How to hire snow removal in Attleboro, MA
Snow removal is mostly a contract structure question. Per-push, seasonal, and full winter management each fit a different homeowner — once you understand how operators price the risk, picking the right one is easy and the relationship goes smoothly all winter.
What to know before you book snow removal in Attleboro
Attleboro's downtown core and older neighborhoods feature Colonial Revival, Victorian, Cape Cod, and two-family homes from the early 1900s through mid-century. Briggs Corner and Camp Hebron shift toward 1970s–1990s ranches, split-levels, and larger colonials. Federal- and Colonial-era homes (late 1700s/early 1800s) command premium prices and require period-appropriate repair work.
Attleboro has typical inland southeastern Massachusetts weather — cold snowy winters, humid summers, and routine freeze-thaw cycles. Inland location reduces salt-air exposure compared with coastal towns but heating loads run longer.
How we price it
These are the factors that move a quote up or down. Knowing them helps you share the right context upfront so we can quote your specific situation accurately — and so you can compare bids on apples-to-apples scope.
Per-push and seasonal are two different bets on the winter. Southern New England averages 8–14 plowable events per year — at $75/push that is $600–1,050. A seasonal contract at $550–750 covers unlimited pushes, locks in your route position, and means the operator can show up at 4 a.m. without you calling. In a mild winter the seasonal feels expensive; in a heavy winter it is a steal. Operators price seasonal contracts to come out ahead on average — they are taking the variance risk so you do not have to. Pick the structure that matches your risk tolerance and how much you want to think about it.
Residential standard is a 2-inch or 3-inch trigger — they show up once accumulation crosses that line. Commercial standard is also 2 inches, but premium retail, medical, and zero-tolerance accounts get continuous service the whole storm. Zero-tolerance can cost 2-3x a standard contract because it requires pre-treating, monitoring, and multiple pushes per event regardless of accumulation. Have the trigger written into the contract — that way both sides know what to expect and nobody is guessing in February.
A 50-ft straight asphalt driveway with a flat turnaround is a 4-minute job. A 300-ft uphill gravel driveway with a tight K-turn at the top is a 25-minute job that needs a smaller truck or a UTV with a plow. Slope above 10% changes the equipment — a 1-ton with a straight blade cannot push uphill safely; you need a V-plow or a skid-steer with a snow pusher. Gravel driveways need a higher cutting edge or rubber-edged blade or you tear up the surface every storm.
Plowing and salting are two different services and the contract should be clear about both. Rock salt (sodium chloride) is $8–15 per 50-lb bag at hardware-store retail, $150–250/ton bulk to commercial operators — works down to about 15°F. Calcium chloride or magnesium chloride blends work to -25°F and refreeze less, but cost 2-3x. The smart play on commercial is brine pre-treatment (anti-icing) the day before a forecasted event — uses roughly 1/4 the material of post-storm salting and prevents pavement bond. Some contracts bundle salt into the plow price, others itemize it per application — ask up front so you can compare quotes apples-to-apples.
In an 8-inch storm, your driveway might get plowed at 5 a.m. or at 2 p.m. depending on where you fall in the operator route. Seasonal customers typically go first. Customers clustered with other accounts on the same road get serviced earlier than one-off pickups across town. New customers signed mid-season often go last because the route is already set. It is fair to ask: "Where am I in your route?" and "What is your typical turnaround time on a 6-inch storm?" — good operators answer this directly.
A residential per-push operator with a personal truck and a homeowner-grade plow does not need much. A commercial operator working a medical campus needs $2M+ general liability with a snow & ice endorsement, auto liability with a plow rider, and time-stamped service logs with photos. Slip-and-fall claims hinge on whether the contractor can prove what time they plowed and salted. For any commercial property — and any residential rental — verify the coverage and documentation match the risk before signing.
Sidewalks and front walks are a different SKU — usually $25–60 per service for a residential walk, charged separately from the driveway push. Some operators bundle, most do not. On commercial, sidewalk clearing requires a separate crew with shovels or a single-stage snow blower because trucks cannot reach the steps and entrances. Walkways need salt or sand applied every visit — bare concrete that gets walked on refreezes fast and is the #1 slip claim location.
Project sizes we handle
Three scopes that cover almost everything in this trade. We'll help you place your project on the right tier based on the property, what you've already tried, and how long you plan to stay.
