
True Line Edgewater Concrete is a concrete contractor serving Deltona, FL with slab foundations, driveways, patios, and footings. We have worked on concrete block homes throughout Volusia County since 2019 and know the sandy soil and building stock that defines Deltona's established neighborhoods.

Almost every home in Deltona sits on a slab-on-grade foundation because of Florida's high water table - no basements here. When the sandy soil beneath those slabs shifts after years of heavy summer rain, you need a contractor who understands Deltona's specific ground conditions before the work starts. We pour slab foundations with proper vapor barriers, steel reinforcement, and compacted bases for Volusia County's sandy soil.
Most of Deltona's driveways were poured when the neighborhoods were built in the 1970s through 1990s - and at 30 to 50 years old, many are cracked, settled, or sunken from the sandy ground shifting underneath them. We replace them with reinforced concrete slabs built on a compacted base, so the next driveway lasts as long as the house it serves.
Additions, pergolas, screen enclosures, and outbuildings in Deltona all require properly poured footings that go deep enough to reach stable soil below the sandy surface layer. Footings that are too shallow in Deltona's ground can settle over a single wet season, throwing off whatever structure sits on top of them. We design and pour footings to match the load and the local soil profile.
Deltona's outdoor-friendly climate means patios and screened lanais see year-round use. A poured concrete patio handles the daily afternoon storms of summer and the intense UV of a Central Florida sun better than alternatives, and it will not develop the shifting and weed growth issues that come with paver systems on sandy ground.
Some Deltona lots near the city's many lakes and low-lying areas have erosion and grade problems that worsen after every heavy storm. A properly engineered concrete retaining wall controls that erosion, holds the grade, and includes weep holes so water does not build pressure behind the structure - something that matters greatly in Deltona's wet season.
New construction in Deltona's growing outer neighborhoods and additions to older Deltona Lakes homes both require foundations built to current Florida Building Code standards. That includes hurricane wind-load anchor bolt specifications, correct concrete mix for the exposure, and a passing county inspection before framing begins. We manage every step from permit to final sign-off.
Deltona was developed almost entirely between the 1960s and 1990s by General Development Corporation as a planned community, and most of the housing stock from that original build-out is now 30 to 55 years old. At that age, concrete driveways crack and sink, patio slabs settle, and foundations that were poured on sandy ground without modern compaction standards start showing movement. The same batch of homes is aging out at the same time - and concrete repair and replacement work is one of the most common calls a contractor in Deltona gets.
Deltona's soil is the underlying cause behind a lot of these issues. Most of the city sits on sandy, porous ground - some neighborhoods were originally scrub or wetland before development. That soil drains unevenly, shifts when saturated by summer storms, and provides less stable bearing capacity than clay-based soils found elsewhere in the country. Proper sub-base compaction, adequate slab thickness, and control joint placement are not optional upgrades in Deltona - they are the difference between concrete that holds for decades and concrete that starts cracking in the first few years.
Our crew works throughout Deltona regularly and pulls permits through the City of Deltona Community Development Department. We know the inspection requirements for residential concrete in this city and have worked on homes in neighborhoods across the area, from the original Deltona Lakes subdivisions to the newer streets near Saxon Boulevard.
Interstate 4 runs along Deltona's southern edge, and Howland Boulevard is the main north-south corridor through the heart of the city. The original Deltona Lakes neighborhood is the core of the older housing stock, while areas near Lyonia Preserve and along Doyle Road reflect the mix of mid-century and more recent construction that characterizes the city as a whole. Homes near Lake Monroe on Deltona's southern boundary have their own drainage considerations - flat lots near water require careful grading and base work before a concrete pour.
We also serve DeBary just to the west, where many of the same soil and housing stock characteristics apply. Homeowners in that area often find us through Deltona referrals, and we work that whole I-4 corridor regularly.
Reach out by phone or through our contact form and we will respond within one business day. Just tell us what you need and where the property is in Deltona - no drawings or plans needed at this point.
We visit the property, assess the soil conditions and drainage on your specific lot, and give you a written estimate at no charge. This is where we go over scope, materials, timeline, and whether a City of Deltona permit is required for your project.
If your project needs a City of Deltona permit, we manage the application and all required inspections. We set a schedule around your availability and work around Deltona's afternoon summer storm window to protect fresh concrete.
We complete the pour, finishing, and curing, then clean up the site before we leave. We walk you through the finished work, explain the curing timeline, and make sure you have answers to any questions before the job is closed out.
We serve Deltona and all of Volusia County. Free estimates, permits handled, no surprises.
(386) 749-1231Deltona is one of Florida's largest cities by population, with roughly 100,000 residents spread across Volusia County between Orlando and Daytona Beach. The city was built as a planned community beginning in the 1960s by General Development Corporation, with most of its neighborhoods filled in between the 1970s and 1990s. That uniform development timeline means the housing stock is highly consistent - single-family concrete block homes on modest quarter-acre lots, most of them owner-occupied and now entering the age range when major repairs start coming due. Deltona Lakes, the original core of the city, contains the oldest homes, while newer subdivisions near Saxon Boulevard and Doyle Road were added in the 2000s and 2010s. The City of Deltona is a full-service municipality with its own community development and permitting office.
The city is bordered by Lake Monroe to the south, and Lyonia Preserve - a 360-acre Florida scrub habitat inside the city - gives Deltona a notable natural landmark that residents know well. Despite its size, Deltona is primarily a bedroom community: most residents commute to jobs in Orlando or Daytona Beach along Interstate 4. Neighboring DeLand to the northwest serves as Volusia County's seat and shares some of the same residential construction patterns. We work throughout this part of the county and understand the differences between the older Deltona Lakes core and the newer outer subdivisions when it comes to concrete work.
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Learn MoreWe serve all of Deltona and surrounding Volusia County communities. Free estimates, permits handled, and we show up when we say we will.