Driveway Sealcoating That Adds Years to Your Asphalt
Sealcoating, crack filling, and patching for Quad Cities homeowners — and commercial parking lots. Regular sealcoating costs a fraction of repaving, and we’ll tell you honestly when it’s upkeep, not replacement.
Not every sealer in the bucket is the same
Two driveways can get sealcoated the same week and look identical on day one — then one is worn out by next summer. The difference is what’s in the bucket, and how it’s mixed.
Some crews stretch their material by cutting the sealer with extra water or using a cheaper mix — more driveways per drum, more profit, and a coating that looks good for a few months before it wears away early. We don’t operate that way. We use quality commercial-grade product, mix it to the manufacturer’s specs, and apply it the way it’s meant to go down. Our reputation took decades to build, and it’s worth a lot more than the few dollars we’d save watering down a bucket of sealer. We’d rather do it right once than have you wondering why your driveway looks tired a year later.
— The Behncke crew · Quad Cities, since 1948
A small investment that delays a big one
Asphalt is held together by a binder that sun, water, and our freeze-thaw winters slowly dry out — that’s why older driveways and lots fade to gray, turn brittle, and crack. Sealcoating lays a fresh protective coat over the surface that shields the asphalt from UV and water and keeps it flexible, so it holds up for years instead of breaking down.
It’s the highest-return maintenance you can do for asphalt. A coat every couple of years costs a fraction of resurfacing — and keeps small problems from snowballing into a full replacement. Need concrete instead? We also pour and repair residential concrete driveways, walks, and patios.
What a quality sealcoat does
Blocks UV & oxidation
Stops the sun from drying out your asphalt and fading it to gray.
Seals out water
Keeps rain and snowmelt from seeping in and freezing the surface apart.
Resists oil, gas & salt
Shrugs off the spills and winter salt that eat away at raw asphalt.
Restores a rich black finish
Makes a tired driveway or lot look new again and lifts your curb appeal.
Slows cracks & potholes
A flexible, sealed surface resists the cracking that turns into potholes.
Adds years before repaving
Regular sealing can roughly double the life of an asphalt surface.
Asphalt care that pays for itself
Driveway sealcoating & repair
The full upkeep cycle for a home driveway — done in the right order so the sealer actually lasts.
- Commercial-grade driveway sealcoating
- Hot-rubber crack filling
- Patch & pothole repair
- Asphalt overlay when the base is still sound
Parking lot sealcoating & striping
Protect the lot and keep it looking sharp — scheduled around your hours, not the other way around.
- Parking lot sealcoating
- Crack fill & pothole patching
- Line striping & ADA markings
- See our commercial lot maintenance
How we sealcoat a driveway or lot
Honest inspection
First we check whether the surface actually needs sealing yet. If it doesn’t, we’ll tell you straight.
Deep clean
We clear dirt, debris, and loose material and treat oil spots so the sealer bonds properly.
Crack filling & repairs
We fill cracks and patch potholes first — sealcoat protects a surface, it doesn’t bridge open damage.
Edge & detail
We cut clean edges along borders, walks, and the garage or curb so the finished look is sharp.
Commercial-grade sealer
We apply an even, professional-grade coat — usually two — for full, lasting coverage.
Cure & protect
Stay off it for 24–48 hours while it cures, then enjoy a surface that’s protected for years.
Signs your asphalt is ready
- The surface has faded from black to gray
- Water soaks in instead of beading on top
- You’re seeing fine, hairline cracks forming
- The texture feels rough, dry, or gravelly underfoot
- It’s been more than 2–3 years since the last seal
Two honest caveats: brand-new asphalt needs to cure 6–12 months before its first sealcoat, and sealing too often just builds up and flakes. Most Quad Cities driveways and lots do best on a 2–3 year cycle — we’ll help you find the right timing for yours.
Driveway sealcoating across the Quad Cities
Common questions
How often should I sealcoat?
Most asphalt driveways and lots do best with a fresh seal every 2 to 3 years. We can tell you where yours is in that cycle.
How long before I can drive on it?
Plan to stay off the surface for 24 to 48 hours so the sealer fully cures. We’ll give you an exact window based on the weather.
What’s the best time of year to sealcoat?
Warm, dry weather is ideal — generally late spring through early fall, with daytime temperatures comfortably above 50°F and no rain in the forecast.
My asphalt is brand new. Should I seal it now?
Not yet. Fresh asphalt needs roughly 6 to 12 months to cure first. Seal it too early and you trap the oils that keep it flexible.
Will sealcoating fix my cracks and potholes?
Sealcoat protects the surface; it doesn’t structurally repair damage. We fill cracks and patch potholes first, then seal over a sound surface.
Do you sealcoat commercial parking lots?
Yes. We sealcoat, crack-fill, patch, and stripe parking lots and commercial asphalt — just ask about our commercial lot maintenance.
Driveway or lot looking tired?
We’ll take an honest look, tell you whether it needs a sealcoat or real repair, and put a written estimate in your hands — usually within one business day. No pressure, ever.
