The 12-inch rule: why most Toronto interlock patios fail by spring

Toronto interlock patios heave every spring because of what’s under them, not the pavers. Here’s the 12-inch base rule and how to vet contractors.

Spring’s the season my phone starts ringing about patios that heaved over the winter. Pavers tilting, flagstone rocking underfoot, joints opened up an inch wide. Homeowner got a “great price” two summers back and now it looks like a skate park.

Nine times out of ten the failure has nothing to do with the pavers themselves. It’s what’s underneath.

The physics nobody explains when they quote you

GTA sits in Zone 5b/6a. Our frost line runs about 3.5 to 4 feet down. Every winter the soil below your patio swells when water in it freezes, then thaws unevenly come March/April. If the base under your stone can’t drain and can’t absorb that movement, the whole surface rides the heave up and settles back down crooked.

A proper base for a walk-on patio in Toronto is roughly 6 inches of compacted ¾" crushed gravel (Granular A works) under 1 inch of bedding sand or HPB, with filter fabric between native soil and the gravel. For a driveway or anywhere that’ll see vehicle load, you’re looking at 10 to 12 inches of compacted base. Compacted in 2 to 3 inch lifts, each lift plate-tamped before the next goes on. Skip the lifts, skip the compaction, and you’ve got a cushion, not a base.

What the “great price” quotes are actually skipping

I’ve seen quotes in the $10 to $15/sqft range for interlock installs in the GTA this month. All-in, legitimate Toronto work is sitting at $25 to $60/sqft this season, closer to $30 to $45 for a straightforward backyard patio, more if you’re adding steps, sitting walls, or proper drainage.

The gap between the cheap quote and the real one is usually:

  • 3 to 4 inches of base instead of 6 to 12
  • No geotextile fabric between native soil and gravel
  • No edge restraints, or plastic ones spiked with 6" nails instead of 10"
  • Polymeric sand skipped, or the bargain bag instead of a real one
  • Pavers rated for appearance (no CSA A231.1 spec) instead of the freeze-thaw rating you actually need here

Any one of those shortcuts will cost you inside five years. Two or more and you’re rebuilding by year three.

Four questions to ask before you sign anything

Put these on every quote, in writing:

  1. How many inches of base are you installing, and is it measured compacted or loose?
  2. Which polymeric sand are you using for the joints?
  3. What’s your settlement guarantee, in years, in writing?
  4. Are you installing geotextile fabric between native soil and gravel?

If they dodge any of them, move on. A 10-year written guarantee with a real base behind it is worth paying 40% more than the quote that doesn’t mention base depth at all.

Salt, while we’re here

Ontario homeowners love rock salt. Concrete pavers that aren’t rated for de-icers will spall on the top surface within 2 to 3 winters. If your patio will ever see salt tracked from a driveway, spec pavers rated for freeze-thaw AND de-icer resistance, or switch to full-depth clay pavers or natural flagstone (granite, basalt) in those zones.

Over to you

Three questions for the thread:

  • If you got a patio installed in the last 5 years, what base depth did your contractor actually install? Did you ask?
  • Anyone running permeable interlock in Toronto, how’s it holding up through our freeze-thaw?
  • Trades lurking here, what base-prep failure are you seeing most often on rip-and-replace jobs this spring?

Pass this along to anyone shopping patio quotes right now. If you’re newer to the forum, the most commonly asked questions thread has the primer on contractor vetting too.

For a full interlock vs. concrete cost comparison for GTA driveways, see: Interlock vs concrete driveways in Toronto: the honest comparison.


Frequently Asked Questions

Why do Toronto interlock patios heave every spring?
GTA sits in climate Zone 5b/6a with a frost line running 3.5–4 feet down. Soil below the patio swells when groundwater freezes each winter and thaws unevenly in spring. A base that cannot drain and absorb that movement causes the entire surface to heave and settle back crooked. The pavers are rarely the problem — inadequate base preparation is.

What is the 12-inch base rule for interlock in Toronto?
For driveways and vehicle-loaded surfaces, the proper base is 10–12 inches of compacted ¾" crushed gravel (Granular A), installed in 2–3 inch lifts with each lift plate-tamped before the next goes on. Walk-on patios require a minimum of 6 inches of compacted base plus 1 inch of bedding sand. Less than this and the base acts as a cushion, not a structural foundation.

How do I know if an interlock quote is too cheap?
Legitimate Toronto interlock work runs $25–$60/sqft in 2026 ($30–$45 for a standard backyard patio). Quotes in the $10–$15/sqft range almost always reflect inadequate base depth, no geotextile fabric, inferior edge restraints, or poor polymeric sand — shortcuts that typically require a full rebuild within 3–5 years.

What questions should I ask an interlock contractor before hiring?
In writing, ask: (1) How many compacted inches of base are you installing? (2) Which polymeric sand brand are you using? (3) What is your settlement guarantee in years, in writing? (4) Are you installing geotextile fabric between native soil and gravel? A contractor who avoids these questions directly should be passed over.


