As of 2026, residential snow removal runs $30–$500 per visit, but most jobs land in the $45–$160 band with a verified average near $105. Commercial work runs $150–$500+ per push, and seasonal contracts run $300–$1,000 residential ($2,000–$20,000+ commercial). The right number depends on your market, lot size, snow depth, and whether you pay per push or per season.
Verified 2026 line-item bands for the most common services. Region, lot size, snow depth, and the pricing model you choose move every line — treat these as starting points, not quotes.
| Service | Typical range | What moves it |
|---|---|---|
| Residential, per visit (most jobs) | $45–$160 | Driveway size, snow depth, market; ~$105 average |
| Driveway plow (standard ~60 ft, 2-car) | $30–$75 / visit | $280–$750 seasonal |
| Driveway plow (large / 4+ car / long) | $125–$250 / visit | $600–$1,000 seasonal |
| Sidewalk / walkway clearing | $20–$75 / push | Linear feet; cheaper bundled |
| Commercial lot, per push | $150–$500+ | Lot size; or $50–$200/hr hourly |
| Commercial seasonal contract | $2,000–$20,000+ | Lot size, market, salting included |
| Salt / de-icing (residential) | $20–$50 / application | Premium de-icers add 20–40% |
| Roof snow removal (standard roof) | $190–$735 / visit | $900–$3,000 large or steep |
| Ice dam removal (steam, most effective) | $800–$2,400 | Salt/tablets $200–$300; chipping $400–$2,000 |
| Emergency / same-day | 1.5×–2× standard | Pre-dawn, overnight, post-storm surge |
Bands are verified 2026 national figures and will differ in your area. See Claver for snow removal to quote and collect them.
Snow removal pricing is one of the most market-dependent numbers in the trades. The same driveway costs one thing in Minneapolis, where plows run all winter, and quite another in Nashville, where a contractor mobilizes equipment a handful of times a year. So the only honest answer leads with a range and then explains what pushes you to one end of it.
Across the U.S. as of 2026, residential snow removal runs $30 to $500 per visit. That spread is real, but it's misleading on its own — most jobs cluster much tighter. The most common residential per-visit band is $45 to $160, with a verified average of about $105. The low end ($30–$45) is a light dusting on a small single-car driveway in a high-competition snow belt; the high end ($160–$500+) is a large or complex property, deep accumulation, or a low-snowfall city where mobilization cost is spread over very few jobs.
Commercial work is a different ballpark: $150 to $500+ per push for a parking lot, or $50–$200 per hour when billed hourly. Seasonal flat-rate contracts run $300 to $1,000 for a residential driveway (averaging around $700 for a standard driveway from November through March) and $2,000 to $20,000+ for commercial lots, depending on size and market.
Anyone quoting a single flat "average price" for snow removal is guessing. The number that matters is the one built from your property, your snowfall, and your local contractor supply.
Two driveways across the street from each other can be priced very differently. The real drivers:
This is the question every customer asks, and the honest answer is it depends on the winter. A seasonal flat-rate contract averages about $700 for a standard residential driveway and shifts the weather risk to the contractor — you pay the same whether it snows twice or twenty times. In a heavy winter that's a bargain; in a light one you may pay for snow that never fell.
Per-push (per-visit) pricing flips the math: cheap in a light winter, expensive in a heavy one. If you live in a reliable snow belt and want a predictable budget, a seasonal contract usually wins. In an occasional-snow market, per-push often makes more sense because you only pay when it actually snows. Per-inch and hourly models exist mainly for deep storms and large commercial lots where scope is genuinely unknown.
Verified 2026 ranges for the services people most often add to a base plow. Bundling usually beats paying for each piece à la carte:
Region is the single biggest reason two identical driveways get different bills. Verified 2026 residential per-visit ranges:
Expect the high end when the property is large, long, or complex; when accumulation is deep; when you need emergency or overnight service; when premium de-icers or hauling are involved; when steep grades or obstacles slow the equipment; or when a storm has exhausted local crew capacity. A low-snowfall metro will also run high simply because the contractor's equipment is idle most of the year.
Expect the low end when you have a small, simple, straight driveway in a competitive snow belt; when you sign a seasonal contract in a heavy-snow market; when you bundle sidewalks and salting into one visit; and when accumulation stays under the trigger depth. A light winter makes per-push pricing especially cheap — which is exactly why seasonal contracts feel expensive in a mild year and cheap in a brutal one.
Set your price from your true cost — equipment, fuel, labor, salt, insurance, and the windshield time between sites — not from the flyer of the operator down the road. Underpricing only works until the plow needs an edge and the loader needs hydraulic fluid.
Snow work lives on speed: the storm hits, the route fires, and you need the price set before the truck rolls and the payment in hand before the next push. That's where the software earns its keep. Claver for snow removal lets you build per-push and seasonal pricing once, send a clear quote, collect a deposit or seasonal payment up front (with consumer financing for the bigger commercial contracts), and invoice on the spot — so the price you set is the price you actually collect. For more pricing breakdowns across the trades, browse the full Claver guides hub.
Build per-push and seasonal pricing, quote in minutes, take a deposit before the route fires, and invoice on the spot. Claver starts at $19/mo, month-to-month — start in minutes.