How to Lay Sandstone Cobbles for a Driveway

sandstone cobbles driveway
Stone Setts

Sandstone cobbles, often also referred to as setts, are one of the most traditional ways to build a driveway in the UK. They have been used for generations because they combine visual character with real structural strength. A properly laid cobble driveway looks natural, settled and permanent. It does not have the flat uniform appearance of many modern paving products, and that is exactly why many homeowners still prefer it. The small units, the natural stone texture and the tighter joint pattern all help create a surface that feels more established and more individual.

That said, sandstone cobbles should never be treated as something you can simply place on the ground like decorative edging. A driveway must carry the repeated weight of vehicles, withstand turning pressure from tyres, cope with rainwater, and remain stable through seasonal movement. If the groundwork is weak, the finished surface will eventually begin to move, sink or spread. In most cases, when cobble driveways fail, the problem is not the sandstone itself. The problem is that the excavation was too shallow, the sub-base was not compacted enough, the edge restraints were weak, or the stones were not laid on a proper full bed.

For that reason, the correct way to lay sandstone cobbles for a driveway is to think of the project as a complete construction build-up rather than just a paving finish. Each layer matters. The excavation creates room for the structure. The sub-base carries the load. The mortar bed supports the stone. The joints help lock the surface together. When these stages are completed in the right order and with the right care, sandstone cobbles become one of the most durable and most attractive driveway options available.

A sandstone cobble driveway is only as reliable as the foundation beneath it. The surface may be the part you see, but the sub-base, bedding and edge restraint are what determine how well it performs over time.

Understanding the Difference Between Cobbles and Setts

Before installation begins, it is worth understanding the format you are working with. In normal trade use, sandstone cobbles are often the smaller and squarer units, while setts are usually rectangular. Both can be used for driveways, and both can produce an excellent result, but they create slightly different visual effects and installation demands.

  • Smaller cobbles create a tighter and more traditional cobbled appearance.
  • Larger setts create a cleaner and slightly more ordered layout.
  • Smaller units mean more individual pieces per square metre and more joints to fill.
  • Larger units are often quicker to lay because fewer pieces are needed.

In practical terms, this means the choice is usually more about style and labour than structural suitability. Smaller sandstone cobbles often suit older properties, character driveways and areas where a more traditional feel is wanted. Rectangular setts can still look traditional, but they usually give a more formal and less busy pattern. Whichever format you choose, the structural method for a driveway remains broadly the same. The main requirement is that the stones are thick enough for the intended use and laid onto a correctly prepared base.

Planning the Area Before You Start

Good installation starts before any digging takes place. The driveway area should be clearly marked out so that the layout, levels and drainage can be controlled from the beginning. This can be done with string lines, stakes and marking spray. Setting out properly saves time later because it gives you a fixed guide for the width, the fall and the final edge position.

At this stage, it is also important to decide where water is going to go. Driveways should never be laid flat without thought for drainage. Water must be encouraged to move away from the house and away from any area where it could collect. A slight fall is therefore essential. In many driveway installations, a gradient is introduced either across the width or along the length, depending on the shape of the site and the drainage point available. The exact arrangement will vary from project to project, but the principle remains the same: the finished cobble surface should always direct water somewhere sensible rather than trap it.

You should also think ahead about edge restraints and transitions. A cobble driveway cannot perform properly if the perimeter is left loose. The outside edges need something solid to hold the paving in place, especially where vehicles turn or brake. If the edges are not restrained, the outer stones can begin to move sideways and that movement will eventually affect the rest of the surface.

Excavation and Required Depth

Once the area is marked out, the next step is excavation. For a driveway, this is not a shallow dig. You need enough depth to accommodate the sub-base, the bedding layer and the cobbles themselves. In many of the laying guides you shared, a typical excavation depth is around 230 mm, and that figure is useful because it allows room for a proper driveway build-up rather than a light garden path construction.

During excavation, all turf, loose soil, organic matter, weeds and debris should be removed. The base of the excavation does not need to look polished, but it does need to be reasonably even and free from soft, unstable spots. Any weak patches should be dealt with immediately rather than ignored, because once the driveway is built, those weak spots can become areas of settlement.

