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How much does a patio cost in Teddington in 2026?

The honest answer is that two patios that look identical in a photo can cost dramatically different amounts. Access, ground conditions, slab choice, drainage, and the state of whatever’s already there all change the number significantly. That said, it’s a fair question, and a fair answer is possible if we agree on what “a patio” means.

For a typical 25 square metre rear-garden patio in Teddington in 2026, properly built on a Type 1 sub base with mortar bedding and proper falls, expect somewhere between £3,000 and £6,500 fitted, depending on materials and access.

Here’s how that breaks down.

Materials

The slab choice is the single biggest variable. There are three families we install, and the prices below are per square metre, fitted, in 2026.

Concrete slabs: £100 to £150 per m². The budget end. Modern ranges from Marshalls, Bradstone and similar look surprisingly close to natural stone from a metre away. They will fade slightly over five to ten years.

Natural stone: £140 to £220 per m². Indian sandstone sits at the lower end (£140 to £190) and is the popular middle ground in this part of London because it suits both Victorian terraces and 1930s semis. Granite is harder wearing, ages well and comes in £170 to £220. Yorkstone and limestone are available too, for period houses or anywhere a softer or paler stone fits.

Porcelain: £190 to £260 per m². The premium end. Costs more upfront but has the lowest lifetime maintenance: no fading, no algae stains in shade, no annual re-jointing. The right pick for shaded gardens and anyone whose top priority is “leave me alone for fifteen years”.

What the labour fee covers

The reason a properly built patio costs more than a cheap one isn’t the slabs, it’s the prep underneath. A real quote includes:

  • Lifting and disposing of any existing patio (£20 to £40 per m²)
  • Excavating to the right depth (more for porcelain, less for concrete slabs)
  • A 150mm Type 1 sub base, compacted in layers
  • Slabs bedded individually on a wet mortar mix (not spot-bedded on five blobs of mortar, which is how cheap patios fail)
  • Polymeric jointing brushed in at the end
  • A fall set at 1:80 away from the house

If the quote you’re holding doesn’t mention any of those things, the patio you get won’t last as long as the ones we build.

Things that push the price up

  • Restricted access. A rear garden you can only reach by walking buckets through the kitchen will add £300 to £600 in labour to a typical job.
  • Drainage challenges. A patio next to a house with no obvious water exit usually needs a linear drain (£250 to £500 fitted with a soakaway).
  • Levels. If your existing garden slopes, a level patio needs either a step or a low retaining wall.
  • Lifting an old patio. £20 to £40 per m² depending on what’s there. A bonded concrete base is more expensive to remove than slabs on sand.

Things that don’t really change the price

  • The shape of the patio. A square or rectangle is slightly cheaper to lay than something curved, but the difference is small.
  • The size, within reason. A 30m² patio doesn’t cost twice what a 15m² one does, because the setup time and the day’s mobilisation are the same.

So what should you actually pay?

For a sensible 25m² Indian sandstone patio in a Teddington back garden with reasonable access:

  • £3,800 to £4,800 for the patio itself
  • Add £500 to £800 if there’s an old patio to lift
  • Add £300 to £600 if access is awkward
  • Add £400 to £600 if a linear drain is needed

If a quote comes in significantly under that, ask what sub base they’re proposing. If a quote comes in significantly over, ask what’s included you don’t recognise. Both directions are signals worth investigating before signing anything.

Want a real quote?

Site visits and quotes are free. Tell us what you have in mind and we’ll come round at a time that suits. See the patios page for more on materials and process, or contact us directly.

Want a quote?

Site visits are free, no pressure. Tell us what you have in mind and we'll come round at a time that suits.

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