
Rialto Asphalt Paving handles driveways, parking lots, crack sealing, and repairs for Rialto homes and businesses - with crews who have served this city since 2017 years ago and understand how the summer heat and expansive soils here affect every pavement project.

Rialto homeowners deal with driveways baked by summer heat year after year, and old surfaces oxidize faster here than in cooler parts of California. Our asphalt paving service uses heat-rated mixes and proper base preparation specifically suited to Inland Empire conditions, so the surface holds up through multiple seasons.
Rialto's intense UV and dry heat oxidize asphalt faster than most areas, turning flexible pavement brittle and gray within a few seasons without protection. Regular sealcoating slows that process, keeping your driveway or lot surface sealed against the elements that do the most damage in this climate.
A large share of Rialto homes were built in the 1950s through 1980s, and many still have their original driveways. If your driveway is crumbling at the edges, full of cracks, or no longer drains properly, a new paved surface restores function and curb appeal in one job.
Rialto properties with expansive clay soils often see cracks and uneven surfaces appear within a few years of installation, as the ground moves through wet and dry cycles. Timely repairs stop small problems from spreading to the base layer and turning a fixable issue into a full replacement.
Rialto has a growing mix of warehousing, retail, and commercial properties, many with aging lots that were installed decades ago. A well-paved lot protects vehicles, reduces liability from trip hazards, and makes a better first impression for any business operating here.
Rialto winters bring rain that works into surface cracks and weakens the base below during wet-dry cycles. Sealing cracks before each rainy season is one of the most cost-effective ways to extend pavement life and avoid more expensive repairs after the winter.
Rialto sits squarely in the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100°F and UV intensity is among the highest in California. Asphalt is not a one-size material - the mix formulation, compaction timing, and curing approach all need to account for the heat. A contractor using a standard mix without adjusting for high-temperature performance is setting up a surface that will soften, rut, and degrade faster than it should. For any homeowner or property manager in Rialto, asking specifically how a contractor handles hot-weather paving is the single most important screening question.
Beyond heat, many Rialto properties sit on soils with significant clay content. These soils expand when the winter rains come and shrink back when the dry season returns. That movement puts constant stress on the pavement from below, regardless of how much traffic it carries. A base that is properly graded, compacted, and built to the correct thickness is the difference between a surface that lasts 20 years and one that starts cracking within five. Rialto also has a mix of property ages - from mid-century ranch homes along the Foothill Boulevard corridor to newer subdivisions near the foothills - and the right approach for each situation is different. According to the National Asphalt Pavement Association, pavement performance in hot climates depends heavily on the binder grade selected for the local temperature range.
Our crew works throughout Rialto regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect asphalt paving work here. We know the permit process at the City of Rialto offices on Palm Avenue, and we pull permits from the city's public works department when encroachment work is required - no homeowner should be left guessing about whether their project is properly permitted. Working in this city long enough means you recognize the patterns: the older neighborhoods south of Foothill Boulevard where driveways have been through 40 or 50 summers, the expansive lots in the newer tracts north toward the foothills, and the industrial areas in the south where warehouse driveways and loading courts need heavy-duty base preparation.
Foothill Boulevard, the old Route 66 corridor, remains one of Rialto's main east-west arteries and cuts through neighborhoods with a wide range of property ages and conditions. Riverside Avenue and Ayala Drive are the cross streets most people in the city navigate every day, and our crews travel those routes to reach jobs across all parts of Rialto. We also serve the adjacent community of Fontana, which shares the same climate and soil challenges, and our schedules move across both cities regularly.
Tell us what you need - driveway, parking lot, repairs, or something else. We reply within one business day and will never give you a firm price without seeing the property in person.
We measure the area, check the base condition, and assess drainage. You receive a written proposal that breaks out what the job involves - so you know exactly what you are paying for and there are no surprises after we start.
We handle any required city permits, remove old material if needed, prepare the base, and lay the asphalt. For residential driveways, most jobs are completed in one to two days.
Before we leave, we walk the job with you and confirm everything meets expectations. We explain curing times - typically 24 to 48 hours before driving - and any follow-up care to protect your new surface.
We serve all parts of Rialto, CA and respond within one business day. No commitment to call - just a straight answer about what your project needs and what it costs.
(909) 546-5231Rialto is a mid-sized city in San Bernardino County with a population over 100,000, situated on the flat valley floor of the Inland Empire between the San Gabriel Mountains and the lower terrain to the south. The city is bisected east-to-west by Foothill Boulevard, the old Route 66 corridor, which connects Rialto to Fontana to the west and to San Bernardino to the east. Interstate 10 runs along the city's southern edge, and a growing number of large warehouse and distribution facilities have taken shape in the industrial areas near the freeway. Rialto is served by its own city government at City Hall on Palm Avenue, with local building and permit departments that contractors working here interact with regularly.
Residential neighborhoods in Rialto span a wide range of ages. The established neighborhoods closer to Foothill Boulevard are mostly single-story ranch-style homes built from the 1950s through the 1980s, sitting on modest lots with concrete driveways and block-wall fencing typical of Inland Empire construction from that era. The northern parts of the city, closer to the foothills, include newer two-story subdivisions built in the 1990s and 2000s on somewhat larger lots. The neighboring community of Colton sits just to the south, and we serve both communities as part of our regular service area across the Inland Empire.
Protect your pavement and extend its life with professional sealcoating.
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Learn MoreCall us today or send a message - we cover all of Rialto, CA and will get back to you within one business day with a clear picture of what your job needs.