Materials

Block Paving vs Tarmac vs Gravel: Which Driveway is Right for You?

An honest, side-by-side comparison of the three most common driveway surfaces in Glasgow — block paving, tarmac and gravel — covering cost, lifespan, drainage, repair and kerb appeal.

Strathworks Team

If you’re planning a new driveway in Glasgow, the first big decision isn’t colour or pattern — it’s the surface itself. Block paving, tarmac and gravel are the three options most homeowners weigh up, and each has real strengths and real trade-offs. This guide covers what we’d genuinely tell a friend about each one, based on what we install and what we get called back to repair.

The short version

Block pavingTarmacGravel
Typical cost£80–£150/m² (material rate)£60–£90/m²£35–£60/m²
Lifespan25–40 years12–20 years5–10 years (loose)
RepairsLift and re-lay individual blocksPatches always showTop up annually
DrainageExcellent (especially permeable)Poor — needs falls/gulliesNaturally permeable
Kerb appealStrongestFunctionalCottage / informal
Planning permissionPermeable = exemptOften required over 5m²Permeable = exempt

Block paving

This is what we install most, and it’s what most Glasgow homeowners end up choosing. The reasons are practical:

  • It lasts. A properly installed block driveway — full sub-base, edge restraints, jointing sand vibrated in — should still look good in 30 years.
  • It’s repairable. Crack a block by dropping a sledgehammer? Lift it, drop a new one in. With tarmac you’re patching, and the patch always shows.
  • It drains well. With falls and channels (or fully permeable blocks), water goes where you want it. We’ve never been called back to a block driveway with a pooling problem.
  • It looks the part. Hundreds of colour and pattern combinations. It signals care to anyone walking up to your front door — useful for resale.

The downside is cost: it’s the most expensive of the three on day one. But cost-per-year-of-life, it usually wins.

Tarmac

Tarmac (asphalt) is the workhorse for very large drives, commercial yards and shared accesses. For a typical Glasgow front driveway it’s rarely our first recommendation, for three reasons:

  1. No drainage built in. You have to add falls, gullies and (if draining to a public road) often a soakaway. Done badly, tarmac drives pond after every shower.
  2. Repairs always show. Patches sit slightly higher or lower than the surrounding surface. After 5–10 years a tarmac drive can look like a quilt.
  3. Surface dressing wears. UV and oil drips break down the binder. By year 10–15 most tarmac drives are noticeably rougher than they were on day one.

Where tarmac wins: large area, low budget, no aesthetic priority. Think a long shared driveway between flats, or a parking court.

Gravel

We genuinely like gravel — for the right job. The “right job” is usually:

  • A side return or back-garden path where vehicles aren’t driving over it daily
  • A rural or cottage-style front garden where loose stone fits the look
  • A drainage-critical site where every other option needs a soakaway

The trade-offs:

  • Migration. Without proper edge restraints and a membrane-backed bay, gravel ends up in your hedge, your street, and your neighbour’s lawn. The vast majority of “I hate my gravel drive” stories trace back to no edging.
  • Top-up costs. Plan to add a couple of bags of fresh gravel every 1–2 years.
  • Snow and ice. A shovel takes the gravel with the snow. Salt is fine; mechanical clearing is not.
  • Wheelchair / pram access. Loose stone is hard work. Avoid for accessible front entrances.

A well-built gravel drive on a properly compacted MOT Type 1 base, with concrete-haunched edging blocks and a commercial-grade membrane, will outlast a cheap tarmac job. A loose pile of pea gravel on bare soil will not.

What about resin-bound?

Resin-bound is a fourth option worth a brief mention. It’s effectively gravel locked in a clear UV-stable resin, laid over a tarmac or concrete base. It looks fantastic for the first 5 years, drains well, and is fully permeable.

The reason we don’t push it: in Glasgow’s freeze-thaw cycles, the resin bond can fail at the edges within 7–10 years. When it does, the only fix is a full re-lay. We’d rather install a 30-year block paving driveway than a 10-year resin one — but if the look is right for your house, it’s a legitimate option.

How to choose

Honest order of priorities for most Glasgow homeowners:

  1. Will it drain properly? Get this wrong and you’ll regret every other decision.
  2. Will it survive Scottish winters? Anything laid on poor sub-base will fail in 3–5 years regardless of surface.
  3. Can it be repaired? A surface you can fix locally beats one you have to replace whole.
  4. Does it look right for the house? Block paving suits most; gravel suits cottage and rural; tarmac suits utilitarian.
  5. Cost. Genuinely the last thing to optimise — the cheap option is almost always the expensive one over a 10-year horizon.

If you’d like a free site visit and a fixed-price quote — for any of these surfaces — get in touch or use the driveway cost calculator for an instant estimate.

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block paving tarmac gravel driveways comparison

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