LF Builders has been installing and repairing interlock across the GTA for over 50 years — get a project quote at lfbuilders.ca. LF Builders also supports Samm Simon’s 251 km run for cancer research — raising funds one kilometre at a time.

More from LF Builders: Interlock and hardscape installation guides on the LF Builders blog.

Adding one more spec most homeowners never ask about — drainage slope. On any hardscape within 6 ft of a foundation it needs to run ¼" per foot (≈2%) minimum, away from the house. Anything flatter and meltwater pools in late March, refreezes overnight, and erodes the bedding course from below. Combine that with an underbuilt base and you’re not just heaving, you’re getting joint spall by year four.

Two more adds for clay-heavy lots — and a lot of Scarborough, Markham, Pickering sits on clay till:

  • Excavate an extra 2–4" under the Granular A and lay a drainage core of clear ¾" stone (no fines) wrapped in non-woven geotextile. Gives hydrostatic pressure somewhere to go.
  • Watch the timeline. A proper residential patio install with correct lifts is 2–3 working days, not a one-day job. Any quote that pencils out to single-day install, walk it.

Quick cross-refs for anyone shopping patio quotes right now:

Answering my own Q1: driveway at my own place, 2019 build, 14" of base (Granular B below, Granular A above). Seven winters in, still flat.

Since I posted this last night I’ve had four messages land in the inbox about April quotes coming in, so let me add the numbers homeowners are actually seeing this season.

2026 pricing across the GTA right now is running roughly $17 to $35 per square foot installed for interlock, depending on paver quality, base depth, and access. Labour alone is about $5 to $10 per square foot of that. If a quote is coming in under $15 a foot for a full install, the base is almost always where the savings come from, and that is exactly where it should not.

Three questions I would ask any contractor before signing this spring:

  1. How deep are you digging, and what is the base material? Anything less than 10 to 12 inches of compacted 3/4" clear stone in our frost zone is a shortcut. A few will try to sell a limestone screening base for the full depth. That holds water.

  2. Are you compacting in lifts? One pass at the end is not enough. Should be 2-inch lifts with a plate compactor, minimum.

  3. Polymeric sand or regular stone dust in the joints? Polymeric costs a bit more but keeps the ants, weeds, and washout down for years.

Short window to get patios in before May-June demand spikes. If you are getting quotes, post them here and we will sanity-check the breakdown, no name-and-shame, just the numbers.

One more failure point that comes up repeatedly this time of year: edge restraints.

Even with a proper 12-inch compacted granular base, if the perimeter is not locked in correctly the field pavers migrate outward over freeze-thaw cycles. Joints at the edge widen, the pattern starts to fan, and once that movement starts it accelerates. I have seen five-year-old patios in Scarborough where the field is still solid but the outside three rows have shifted two inches because the restraints were spiked into loose fill.

What I look for when I am inspecting work:

  • Plastic or aluminum edge restraint spiked into compacted granular material at 12 inches on centre minimum, not screwed into adjacent concrete
  • Any edge butting a step or wall should get a flexible polyurethane sealant bead, not rigid mortar — rigid cracks every time against a flexible interlock field in our climate
  • Polymeric sand rated for Zone 5 minimum — cheaper products wash out by year two and the joints never really lock

On that last point: if your patio is five or more years old and you have not touched the joints since install, pull one paver in a low-traffic corner and check the bedding depth. That will tell you more than the surface ever will.

Anyone dealing with edge creep or open joints this spring? Happy to walk through what the fix looks like before you book a contractor.

Quick update from the field since spring is now in full swing.

We wrapped a rip-and-replace in North York this week. Original install was sitting on about 3.5 inches of uncompacted gravel with zero filter fabric. By March it was a sponge. Homeowner had no idea what base depth the original contractor used — never thought to ask.

To the three questions in the OP:

How many homeowners actually knew their base depth? Almost none. In my experience over 50 years doing this in Toronto, the scope that gets cut first is always what’s invisible after the job is done. A homeowner inspecting the finished surface has no idea whether there are 4 inches or 12 inches below it. That information asymmetry is exactly how the low-ball quotes survive.

Permeable interlock in Toronto freeze-thaw — how is it holding up? Mixed results, and the difference is almost always in the base spec. Permeable pavers over a standard Granular A base defeats the whole point — water pools in the aggregate layer and the freeze-thaw movement is worse, not better. The installs I’ve seen hold well all used an open-graded base (OGDL or similar), 8 to 12 inches deep, with no fine material in the sub-base at all. Expensive to do right, but it does work in our climate.

What failure mode are we seeing most on rip-and-replace this spring? Thin base combined with edge restraint failure. When the restraints migrate the whole field follows, and you get that zipper crack diagonally across the patio. Fix only the pavers without addressing the edge restraints and it opens up again within two seasons.

If anyone got a quote recently that doesn’t mention base depth at all — that omission alone is the red flag. Anyone shopping patio work right now, happy to gut-check numbers in the replies.