If the driveway is being laid next to a building, the final paved surface should remain at least 150 mm below the damp proof course. This is long-established good practice and should not be overlooked. It is one of those details that is easy to miss during early planning, yet it is fundamental once levels are fixed.

As a practical rule, do not start laying the visible surface until you are satisfied with the excavation depth, drainage direction and relationship to the damp proof course. Correcting these later is far more difficult.

Why the Sub-base Is the Most Important Part

The sub-base is the structural foundation of the driveway. It is the layer that spreads weight, supports the bedding above it and helps prevent long-term sinking or movement. For sandstone cobble driveways in the UK, MOT Type 1 is the standard choice because it compacts tightly into a dense, stable base.

A common approach is to build the sub-base to around 150 mm in total, compacted in two separate 75 mm layers. This method is sensible because it allows each layer to be properly consolidated rather than trying to compact one deep loose layer in a single pass. The compactor should be used thoroughly at each stage until the material feels firm and stable underfoot.

  • Use MOT Type 1 rather than loose rubble or mixed site waste.
  • Compact in layers rather than trying to compress the whole depth at once.
  • Check the fall again after compacting because levels can change slightly.
  • Take your time here, because this layer determines long-term performance.

This stage is often where shortcuts cause later problems. If the sub-base is too thin, poorly compacted or filled with unsuitable material, the driveway may look acceptable at first but gradually start to settle under vehicle traffic. Once that happens, the surface joints can open up, individual stones can rock, and water can begin working its way into weak areas. A well-compacted sub-base is therefore not an optional extra. It is the backbone of the entire job.

Edge Restraints and Why They Matter

Edge restraints are not just a neat finishing detail. They are part of the structure. Sandstone cobbles are small individual units, and although they lock together through bedding and jointing, they still need something solid at the perimeter to stop outward movement. This is especially important on driveways where tyres apply sideways force during turning.

Depending on the design, edge restraints might be formed with concrete kerbs, stone edgings, steel edging or another suitable retaining edge. The important point is not the visual type but the strength of the restraint. It should hold the paving firmly and remain stable over time. On a driveway, a decorative edge that is not properly backed up can quickly become the weak point of the whole installation.

It is generally best to establish the restraint early so the rest of the paving can be laid accurately between fixed boundaries. This helps maintain straight lines and also gives confidence that the edges will not spread later.

Choosing the Right Bedding Method for a Driveway

Once the sub-base is in place, attention turns to the bedding layer. This is where the sandstone cobbles actually sit, and for driveways the correct choice is usually a mortar bed rather than loose sand. While a lighter-use garden feature or decorative path may sometimes allow more flexibility, a driveway should be built for strength and permanence.

A mortar bed provides full support beneath the stone and gives the installer control over final levels. This matters because natural sandstone cobbles are not identical manufactured blocks. Small variations in thickness are normal, so the bedding has to allow each piece to be adjusted individually while still giving full support underneath.

Different guides use slightly different mortar descriptions, but the overall message is consistent: the bedding should be appropriate for vehicle-bearing use and should not leave the cobbles sitting on isolated spots. Full support is the aim. In practical trade terms, many installers use a strong sand-and-cement bedding mix suitable for external paving work.

Laying the Sandstone Cobbles

When the bedding is ready, the sandstone cobbles can be laid one by one. This is the part many people picture when they think of the job, but by this stage the success of the installation has already been largely decided by the groundwork underneath.

Use string lines to control both direction and level. The stones should be placed carefully and tapped into position with a rubber mallet. Because natural sandstone can vary slightly, every piece needs to be judged as it is laid. The goal is not to force every unit to look machine-perfect, but to achieve a consistent and practical finished surface overall.

  • Lay to string lines so the courses remain tidy and controlled.
  • Tap each unit down carefully rather than hitting it hard into place.
  • Keep checking levels with a straight edge or spirit level.
  • Maintain the drainage fall as you progress across the area.

