🔄 Mill-and-fill · Overlay · Full replacement

Asphalt Overlay Calculator
Resurfacing & Mill-and-Fill

Calculate new HMA tonnage, millings removed, tack coat quantity, and full project cost for any overlay type. Includes an overlay vs full replacement decision guide with 2026 pricing benchmarks.

Asphalt Overlay Calculator

1. Select overlay type

2. Project area

ft
ft
in
Typical surface mill: 1.5–2 inches. Full removal: enter full existing pavement depth.

3. New HMA specification

in

4. Pricing inputs

$/t
$/yd²
gal/yd²
Applied to existing surface before new HMA. Standard: 0.08–0.12 gal/yd². Required — never skip.
5%10% standard20%
Overlay Results New HMA + millings
🔄

Select overlay type, enter dimensions and new HMA thickness, then click Calculate.

The most important decision first

Overlay or full replacement? — the definitive guide

Choosing overlay when you need replacement is the most expensive mistake in pavement maintenance. The overlay cracks within 1–2 years and you pay for both operations. Use this guide before entering any numbers into the calculator.

Surface conditionOverlay?Mill-and-fill?Replace?Reason
Surface oxidation / fading
Grey colour, surface hardening
✓ Yes✓ Yes× NoPurely cosmetic — base is intact. Best value: seal or thin overlay.
Minor surface cracking
Cracks <¼" wide, isolated
✓ Yes✓ Yes× NoSeal cracks first, then overlay. Mill-and-fill removes cracked surface entirely.
Longitudinal / transverse cracks
Cracks >¼" wide, through full depth
⚠ Maybe✓ Better× Not yetStraight overlay risks reflective cracking. Mill-and-fill preferred. Seal cracks first.
Rutting (wheel path depressions)
<1" depth
× No✓ Yes× Not yetOverlay over ruts creates uneven surface. Mill-and-fill corrects grade.
Alligator / fatigue cracking
Interconnected cracks, <25% of area
× No⚠ Partial✓ Yes (patches)Indicates base failure in that area. Patch failed zones, then overlay sound areas.
Alligator cracking >25% of surface
Widespread base failure
× No× No✓ YesBase has failed structurally. Any overlay cracks within 1–2 years. Replace.
Potholes / deep depressions× No× No✓ YesSubgrade failure. Fill, recompact base, and rebuild — don't overlay.
Heaving / frost damage
Surface rises/falls seasonally
× No× No✓ YesSubgrade or drainage issue — overlay won't fix the root cause.
3+ previous overlays
Surface is above curbs/drains
× No× No✓ YesGrade has risen too far. Another overlay causes drainage and clearance issues.

✓ Overlay is the right call if:

  • A loaded pickup truck drives over it without bouncing or flexing
  • Less than 25% of the surface shows cracking of any type
  • No alligator (interconnected) cracking anywhere on the surface
  • Drainage flows correctly — no standing water near edges
  • Adding 1.5–2" won't raise surface above curbs or drain openings
  • Pavement is less than 20–25 years old

✗ Replace — don't waste money on overlay if:

  • You see alligator (crocodile-pattern) cracking anywhere
  • The surface bounces or feels spongy under a vehicle
  • There are depressions or ruts deeper than 1 inch
  • Water ponds on the surface after rain — drainage failed
  • There have been 3 or more previous overlays already
  • Pavement is 25+ years old with widespread distress

2026 pricing — real numbers

Overlay vs replacement cost — full comparison

Overlay saves 40–60% upfront. But the right choice depends entirely on your pavement condition — not your budget. Here are the full numbers for every scenario.

