This question shows up constantly on Canadian homesteading and DIY forums. The answer is yes — a skid steer handles gravel driveway work well. But the right attachment choice makes a significant difference in results, and a few techniques are worth understanding before you start. This guide answers the question properly.
Gravel driveway work isn't one task — it's several, and each phase suits a different attachment. Using a GP bucket for finish grading is like using a shovel to sweep. Using a box blade to spread new gravel from a delivery pile is slow and awkward. Understanding the sequence saves time and frustration.
A general-purpose bucket is best for moving volume. Scooping from a gravel pile, dumping loads across the driveway surface, pushing rough windrows into position. Fast. No finesse.
The bucket's limitation: it leaves an uneven surface. Pushing gravel with a bucket creates ridges where the cutting edge digs, scalloped patterns in soft spots, and piles at the edge where you run out of push. It's not a finishing tool.
A box blade — a three-point or skid-steer-mounted blade with side panels — is the standard grading tool. It levels, cuts high spots, fills low spots, and shapes crowns. The box catches material as it grades and redistributes it forward. Unlike a straight blade, it holds a working reserve of material.
The box blade requires multiple passes to achieve good results. Experienced operators plan the grade before starting and work methodically — cutting high then filling low, not trying to do both at once. A box blade in the hands of a first-time operator will produce acceptable results. In experienced hands, it produces excellent results.
A land plane — sometimes called a road grader attachment or driveway grader — is a long, flat cutting edge that levels through sustained contact rather than box-and-fill. It skims the high spots and presses material into low spots in a single pass. Produces a smoother finish than a box blade on long, relatively even surfaces.
Land planes work well for annual maintenance grading on an established driveway. They're less useful for significant regrading or moving material — they're a finishing tool, not a volume-moving tool. Not the right attachment if you're dealing with significant depth variation, deep ruts, or major crown reshaping.
You've just had gravel delivered — three or four loads of ¾" minus crusher run dropped in piles along the driveway. Now what?
Use the GP bucket to move material from the delivery piles across the surface. Working method: scoop from the pile, back drag or push the load in the direction you need it, dump and push forward. Rough-spread material across the entire width — you don't need it perfect at this stage. Aim for consistent depth across the width.
Back-dragging with the bucket (bucket edge dragging along the surface as you reverse) spreads material more evenly than pushing forward. Push forward to move volume; back-drag to level.
Once the material is roughly distributed, switch to the box blade. Make passes the length of the driveway, overlapping by about a third. Keep the blade at a consistent depth — adjust for the crown as you work. First pass cuts the high spots and gathers material. Second pass levels from what the first pass left. It takes three to four passes to achieve a flat surface on a significant new gravel application.
At this stage: shape the crown. A properly graded gravel driveway has a slight crown — higher in the centre, sloping toward the ditches on each side. Roughly 3–4% cross slope (about 1" of drop per foot of width) is the standard recommendation for good drainage on gravel surfaces. Without crown, water pools in wheel tracks and accelerates rutting.
If you have a land plane, run it over the box-bladed surface for the finish grade. It knocks down the small ridges and seams left by the box blade and produces a clean surface. Not essential — a well-run box blade leaves a serviceable surface without this step. Worth doing if you have the attachment and the surface is for a higher-use or more visible section of the driveway.
An established driveway that's developed ruts, soft spots, and edge rollover is a different job than spreading fresh material. There's gravel present — it's just in the wrong places. The box blade moves it back where it belongs.
The first mistake first-time operators make: trying to achieve a finished grade on the first pass. It doesn't work that way. Box blade grading of an existing surface is an iterative process. Each pass collects what it cuts and deposits it — finding the grade requires letting each pass establish where material ends up before the next corrects it.
A practical working sequence for an established driveway in rough shape:
On a 400-metre driveway, this takes most of a day. On a 50-metre driveway, it takes a couple of hours. Budget realistically — grading is slower than it looks.
Crown is the most important structural feature of a gravel driveway. A flat driveway collects water in wheel tracks. Wheel tracks fill with water and turn to mud. Mud ruts. Ruts collect more water. The cycle accelerates.
Forming crown with a box blade: most adjustable box blades allow tilting the blade on the horizontal axis. Tilting up at one end puts more downward pressure on the opposite side — this is your crown-forming adjustment. Work toward the centre from each edge, angling the blade slightly to push material inward. The machine's weight and blade geometry do the work.
Potholes in a gravel driveway form for a few reasons. Knowing why determines the fix.
If the pothole is at the surface — a depression in the gravel layer that formed because material migrated to the edges or shoulders — regrading moves that material back. The underlying base is intact and adequate. A box blade pass fills surface potholes by collecting the gravel that's sitting at the wrong elevation and redistributing it. This works when:
If the pothole goes deeper than the gravel layer — if you're hitting soft subgrade material at the bottom of the hole — regrading alone doesn't fix it. You're dealing with base failure, not surface displacement. Signs of this:
Fix: fill the hole with material — ¾" minus or crusher run, packed firmly with the machine or a tamper — before surface grading. On persistent wet soft spots, the fix is drainage improvement, not just more gravel. A perforated drainage tile under the problem area, or a graded swale to redirect water away from the surface, addresses the cause. Just adding gravel repeatedly to a wet soft spot is a slow money drain.