Joint width is another important detail. Many of the guides you shared work within a typical range of around 8 mm to 15 mm. That is a useful range because it allows enough room for jointing while also respecting the character of natural stone. Tighter or wider joints can change the look significantly, but for most sandstone cobble driveways this range is practical and visually balanced.

It is also important to keep stepping back and checking the layout as a whole. Cobbles can quickly drift visually if you only focus on one small area at a time. Looking across the surface regularly helps you maintain a better line and a more professional result.

Jointing the Surface Properly

Once the cobbles have been laid and the bedding has had time to firm up, the joints need to be filled properly. Jointing is not simply cosmetic. It plays a major role in locking the individual stones together and reducing water penetration into the structure below.

Depending on the installation method and site conditions, jointing may be carried out with a suitable mortar-based mix or another paving jointing product appropriate to the application. The key point is that the joints should be fully filled, well compacted and finished cleanly. Weak or shallow joints can allow water in and eventually contribute to movement.

Sandstone is a porous natural stone, so cleanliness matters during this stage. Mortar residue and grout haze should not be left to dry on the surface. Careful working and prompt cleaning help avoid staining and leave the stone looking more natural once the installation is complete.

Curing, Protection and First Use

After laying and jointing, the driveway needs time to cure. Several of the guides you shared refer to leaving the surface undisturbed for at least 24 hours, and for driveway use it is sensible to be even more cautious before putting the area under vehicle load. A surface that feels firm to the touch after one day is not necessarily ready for the full weight and turning action of a car.

Weather conditions should also be considered. If heavy rain is expected soon after laying, some protection may be needed. Fresh bedding and joints are vulnerable before they have had time to develop proper strength. In practical terms, patience at this stage often prevents remedial work later.

Once cured, the driveway should feel solid, even and properly restrained. Minor natural variation in the face and thickness of the sandstone will still be visible, but that is part of the appeal. A good cobble driveway is not supposed to look like a mass-produced concrete grid. It should look substantial, natural and settled.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Most problems with sandstone cobble driveways come back to a few common mistakes. Avoiding them is just as important as following the correct installation sequence.

  • Excavating too shallowly and leaving no room for a proper build-up.
  • Using an inadequate or poorly compacted sub-base.
  • Forgetting to maintain a fall for drainage.
  • Leaving the perimeter without strong edge restraint.
  • Laying for vehicle use without a suitable full bedding method.
  • Rushing jointing or allowing residue to stain the stone surface.
  • Driving on the area before it has cured properly.

None of these points is complicated on its own, but together they explain why cobble laying has to be approached with care. The work is methodical rather than glamorous. Traditional paving holds up because the old rules were usually based on sound practice, and this is a good example of that.

Final Thoughts

A sandstone cobble driveway is not the quickest paving option to install, but it remains one of the most rewarding when done properly. It combines traditional appearance with real practical strength, and it tends to age well rather than look tired too quickly. The texture of natural sandstone, the variation from piece to piece and the smaller paving format all help create a result that feels more established than many modern alternatives.

The key is to respect the build-up. Mark the area carefully, excavate to the right depth, create a strong sub-base, maintain proper drainage, use firm edge restraint, lay the stones accurately and finish the joints properly. If those fundamentals are done well, sandstone cobbles can form a driveway surface that is both visually timeless and structurally dependable for years to come.

If you are looking to purchase block paving for a driveway, you can explore our full range here: Stone Block Paving. This includes both Indian Sandstone Setts and Granite Setts in a variety of sizes to suit different driveway layouts and styles.

As a direct importer with quarry-managed supply, we work closely with our own production sources to ensure consistent quality and reliable sizing. You can learn more about our quarry background here: Granite Quarry Supply. This allows us to offer cost-efficient pricing while maintaining stable supply for both sandstone and granite paving products.

Written by Yukai Wang (LinkedIn), a long-standing practitioner in the natural stone paving, stone wall cladding and outdoor porcelain paving trade. His work focuses on quarry sourcing, production standards, procurement and UK distribution, with insights grounded in practical supply chain experience.

Related Articles

Looking for products? Browse our Stone Setts collection .