No contract. You call (or the operator just shows up after a storm based on a loose list). Driveway gets plowed when they get to it — typically same day, sometimes next day on big storms. Salt is extra. Works fine for people who can wait, do not have a steep driveway, and can dig out themselves in a pinch.
- 8-ft straight blade on a half-ton or 3/4-ton pickup
- Bagged rock salt applied by hand or scoop, billed per bag
Best for: Single-car driveway, mild slope, owner can shovel a path in an emergency, mild snowfall season (or lucky).
Flat price for the season — typically November through April, sometimes binding both parties for two seasons. Defined trigger depth (usually 2 inches), unlimited pushes, walkway clearing optional. Salt included after every plow on most contracts. Operator services you in route order without you calling. A good fit for full-time residents who need reliable winter access.
- 8-9 ft V-plow or straight blade — V is better for big storms because it can scoop
- Bulk rock salt from a tailgate or under-tailgate spreader for driveway and apron
- Reflective snow stakes installed in October to protect lawn edges
Best for: Year-round residents with steep driveways, work commutes, kids in school, or anyone who values knowing exactly what they will pay regardless of how the winter shakes out.
Seasonal plowing + sidewalks/walkways + brine pre-treatment 24-48 hours before forecasted events + documented salt applications + roof rake on the front edge after heavy events. Common on premium residential, B&Bs, rental properties, and commercial. The contract reads "snow-free and ice-free surfaces throughout the season" rather than "we plow when it snows."
- V-plow or pusher box (skid-steer mounted) for the driveway
- V-box salt spreader or tailgate spreader with electronic controller for consistent rate
- Brine sprayer (truck-mounted or tow-behind) for anti-icing
- Calcium chloride blend for sub-15°F events
- Roof rake passes after 8+ inch events to prevent ice dams at the eave
Best for: Steep or long driveways, rental properties (liability), home-based businesses, owners who travel in winter, or anyone whose driveway sees morning sun and afternoon ice.
What we reach for and why
The materials and techniques behind a job that lasts — so you know what's in the quote and why it's there.
Spraying a salt-brine solution (typically 23% NaCl) on pavement 12-48 hours before a forecasted snow event. The brine dries to a residue that prevents snow and ice from bonding to the pavement, so plowing scrapes down to bare blacktop. Uses about 1/4 the material and 1/10 the cost of post-event salting and is dramatically more effective at preventing ice formation.
Rock salt (sodium chloride) is the workhorse — cheap ($150-250/ton bulk), effective down to about 15°F, available everywhere. Calcium chloride works to -25°F and generates heat as it dissolves, so it melts faster. Magnesium chloride works to -13°F and is gentler on concrete and pets. Most southern New England operators run rock salt as their default and switch to calcium chloride blends for sub-15°F events or for concrete walkways and brick stairs that rock salt can spall.
Straight blades (Western Pro Plus, Fisher HD2, Boss Standard Duty) angle left or right and push everything to one side — simple, cheap, fast for small flat lots. V-plows (Western MVP3, Fisher XV2, Boss DXT V) have two independently-controlled wings that form a V (for breaking through deep snow), a scoop (for carrying snow off long driveways), or angled (for windrowing). V-plows are 30-50% more expensive but dramatically faster on long driveways, big storms, and end-of-driveway berms left by town plows.
Tailgate spreaders (SnowEx, Buyers SaltDogg) hold 4-12 cu ft of bagged salt and mount on a hitch receiver — fine for residential. V-box spreaders (Henderson, SnowEx V-Maxx, Western Tornado) hold 1.5-4 yards of bulk salt in the truck bed and feed it down a conveyor to a spinner — the standard for commercial. V-box meters salt consistently from full to empty; tailgate spreaders pulse uneven as the hopper drains.
Fiberglass stakes (4-5 ft tall, reflective top, hammered 6-12 inches into the ground) installed every 10-15 ft along the driveway edge in October, before the ground freezes. They mark the plowable lane so the operator does not scalp the lawn or hit the septic cover, the well head, or the boulder you put in last summer. Wood stakes break by January; fiberglass lasts 3-5 winters.