Thin overlay (no milling)
Material per sq ft (1.5")$0.55–$0.90
Installed per sq ft$1.50–$3.00
600 ft² driveway$900–$1,800
5,000 ft² parking lot$7,500–$15,000
Added lifespan6–10 years
Mill-and-fill
Milling cost$1.00–$2.50/ft²
Installed per sq ft (total)$2.50–$5.00
600 ft² driveway$1,500–$3,000
5,000 ft² parking lot$12,500–$25,000
Added lifespan10–15 years
Full-depth replacement
Removal + disposal$1.00–$3.00/ft²
Installed per sq ft (total)$4.00–$8.00
600 ft² driveway$2,400–$4,800
5,000 ft² parking lot$20,000–$40,000
Lifespan15–25 years
Annual cost per sq ft (30-yr TCO)
Thin overlay × 2 cycles~$0.10–$0.20/yr
Mill-and-fill × 1.5 cycles~$0.12–$0.25/yr
Full replacement × 1 cycle~$0.13–$0.27/yr
Verdict over 30 yearsRoughly equal
Winner for bad baseReplacement always
The key insight: Over 30 years, all three approaches cost roughly the same per sq ft per year — when applied to the correct pavement condition. Choosing overlay for a failing base wastes 100% of the overlay cost and still requires replacement within 2 years. The condition assessment is always more important than the unit price.

Step-by-step

How asphalt overlay works — the complete process

Understanding the process tells you what to inspect on the day of work and what your contractor should be doing at each stage. Every skipped step reduces the overlay's lifespan.

01

Surface assessment

Inspect for alligator cracking, depressions, drainage issues, and base failure. Proof-roll with a loaded truck — soft spots that flex more than ½" indicate base failure requiring replacement, not overlay.

02

Milling (if applicable)

Cold planer removes 1–2" of existing surface. Creates a rough, consistent bonding surface and restores grade. Millings loaded into trucks. Costs $1.00–$2.50/ft² — but removes the cracked layer that would otherwise reflect through.

03

Crack repair & patching

Fill all cracks wider than ¼" with rubberised crack sealant ($0.50–$1.50/linear ft). Repair potholes with hot or cold patch. This is mandatory before overlay — uncorrected cracks will reflect through within 1–3 years.

04

Tack coat application

Spray distributor truck applies 0.05–0.12 gal/yd² of bitumen emulsion. Surface must be clean and dry. Allow tack to break (turn from brown to black — typically 15–30 minutes). Never place HMA on brown tack coat.

05

HMA placement

Paving machine places HMA at 275–325°F to the specified compacted thickness. Trucks dump directly into the paver hopper. Mat must be placed and compacted before temperature drops below 175°F — keep paver moving continuously.

06

Compaction & finishing

Steel drum roller (breakdown pass), pneumatic tyre roller (intermediate), then steel drum again (finish pass). Target: 92–96% of maximum theoretical density. Edge compaction with hand roller or plate compactor. Allow 24 hours before traffic.

Don't waste your millings

Asphalt millings — reuse, value, and disposal guide

Millings from a mill-and-fill project are worth money — if you know how to use them. Most homeowners leave value on the table by treating them as waste to be hauled away.

What millings are worth

Scrap value (plant takes them)$5–$15/ton
Base material (reused on-site)$8–$15/ton saved
Driveway surface (RAP driveway)$10–$25/ton delivered
Disposal cost (if landfilled)$0 — asphalt is banned from most landfills
Density (compacted)120–130 lb/ft³

Best uses for millings

  • On-site base layer: Compact under new HMA or as a base for paths and access roads. Saves aggregate base purchase cost.
  • Budget driveway surface: 3–4" of compacted millings over geotextile fabric makes a serviceable low-traffic driveway at $1–$3/ft².
  • Return to plant as RAP: Asphalt plants buy back millings to use in new RAP-modified HMA. Up to $15/ton credit against your new HMA purchase.
  • Donate to municipality: Some counties accept millings for rural road maintenance — contact your local highway department.

Millings tonnage formula

Millings (t) = ( Areaft² × Mill depthin ÷ 12 × 130 ) ÷ 2,000

Example: 5,000 ft² milled at 2" = (5,000 × 2/12 × 130) ÷ 2,000 = 54.2 tons of millings. At $10/ton plant credit: $542 recoverable value. At $15/ton: $813. Always negotiate millings credit against your new HMA purchase — it's standard industry practice.

