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Brazoria Driveway & Drainage

Culverts, drainage, and county paperwork. Angleton, Texas.


New Driveway Culverts

Driveway culvert installation in Angleton, TX and Brazoria County

We file the county permit, size the pipe to the ditch, and set the grade so water actually leaves.

  • Permit filed before we dig
  • Pipe sized to the ditch, not the driveway
  • 90-day grade guarantee
  • Angleton, Danbury, Rosharon, West Columbia, Sweeny

What a new driveway culvert actually involves

Every driveway that crosses a county roadside ditch in Brazoria County needs a Driveway/Culvert Permit. That applies to a new house going up on a bare lot outside Danbury just the same as a second entrance added to land you've owned for years near Rosharon. The permit itself doesn't cost anything to file. What trips people up is everything around it. Knowing whether your road is county-maintained, sits inside Angleton's city limits, fronts a state highway, or is a private subdivision street changes which office handles it and how the work actually gets done. Get that wrong and you can order the wrong pipe, miss the permit's expiration window, or pay for excavation work the county was going to do for free.

We handle that whole chain, start to finish. On a standard 20-foot residential drive over a county ditch, we're usually done in a single day once the permit clears and the pipe is staged on-site. Wider commercial entrances, deeper ditches, or driveways crossing two ditch sections run longer.

Pricing

What it costs

ScopeTypical range
Permit handling, staking, and driveway base on a county road. You buy the county-sized RCP pipe directly, we tell you exactly what to order.$450 to $950
Full culvert install on a private road, subdivision street, or state highway frontage. We excavate, set the pipe, and backfill, since the county won't.$1,200 to $3,200
Concrete or asphalt surfacing over the culvert (subbed to a concrete crew)Quoted separately

Final price depends on pipe diameter, typically 18 to 24 inches for a standard drive, ditch depth, driveway width, and how much base material you want spread. We write the number down before anyone digs.

Process

How a new culvert install actually goes

  1. Site visit and jurisdiction check

    We walk the ditch and confirm your road type, county-maintained, inside Angleton's city limits, state highway frontage, or a private street. That answer decides which permit applies.

  2. Permit application and site drawing

    We complete the Driveway/Culvert Permit application, sketch the driveway location and dimensions the county requires, and file it against your site address.

  3. Ditch measurement and pipe sizing

    On county roads, the county's own Road and Bridge crew measures the ditch and tells us the required pipe diameter. We relay that number to you before you spend a dollar on pipe.

  4. Order and stage the pipe

    The county requires the landowner to furnish the reinforced concrete pipe. We coordinate ordering and delivery so the correct pipe is sitting on-site before a crew ever shows up.

  5. Set the culvert

    On county roads, the county sets the pipe at no labor charge once it's staged. On private roads, subdivision streets, and state highway frontage, our crew excavates to the ditch flow line and sets the pipe on grade ourselves.

  6. Backfill and surface

    Compacted backfill first, then crushed limestone, crushed concrete, or a stabilized base sized to what will actually drive over it, a car versus a truck and trailer.

  7. Walk-through and permit close-out

    We show you the finished grade, confirm the driveway ties to your permit file, and leave you photos in case an inspector or a future buyer ever asks.

What Makes This Harder

Failure points we watch for

  • Ordering pipe before the ditch is measured. Guess the diameter and you either pay for pipe that gets rejected or set an undersized culvert that washes out at the inlet during the next real storm.
  • Missing the permit's expiration window. Brazoria County permits carry an expiration date. Delay the pipe order or the work order past it and you're refiling from scratch.
  • Assuming the county will set it. The county cannot set culverts in state highway right-of-way or on private roads. If your drive fronts a state highway or sits on a subdivision's private street, that's on us, not a county work order.
  • Concrete poured before inspection. Plan a concrete driveway surface and the county requires an inspection before the pour. Pour first and you can be required to remove concrete from the right-of-way at your own expense.
  • Wide entrances without a clean-out. Any culvert longer than 48 feet needs a clean-out opening or grate. Skip it during design and you're retrofitting later.

One thing we don't do

We don't set culverts on state highway right-of-way without a TxDOT access permit already in hand. That approval comes from TxDOT's district office, not Brazoria County, and it runs on its own timeline. We'll tell you upfront if that's your situation so you're not waiting on us for something outside our control.

Questions

Driveway culvert install, answered

How long does the whole thing take, start to finish?

Permit filing and the county's ditch measurement usually run about a week or two depending on their backlog, longer right after a big storm when their crews are on emergency drainage work. Once the pipe is staged, the physical install for a standard drive is typically one day.

Do I need a permit if I'm just extending an existing driveway?

Yes. The county's Driveway/Culvert Permit covers extensions of an existing driveway, not just new ones, and it also applies if the traffic type on your drive changes, say from passenger cars to regular truck traffic.

What size pipe will I need?

It depends on your specific ditch, not a chart. Standard residential drives commonly run 18 to 24 inch reinforced concrete pipe, but a deeper or wider county ditch calls for more. We get the real number from the ditch measurement before you order anything.

Can I just pour gravel over the ditch without a culvert?

No. Blocking a roadside ditch without a properly sized culvert traps water against the road shoulder and your own yard. It's exactly the kind of unpermitted work the county can require you to remove.

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