A wide aluminum blade on a 16-30 ft telescoping pole used from the ground to pull snow off the lower 3-4 ft of roof. After a heavy snowfall, removing that bottom strip prevents the freeze-thaw cycle that builds ice dams at the eave. Snow Joe RJ208M and SNOWPEELER are the two homeowner-grade options most pros recommend. Pros use commercial-grade rakes with roller wheels that protect shingles.
When ice dams have already formed and water is backing up under shingles, steam is the safe removal method. A truck-mounted steamer (220-250°F, 1500-3500 PSI) melts ice without damaging shingles. Chipping with axes or hammers can crack shingles and void warranties; calcium-chloride socks help slowly but only for small dams. Steam runs $400-800 for typical access, $800-2,400 for large or multi-story homes.
What to watch for
A short list of the things that actually matter for safety, code, and your peace of mind. Worth confirming with any pro before you sign — we expect these questions and we're happy you ask.
What else might come up
Most projects touch more than one trade. Here's where this one usually overlaps with others — so you can plan ahead instead of scrambling.
Ice dams are an attic problem. Air-sealing penetrations (top plates, recessed lights, chimney chases, attic hatch) and bringing insulation to R-49+ stops the warm air leaking into the attic that melts the snow that refreezes at the eave. Pay the insulator $4,000-7,000 once instead of the steam guy $600 every February.
Modern roof installs include ice & water shield (a peel-and-stick membrane) on the lower 3-6 ft of roof. If your roof was installed before 2005 in this region, you may not have it, and any ice dam meltwater finds its way under the shingles. Roofers also install ridge vents and verify soffit intake is not blocked by insulation — the other half of ice dam prevention.
Clogged gutters fill with frozen leaves and meltwater, then become miniature ice dams themselves. A clean gutter does not prevent ice dams (the dam forms above the gutter), but a clogged one accelerates them and makes meltwater spill behind the fascia. Gutter guards are mixed — high-end micromesh helps, cheap ones make cleaning harder.
Plow blades scratch sealcoat, rock salt accelerates concrete spalling, and freeze-thaw cycles widen cracks. A spring driveway inspection catches cracks before water gets in and freezes them open. Sealcoating every 2-3 years extends asphalt driveway life from 15 to 25+ years in this climate.
Even good plow operators tear up sod at the edges, and sprinkler heads near the driveway often get clipped. A spring walkthrough with your landscaper to repair edges, reset stones, and replace damaged sprinkler heads is normal maintenance — budget $200-600/yr depending on driveway length.
Seasonal residential contracts run $450–800/yr in southern New England with a 2-inch trigger and unlimited pushes. Commercial lots price per event at roughly $150–350 per acre plowed plus $200–400 per acre salted.
The biggest swings come from contract structure (per-push vs. seasonal), trigger depth (3-inch vs. zero-tolerance), and whether ice management is bundled. Driveway length and slope matter, but the contract structure usually moves the number more.
See what drives priceWhat we show up with
The equipment we bring is part of what separates a real job from a shortcut. Here's what to expect on a typical visit.
Two-wing plow for breaking through deep snow (V-position), carrying snow off long driveways (scoop position), or windrowing (angled). The pro standard for serious residential and commercial work.
Wide containment box (8-14 ft) on a skid-steer or compact loader for clearing parking lots fast. Holds snow in front of the box instead of windrowing it, so one pass clears a full driveway lane.
V-box (1.5-4 yd capacity, mounted in truck bed) for commercial; tailgate (4-12 cu ft, hitch-mounted) for residential. Electronic controllers meter salt consistently regardless of truck speed.
Truck-mounted or tow-behind 100-300 gallon tank with boom sprayer. Applies salt brine 12-48 hours before a forecasted storm to prevent snow and ice from bonding to pavement.
24-30 inch wide auger + impeller for clearing walks, decks, and small driveways. Two-stage handles wet heavy snow that single-stage blowers stall on. $1,000-2,500 retail.
Pull the lower 3-4 ft of snow off a roof from the ground to break the freeze-thaw cycle that forms ice dams. Aluminum blade on a 16-30 ft pole, $80-180 retail.
220-250°F low-pressure steamer for melting ice dams without damaging shingles. The only non-destructive removal method. Pro-only — $4,000-8,000 of equipment.
