


Cracked, patched concrete is one of those things homeowners put up with longer than they should. It looks rough, it's hard to clean, and every time you pull into the garage you're reminded it needs attention. That's exactly what we were working with here - a floor that had seen better days, with visible cracks and patch lines running across the slab.
Before we do anything, proper prep is everything. We fill and address the cracks first. Skipping that step is one of the biggest mistakes in this industry - if the surface underneath isn't solid and level, no coating is going to hold up the way it should. That prep work is what separates a floor that lasts from one that starts peeling in a year.
Once the slab was ready, we applied a full epoxy flake system. The gray and white flake blend we used here is one of our most popular choices - it hides everyday dirt and scuffs well, and it gives the floor that clean, finished look that's hard to get with bare concrete. The flakes also add a subtle texture that improves grip underfoot.
What you end up with is a floor that's genuinely low-maintenance. Spills wipe up fast. Oil doesn't soak in. Dust doesn't cling the way it does with raw concrete. It holds up to the kind of wear a garage floor takes - foot traffic, vehicles, whatever you're storing. And honestly, it just makes the whole space feel more put-together.
We've done this on floors in all kinds of condition. Whether the concrete is relatively clean or has years of cracks and patches like this one, the process works. The finish is consistent wall to wall, and it's built to last.