Short answer: In the short term, repairing is usually cheaper for small, non-moving defects (hairline cracks, shallow scaling, minor settlement). In the long term, replacement can be cheaper when the slab has base failure, active movement, or widespread weak paste—because repairs won’t last through Kansas City’s heat, wind, and freeze–thaw cycles. The lowest total cost comes from matching the method to the cause and building in proper jointing, drainage, support, and curing. If you want help assessing your slab, start with our concrete repair team.
Concrete doesn’t fail only because of compressive strength; it fails at details: trapped water at edges, weak or uneven support, late joint cuts, and under-cured paste. In Kansas City, hot windy summers accelerate evaporation and crusting, while winters bring freeze–thaw and deicers that scale any porous surface. Clay-influenced soils swell when wet and shrink when dry, stressing edges and joints. The same cosmetic crack can be a cheap repair—or a sign of expensive movement—depending on context.
Note: Exact prices vary with area, access, demolition, saw-cutting, restoration, permits, and finish choice. Use line-item bids for apples-to-apples comparison.
• Yes: Stabilize support (slabjack/foam) or R&R. Overlays without support correction will reflect and fail.

• Yes: Cosmetic scaling → resurface; widespread wear → bonded overlay; limited cracks → seal or inject.
• No: R&R or unbonded topping if elevation allows. Is water managed? (Downspouts, grading, irrigation.)
• No: Fix water first. Any repair will be temporary otherwise.

For static hairlines inside a proper joint plan, sealing keeps water and chlorides out and prevents freeze–thaw damage. It’s fast and inexpensive. It won’t fix movement, but it does extend service life with minimal cost.
Route, clean, port, and inject low-viscosity epoxy to weld concrete across a non-moving crack. Finish by grinding flush, then honor the crack with a joint so thermal/drying movement occurs where you choose—not through your repair.
If joints pump or panels rock, repair the support. Cement grout (slabjacking) is cost-effective; polyurethane (polyjacking) costs more but uses tiny holes, cures fast, and adds less weight. Both are durable if you fix the cause (downspouts, poor grade, plumbing leaks). We handle both methods in the KC metro—see repair options.

Great for uniform appearance and light wear, provided you shot-blast or grind to an ICRI CSP (often 3–5), place over sound concrete, align jointing, and cure immediately. It’s a lower-cost way to refresh without the height of an overlay.
When the substrate is sound but concrete steps tired, a bonded overlay creates a new exterior-grade wearing surface. It’s cheaper than R&R and longer-lived than a thin resurfacer—if you align joints directly above the substrate and cure aggressively. For driveways that need a new wearing course, explore driveway overlays.
Situation: Two patios with light scaling and intact bases. Action: Shot-blast to CSP 4, route/clean hairlines, polymer-modified resurfacer, joint alignment, immediate curing, penetrating sealer after dry-back. Outcome: Crisp broom texture after three winters; resurfacer cost much less than R&R.
Situation: Driveway slabs rocked at joints; gutter dumped at edge. Action: Extend downspouts 10 ft, regrade soil, polyjack low panels, seal joints. Outcome: No pumping the next winter; total spend below overlay or R&R.
Situation: Garage apron and approach scaled and dusted extensively. Action: Remove and replace with 6" air-entrained slab over 8" DGA; #4 at 18" o.c.; dowels at threshold; early-entry joints; curing/sealer schedule. Outcome: Higher up-front cost but five-year lifecycle cost lowest; no threshold chipping.
For proportioning, exterior durability, overlays, and jointing fundamentals, see the Portland Cement Association. For turnkey help comparing repair vs. replacement, request a consult: contact our KC team.
Repairs are cheapest when the slab is sound and the damage is small or cosmetic. Replacement is cheaper over the life of the slab when you have base failure, active movement, or pervasive weakness—especially in Kansas City’s demanding climate. Fix water first, stabilize support where needed, then choose a repair, overlay, or replacement with disciplined jointing and immediate curing. That’s how you spend once and stop the cycle of repeat fixes. Explore options for driveways, patios, and foundations in the KC metro.
Kansas City Concrete Contractor Services
6041 Walrond Ave
Kansas City, MO 64130
Phone: (816) 408-3461
https://kcityconcretecontractors.com