Common questions answered

Asphalt overlay calculator — FAQ

Every question homeowners, property managers, and contractors ask before starting an overlay project — answered with the numbers you need.

Thin overlay (no milling): $1.50–$3.00/ft² installed. Mill-and-fill: $2.50–$5.00/ft². A 600 ft² driveway: $900–$3,000. A 5,000 ft² parking lot: $7,500–$25,000. Mill-and-fill costs 30–60% more than thin overlay but lasts 3–5 years longer. Use the calculator above for your exact dimensions and local rates.
Minimum 1.5 inches for any overlay. Below this, the mat cools before rollers achieve density — you get a porous, weak surface that fails within 2–3 years. Standard residential: 1.5–2 inches. Commercial: 2–3 inches. Heavy traffic: 3+ inches. Thinner overlays are always false economy — the extra half-inch of material costs $0.20–$0.35/ft² more but adds 3–5 years of service life.
Reflective cracking is when existing cracks in the old pavement propagate upward through the new overlay — typically within 1–3 years. The thermal movement of the old crack creates stress that breaks the new overlay above it. Prevention options: (1) Mill out the cracked area before overlay. (2) Apply a stress-absorbing membrane interlayer (SAMI) or geotextile fabric. (3) Use a 3"+ thick overlay — more material slows crack propagation.
Mill-and-fill removes the cracked, oxidised surface before laying new HMA. Benefits: maintains existing drainage grades (critical for edges, curbs, and garage aprons), removes the source of reflective cracking, creates a rougher bonding surface, and allows base inspection during milling. The extra cost ($1–$2.50/ft² for milling) typically adds 3–5 years to the overlay lifespan — often making it the better value over 15 years.
The definitive test: proof-rolling with a loaded dump truck or tandem axle vehicle. Drive slowly across the entire area. Any section that deflects more than ½ inch or shows a wave in front of the tyre has failed base. Alligator (crocodile-pattern) cracking is also a direct indicator of fatigue base failure. If you see either — replace, don't overlay. No amount of overlay material will fix a failed base.
Narrow, isolated cracks (<¼" wide): yes, if sealed first with rubberised crack sealant. Wide cracks (>¼"): seal and overlay with caution — reflective cracking likely within 2–3 years. Alligator/fatigue cracking: no — this indicates base failure, and any overlay will fail within 1–2 years. Mill-and-fill (removing the cracked layer) is always better than overlaying on top of existing cracks.
Millings are 100% recyclable. Options: sell back to the plant ($5–$15/ton credit), reuse on-site as base material (saves $8–$15/ton in aggregate cost), use as driveway surfacing for low-traffic paths, or donate to a municipality for rural road maintenance. Never pay for millings disposal — asphalt is banned from most landfills and plants actively want it back for RAP-modified HMA production.
Thin overlay (1.5–2") on a sound surface with proper crack sealing: 8–12 years. Mill-and-fill (1.5–2") on prepared surface: 10–15 years. Thick overlay (3") on commercial lot: 12–18 years. All lifespans assume proper maintenance (sealcoating every 2–3 years, crack filling annually). Without maintenance, reduce all estimates by 30–40%.
Yes — always, without exception. Tack coat (bitumen emulsion at 0.05–0.12 gal/yd²) is applied to the clean, dry existing surface before placing the new HMA. Without it, the overlay delamsinates from the existing pavement under braking loads — causing shoving and potholing within 1–2 years. Allow tack to break (turn from brown to black) before placing HMA. The calculator above includes tack coat quantity in every result.
Use the formula: Tons = (Area ft² × Depth in ÷ 12 × 145) ÷ 2,000 × 1.10 (10% waste). Example: 600 ft² at 2" = (600 × 2/12 × 145) ÷ 2,000 × 1.10 = 7.97 tons. At $110/ton plant price, that's approximately $877 in material. Enter your exact dimensions into the calculator above for a precise figure including millings tonnage and tack coat.