A practical, contractor-minded guide for patios, walkways, and entertaining areas
Why pavers shift (and why it happens more in our area)
- Insufficient compacted base (or base compacted in lifts that are too thick)
- Poor drainage that keeps the subgrade wet after storms
- Missing or weak edge restraint that allows lateral “creep” over time
- Too much bedding sand used as “extra base”
- No plan for downspouts or slopes, leading to erosion and washout
What a “proper” paver base looks like (the parts that prevent settling)
Breakdown: Patio vs. driveway vs. pool deck (why the build changes)
- Patios & walkways: prioritize flatness, drainage away from the home, and strong edge restraint.
- Driveways: need thicker base and the correct paver thickness for vehicle loads.
- Pool decks: focus on slip resistance, drainage, and keeping joint sand from washing out.
| Application | Common Base Range (Compacted) | Notes That Prevent Shifting |
|---|---|---|
| Walkway / Patio | ~4–6 inches | Best on well-drained soils; increase thickness for soft subgrade or runoff zones |
| Residential Driveway | ~6–8 inches | Thicker base + correct paver thickness helps resist rutting and edge spread |
| Commercial / Heavier Loads | Often 8+ inches (site-specific) | Engineering/design inputs matter—especially with poor drainage or frequent loads |
Quick “Did you know?” facts (that can save a project)
Step-by-step: A smart pavers installation plan (homeowner-friendly)
1) Start with layout, slope, and water control
Decide where water should go before excavation begins. In Hill Country lots, it’s common to need gentle grading away from foundations and to manage downspouts so they don’t dump directly onto the patio edge.
2) Excavate to the correct depth (not “until it looks right”)
Excavation depth should account for paver thickness + bedding layer + compacted base. If the plan calls for more base in soft spots or along runoff paths, that depth needs to be excavated—not “cheated” with sand.
3) Compact the subgrade and install separation fabric when needed
If the soil is fine, unstable, or mixed fill, a geotextile separation layer can reduce migration of fines into the base and help slow settling. (masonryandhardscapes.org)
4) Build the aggregate base in compacted lifts
Base should be placed in lifts and compacted thoroughly. Proper lift thickness depends on the compaction equipment, but the idea is consistent: compact in layers so you don’t trap loose material below. (masonryandhardscapes.org)
5) Screed bedding sand and set pavers with consistent joint spacing
The bedding layer is for minor leveling—not structural fill. After pavers are laid, they’re compacted to seat them evenly.
6) Install edge restraint + joint sand (polymeric when appropriate)
Strong edge restraint locks the field in place. Joint sand completes interlock; polymeric sand can help reduce washout and weeds in many installations (especially where runoff is strong), but it must be installed correctly for best results.
- Gravel Calculator (for base material estimates)
- Mulch Calculator (for nearby beds and finishing touches)
- Concrete Calculator (for edging, footings, or adjacent slabs)
Local angle: Boerne water rules, irrigation, and smart planting around hardscapes
- Use drip irrigation in beds near patios to reduce overspray and water waste.
- Consider Texas native plants for lower-maintenance color and resilience in heat.
- Confirm backflow requirements when irrigation is installed or modified; Boerne has an official backflow prevention program tied to TCEQ requirements. (ci.boerne.tx.us)
Want a paver patio that stays flat, drains correctly, and looks finished?
Request a Paver Installation Quote
