
Heaved driveways, cracked slabs, and basement utility work all start with a clean cut. We use diamond-blade saws and locate utilities before every job.

Concrete cutting in Enid uses diamond-tipped saws to slice through hardened concrete cleanly - for driveway section removal, basement utility openings, and control joints - and most residential jobs are finished in a single day with straight edges and no damage to surrounding concrete.
In Enid, concrete cutting comes up most often when clay soil movement has heaved or cracked a slab section badly enough that patching will not hold, or when a homeowner is adding plumbing or a floor drain and needs an opening cut through the existing slab. Either way, the goal is a clean, controlled cut - not a jackhammer job that sends cracks running where you do not want them.
Concrete cutting is also frequently the first step before concrete driveway building when only a portion of the driveway needs to be replaced rather than the entire surface.
If part of your driveway or patio has risen above or dropped below the surrounding surface, the slab has shifted - likely from Enid's clay soil expanding and contracting beneath it. A tripping hazard like this will not fix itself, and surface patching rarely holds. Cutting out the affected section and addressing what is underneath is the right long-term solution.
Enid's freeze-thaw cycles push water into small cracks, which expand as that water freezes. If a crack you noticed last fall looks noticeably larger now, it is actively getting worse. Cutting out the damaged section stops the progression and gives you a clean, stable surface to work with.
Any time a plumber, electrician, or HVAC contractor needs to run a line beneath an existing slab, the concrete has to be cut first. If you are planning a basement finish or adding a floor drain in your garage, concrete cutting is the first step - not something you can skip or work around.
Spalling is when the surface of concrete starts to flake off in chunks, leaving a rough, pitted surface. In Enid's older homes, this is common on garage floors that were poured thin and exposed to decades of heat and moisture. Once spalling reaches a certain depth, resurfacing will not hold - the damaged section needs to be cut out and replaced.
We use diamond-blade flat saws for horizontal slab work and wall saws for vertical cuts through garage or basement walls. Before any cut begins, we contact the call-before-you-dig service to have underground utility lines marked - that step is not optional and happens on every single job. We also control dust with water or vacuum systems to protect your home and the crew. Every job ends with a walkthrough: you see the cut edges, confirm they are straight and clean, and get clear instructions on when the area is safe to use.
Concrete cutting is often paired with concrete parking lot building for commercial properties where damaged sections need to be removed before a new pour. For residential driveways, the same logic applies - cutting out only the compromised section saves money compared to replacing the whole surface.
Best for homeowners with a specific heaved, cracked, or spalled section of a driveway, patio, or garage floor that needs to be cut out and replaced.
Best for homeowners adding basement bathrooms, floor drains, or any utility line that needs to run beneath an existing concrete slab.
Best for homeowners creating a new door or window opening through a concrete or block garage or basement wall.
Best for homeowners with a new pour or an existing slab that lacks joints, leaving it vulnerable to random cracking as the ground shifts.
A significant share of Enid's residential neighborhoods were built between the 1950s and 1970s, which means many driveways, garage floors, and basement slabs are 50 years old or more. Older concrete in this area is often thinner than current standards and more brittle - it has been through decades of Enid's heat cycles, freeze-thaw winters, and clay soil movement. When a section finally fails, patching over it is rarely the right call. Cutting it out cleanly and replacing it is what actually lasts.
We regularly handle concrete cutting work for homeowners in Woodward and Kingfisher, where the same northwest Oklahoma geology - Permian red-bed clay that moves with moisture - creates the same pattern of slab damage. Whether it is a heaved driveway section or an interior floor that needs a drain opening, the approach is the same: locate utilities first, cut cleanly, and explain what comes next.
We respond to all concrete cutting inquiries within one business day. Tell us what you are trying to accomplish and where the concrete is located. Sending a photo or two helps us give you an initial read on timing and complexity.
We visit the site in person to check slab thickness, access, and any complications. You receive a written estimate that breaks down cost clearly before we schedule anything.
We contact the national utility-locating service to have underground gas, water, and electrical lines marked before the first cut. This happens on every job - no exceptions.
The crew makes the cuts, removes concrete debris, and cleans the work area. Before leaving, we walk the job with you - you inspect the cut edges and get clear instructions on when the area is safe to use and what comes next.
We respond within one business day, locate utilities before every cut, and give you a written estimate before work begins.
(580) 366-4082Enid has natural gas service in most residential neighborhoods, and cutting through a gas or water line is a serious safety risk. We contact 811, the national call-before-you-dig service, before every job to have underground lines marked. It is not an extra step - it is the first step, every time.
Professional concrete cutting uses diamond-tipped blades that slice through hardened concrete without sending vibrations into the surrounding slab. You get a straight, clean edge - not a jagged break with new cracks running in every direction. That matters especially in Enid's older neighborhoods, where brittle slabs crack more easily under careless work.
We visit the site before quoting because slab thickness, access conditions, and job complexity all affect the price. The written estimate you receive before work starts is the number on the final invoice. Homeowners in Enid call us back because that commitment holds.
We work on concrete across Enid and the surrounding region, which means we know what decades of clay soil movement and Oklahoma heat does to a slab. That background informs how we set up equipment, how carefully we work around older brittle concrete, and what we recommend for what comes after the cut.
Clean cuts and honest estimates are the baseline. Knowing Enid's soil, housing stock, and permit requirements is what makes the difference between a job done and a job done right.
Once a damaged driveway section is cut out, we pour a new slab matched to the existing surface and built for Enid's clay soil conditions.
Learn MoreCommercial slab removal and replacement for parking lots and paved surfaces where sections have heaved or deteriorated past repair.
Learn MoreCall Precision Enid Concrete today - we locate utilities, give you a written estimate, and finish most jobs in a single day.