide a certificate of general liability insurance?
  3. Are the workers on my job your permanent employees or day labor?
  4. Will the owner or a named foreman be on my job site every day?
  5. How long have you been operating in this area?
  6. What concrete mix design do you use? What PSI?
  7. How thick will the pour be?
  8. Is sealer included? What type?
  9. What does your warranty cover?
  10. What is your deposit requirement and payment schedule?

A contractor who hesitates or gets defensive on any of these questions is telling you something important.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I verify a contractor's license in Utah?
Go to secure.utah.gov/llv/search and search by business name or license number. Residential contractors in Utah are required to be licensed for projects over $3,000.

Is it normal to pay a large deposit for concrete work?
No. Industry standard is 0–20% upfront for residential concrete. Requests for 50% or more before work begins are a significant red flag.

What if a contractor abandons my project in Utah?
File a complaint with the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing and the Better Business Bureau. If you paid by credit card, contact your card issuer to dispute the charge. If you were threatened, contact local law enforcement. Document everything in writing.

How do I find a trustworthy concrete contractor in Salt Lake City?
Look for contractors with verifiable local history, BBB accreditation, a high volume of recent Google reviews, and clear licensing and insurance. Ask directly about their crew structure and who will be on site. A contractor with nothing to hide will welcome the scrutiny.

Ready to Move Forward?

If you've been burned before or you're just being careful this time — we respect that. Call us at 801-864-5026 or Request a Bid online. We'll come out, look at the project, give you a detailed written quote, and answer every question you have. No pressure, no large deposit required to get started.

Serving Salt Lake City, Draper, South Jordan, West Jordan, Sandy, Riverton, Herriman, Murray, Cottonwood Heights, West Valley City, and all Wasatch Front communities.