Gravel is not all the same. The aggregate type, size, and whether it includes fines (smaller particles that compact and bind) determines how a gravel driveway performs. Here's what you'll find at Canadian aggregate suppliers and what works for driveway use.
Also called ¾" minus, crusher run, or processed gravel. This is crushed stone — angular, not rounded — graded to include everything from ¾" aggregate down to fine dust. The fines are the key: they compact and bind, creating a firm, stable surface that resists rutting.
Angular crusher run locks together under compaction in a way that rounded gravel doesn't. It's the most common driveway surface material in Canadian rural and suburban applications for good reason — it performs well and stays where you put it.
Best application: Driveway base and surface layer. Box blade well. Compacts well. Stays in place after compaction.
Clear crush is screened to a specific size — ¾" aggregate — with the fines washed out. No fines means no binding. The individual pieces have nothing to lock them together. They roll and scatter under traffic.
Where clear crush is useful: drainage applications (around footings, under concrete slabs, alongside foundation walls) where water needs to pass freely through the aggregate. Under a geotextile fabric base before crusher run surface, it provides drainage while the fabric prevents intermixing with subgrade.
Not ideal for: Driveway surfaces. It doesn't compact firmly, stays loose, and migrates. If your budget is limited, ¾" minus performs better than clear crush for the same investment.
Larger clear aggregate. Same drainage properties as ¾" clear — plus the size makes it uncomfortable to walk on and difficult to grade with a box blade. The large, round stones roll away from the blade edge and are impossible to compact into a stable surface.
This material has its applications — drainage trenches, French drains, decorative beds — but not driveways. If a supplier is suggesting 1¼" clear for your driveway surface, ask for ¾" minus instead.
Best application: High-flow drainage where permeability is the only objective.
Bank run gravel is natural pit-run material — not crushed, mixed sizes, variable fines content. It's cheaper than crusher run and widely available in rural Canada. The quality varies significantly by source: some pit-run has good fines content and compacts reasonably well; other sources are mostly large rounded stones with little binding material.
Bank run is common on low-traffic farm laneways where durability is less critical and cost is the primary constraint. On a frequently-used residential driveway, crusher run is a better long-term investment.
Best application: Low-traffic farm lanes, base layers under crusher run surface, where cost is the primary factor.
Regional note: gravel availability and naming conventions vary across Canada. What's called ¾" minus in Ontario may be labelled crushed limestone or road crush in Alberta or BC. The aggregate quarry mineral composition also varies — limestone, granite, basalt, and dolomite aggregate all behave similarly for driveway purposes, though hardness varies. Ask your local aggregate supplier what they stock that's equivalent to "¾" minus with fines" and you'll be pointed to the right product.
This is the question behind the question for many Canadian property owners. Is it cheaper to rent a skid steer and do it yourself, or call a gravel contractor?
| Approach | Rough CAD Cost (Day) | What You Need | When It Makes Sense |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent Skid Steer + Box Blade, DIY | $650–$1,100/day (machine + attachment rental, varies by region and machine size) | Trailer capable of hauling the machine, time to learn the equipment, someone to help on first use | When you have other skid steer tasks to batch with the driveway work, when you want the skill for future use, when the driveway is long enough that contractor time is expensive |
| Hire Gravel Contractor | $1,500–$3,500+ for typical residential driveway grading job | Nothing — they show up with equipment and expertise | When you have no other use for the machine, when you need expert results, when the job is small (hiring for 2 hours of expert work beats renting for a full day of learning) |
| Own a Skid Steer | Amortized cost varies widely | Storage, maintenance, operating knowledge | When you use a skid steer regularly for other purposes — the driveway work is then essentially free beyond attachment rental |
The honest answer: for a single driveway grading job on a 200-metre residential driveway, hiring a local gravel contractor often costs similar to renting a machine for the day once you factor in transport. The contractor brings experience and finishes the job faster. Renting makes clear financial sense when you can batch skid steer work — combine the driveway with moving a gravel pile, filling low spots in a yard, or other material handling tasks into a single rental day.
If you're planning to rent and do it yourself: budget extra time for the learning curve. Grading with a box blade looks simple and is conceptually straightforward, but developing a feel for blade pressure and how the machine moves material takes a few hours. On a 400-metre driveway, that learning time is absorbed into the work. On a 100-metre driveway, it's a more significant proportion of the day.
Gravel migrates. Every vehicle that drives on a gravel driveway pushes material slightly outward. Over years, the shoulders build up and the driving surface gets thin. Regrading moves that material back — but during grading, there's a real risk of pushing too much material off the edge onto the lawn.
The risk is real: a box blade moving material outward drops gravel onto the adjacent lawn. Gravel on lawn is difficult to remove, damages mower blades, and kills grass over time. Preventing this is easier than cleaning it up after.
Gravel that's migrated into the ditch over years looks like it's been lost. Some of it has — mixed with soil and organics. But significant material sits on the shoulder and the crown of the ditch that's recoverable. A box blade skimming the ditch shoulder pulls that material back onto the driveway surface. This is often where the "missing gravel" went — it didn't disappear, it's sitting six inches off the edge.
Caution: if the ditch carries meaningful drainage flow, don't push material into the ditch itself. Blocking ditch flow creates culvert backup and road flooding problems. Skim the shoulder, not the ditch bottom.
Looking for specific models available in Canada? Browse the skid steer landplane catalog, dozer blade catalog, and bucket catalog for verified product pages on real models sold through Canadian dealers.