Circulating estimates swing from 8,500 companies to 200,000. That 23× spread is not missing data — it is a fight over what counts as a "paving company." This report tests every number against its source and lands on a defensible figure for the operators AOS actually serves.
There is no clean NAICS code for "asphalt paving company." The trade is fractured across three federal codes — and each one distorts the count in a different direction. Get the taxonomy wrong and you are off by a factor of twenty.
Two mechanisms inflate every headline: establishments vs. firms (multi-location primes counted many times) and the non-employer swinger — ~110,000 one-truck sole proprietors and dormant shell LLCs that aggregators scrape as "companies." Demand a W-2 payroll and an equipment yard, and the market collapses under 12,000.
From 165,000 down to 11,850. Every inflated aggregator claim can be rationalized by subtracting the layers that don't belong. Tap any row for the mechanism behind the cut.
AOS's earlier internal research cited 138,000 U.S. paving businesses. That figure is not wrong — but it needs a label. Here is how it squares with this deeper analysis.
Both numbers are true about different things. 138,000 is the right number for "how many entities could a marketing list reach." 11,850 is the right number for "how many real paving companies could AOS actually serve." For AOS strategy — pricing, territory, a few dozen $35K engagements — the smaller, segmented number is the one that matters.
"How many paving companies" has five different right answers depending on which layer you mean. AOS lives in A1 and the top of C.
From the raw universe down to the firms that fit the program's price and profile. This is the funnel that matters for territory and volume planning.
At a few dozen $35K engagements over two to three years, AOS is drawing from ~9,500 obtainable firms. Even county-cluster territory exclusivity never runs out of claimable market at that volume. The pool size simply does not bind the decision.
Top-line revenue hides a structural shift: new paving is shrinking while recurring maintenance is exploding — and private equity has noticed.
Among the Top 50, new-asphalt-laydown revenue fell for a third straight year — from $913M in 2023 to $698M in 2025 — even as total Top-50 revenue surged 18% to $1.9B. Growth is coming from repair, not new builds.
20%+ margins triggered 14+ active private-equity platforms rolling up the $5M–$25M revenue band between 2024–2026 — Pave America, Pavement Preservation Group, Heartland Paving Partners — building regional powerhouses with pricing authority.
Hot mix must be laid within a 30–50 mile radius (≤90-minute drive) of the plant before it cools. Companies cannot centralize — they cluster by population, freeze-thaw degradation and road mileage.
| Claimable market layer | Count | Use for AOS |
|---|---|---|
| States | 50 | Coarsest territory lock — never exhausted at AOS volume |
| Counties | 3,143 | Fine-grained; basis for county-cluster exclusivity |
| Core Based Statistical Areas | ~900 | Metro + micro markets |
| Metropolitan Statistical Areas | ~384 | Primary concentrated commercial demand |
| Nielsen DMAs | 210 | Standard for geo-targeted ad spend |
California, Florida & Texas lead on sheer volume and development; New York, Pennsylvania & Ohio punch above their weight because intense freeze-thaw cycles destroy asphalt and guarantee perpetual repair revenue. Freeze-thaw isn't a weather note — it's a recurring-revenue engine.
The 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act provides $348B in highway funding FY22–FY26. As of mid-2024, states had committed $130B+ across 80,000+ projects — and 44% of committed funds go to repair and reconstruction, favoring milling and overlay contractors.
An asphalt plant runs $2M–$8M; a commercial paving fleet adds $1M–$2M in rolling stock. This barrier keeps the core market from flooding — and makes the operators who clear it exactly the kind of established businesses AOS is built to serve.
| Revenue band | W-2 crew | Profile | AOS fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| $500K–$1.5M | 3–8 | 1–2 crews, leased/older equipment, residential & light commercial patching | Small-real tier · entry |
| $1.5M–$10M | 10–45 | Multiple paving/prep/sealcoat crews; commercial lots, retail, secondary municipal | The sweet spot |
| $10M–$55M+ | 50+ | Heavy commercial, municipal & DOT sub-contracting; often own a plant | Big regional · upper bound |
Is a single individual with a pickup truck and a patching tamp an "asphalt paving company"?
If yes, the market balloons past 100,000. If you require a W-2 payroll, a commercial equipment fleet and a physical yard, it contracts to under 12,000. That one definitional choice — not any missing data — is what drives the entire 20,000-to-200,000 spread.
For macroeconomic labor tracking, non-employers count. For B2B market sizing, program pricing and territory planning, Segment B is ghost data that dangerously inflates the addressable market. This report counts the way AOS should: real employer companies, segmented and confidence-tagged.