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Garage with a fresh gray flake epoxy floor, door open to the driveway

Epoxy Floors

Flake epoxy garage floors that turn bare concrete into a finished room — tough enough to park on, clean enough to work in.

The craft

The prep is the product

An epoxy floor is only as good as the concrete underneath it. We mechanically grind the slab, repair cracks and spalls, and only then build up the coating — a pigmented base coat, a full flake broadcast, and a clear top coat that locks it all in.

The result is a floor that resists hot tires, oil, and moisture, brightens the whole garage, and mops clean in minutes. As concrete people, we like it for another reason: it protects the slab we poured in the first place.

Finished flake system — base coat, full broadcast, clear top coat.

Common questions about epoxy floors

Will epoxy hold up to hot tires and oil?

Yes — that’s the point of it. A properly prepped and coated epoxy floor shrugs off hot tires, oil drips, and road grime that would stain bare concrete, and it wipes clean with a mop.

What makes an epoxy floor last?

Preparation. The concrete has to be mechanically ground and any cracks or spalls repaired before the first coat goes down — coatings fail when they’re applied over a dirty or sealed slab, not because of the epoxy itself. We prep every floor like we’re going to park on it ourselves.

How long does a garage floor take?

Most garage floors are a two-to-three-day project: grinding and repairs, base coat with flake broadcast, then the clear top coat. Plan to keep cars off it for a few days while it fully cures.

What does an epoxy floor cost?

It depends on the size of the floor and how much repair and grinding the slab needs before coating. Estimates are always free: call (310) 539-8023 and we’ll take a look.

Let’s build something that lasts

44 years of South Bay craftsmanship, one phone call away. Estimates are always free.