How a job goes
Pre-season site walk (October)
Operator walks the driveway with the homeowner before the first snow. Locates obstacles (septic risers, sprinkler heads, well caps, paver edges), agrees on snow piling locations, confirms the trigger depth and route position, installs reflective snow stakes every 10-15 ft. 20-30 minutes per residential property.
What you see: A walk-around with a notepad and a bundle of stakes. Scheduling this in October sets the season up for fewer surprises.
Storm prep (24-48 hours before)
Operator watches the forecast. For commercial accounts, brine pre-treatment goes down the day before. Trucks are fueled, plows mounted, salt boxes loaded, spreaders calibrated. On-call rotation set for the storm window. Residential per-push outfits typically skip the prep step — they get going once the storm arrives, which is part of why per-push pricing is lower.
What you see: Nothing on residential. On commercial, a wet-pavement trail from the brine sprayer going down the lot the day before.
Active plowing (during and after the storm)
Once the trigger depth hits, the operator runs the route. Commercial zero-tolerance accounts get continuous service. Residential seasonal accounts get pushed in route order. For 2-4 inch events, one pass usually finishes; for 8+ inch events, expect 2-3 passes spaced through the storm to keep up with accumulation.
What you see: Truck pulls in, plows in a sequence (often: open the driveway, clear the apron of town-plow berm, push to the agreed pile location, do the turnaround), maybe shoves the end-of-driveway berm into the lawn.
Salt or treated brine application
Right after plowing, salt or chloride blend is broadcast across the driveway and apron. Sidewalk and stairs get hand-applied salt or sand. On commercial, salt rate is metered by a ground-speed-aware controller. On residential, it is usually a spinner spreader or by-hand from a 5-gallon bucket — less precise but adequate.
What you see: A spinner spreader running off the back of the truck after the plow goes back up, or a person walking the walkway with a hand-spreader.
Service confirmation & log entry
On commercial, the operator logs the service in software (timestamp, weather, materials applied, photos) and sends to the property manager. On residential seasonal contracts, many operators send a text confirmation after each service. Per-push customers typically rely on visual confirmation — the cleared driveway tells the story.
What you see: A text message: "Plowed and salted, 6:15 a.m." or an emailed PDF with photos and timestamps for commercial accounts.
End-of-season debrief and damage repair (April)
Spring walkthrough to identify plow damage to lawn edges, mailbox posts, broken stakes, or salt-stressed plantings. Good operators repair minor sod damage and replace broken stakes as part of the contract. Bigger damage (sprinkler heads, paver edges, gate posts) is handled with the homeowner and a landscaper. A proactive spring check-in from your operator is the sign of a relationship that will continue smoothly next season.
What you see: A spring text or email asking how the season went and whether anything needs repair.
- Driveway length, width, and surface (asphalt, concrete, gravel, pavers)
- Slope — flat, mild, steep — and whether the driveway curves
- Photo of the driveway from the road and from the house looking down
- Whether you need sidewalks, walkways, front steps, or just the driveway
- Permanent occupancy: full-time residence, second home, or rental property
- Town that plows your road (some towns leave bigger berms than others)
- Where snow can be piled — lawn on the right, woods on the left, etc.
- Whether the driveway is gated, fenced, or has any access constraints
- Existing snow stakes or markings, or willingness to have them installed
- Vehicle parking plan during storms — cars in the driveway slow service
- Driveway is steep enough that you have struggled to drive up in winter (slope > 10%)
- Septic system risers or well head located in or near the driveway
- Buried propane tank or utility cover near the driveway edge
- Concrete or paver surfaces that should not be salted with rock salt
- History of ice dams or water infiltration at the eaves
Permits, timing, and what's local to Attleboro
Permits & regulations
Attleboro's Building Inspection department is open Monday–Friday 8:00–4:30 (Tuesdays until 6:00) with online permitting available. The State Building Code requires permit-application review within 30 days of filing, and the department conducts staged inspections through construction. Permits cover new construction, alteration, repair, demolition, change of use, and any equipment regulated by the state building code.
Permit authority: Attleboro Building Inspection Department (https://www.cityofattleboro.us/167/Building-Inspection)
What's local to Attleboro
Mass Save heat-pump and weatherization rebates apply, and the commuter-rail-adjacent downtown has a meaningful share of older two-family homes that periodically need fire-separation and electrical-service upgrades.
What homeowners ask us
Other services we handle in Attleboro
Where else we serve
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