Decorative concrete
Add color, texture, or a stamped pattern to your new garage floor or other concrete surfaces for a finish that goes beyond plain gray.
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Your garage floor takes more abuse than any other slab on your property. We replace worn, cracked, and uneven floors with properly reinforced concrete that holds up through Corona's heat cycles and shifting soils.

Garage floor concrete in Corona means breaking out the old slab, preparing the ground underneath, placing steel reinforcement, and pouring fresh concrete that is leveled and finished before it sets - most full replacements take one to two days of active work, with a seven-day wait before you can park on it again.
A garage floor takes more punishment than a patio or sidewalk - vehicle weight, oil drips, temperature swings, and the freeze-thaw stress that comes with Corona's inland climate. When the surface starts flaking, cracks keep reappearing, or sections feel uneven underfoot, patching only delays the inevitable. The underlying slab is telling you it needs to be replaced.
If you are thinking about upgrading the look of your garage at the same time, we can pair a replacement with decorative concrete finishes that turn a utilitarian floor into something you are actually proud to show off. Or if you need work across multiple surfaces, our concrete floor installation service covers interior and commercial slabs as well.
If you have patched cracks before and they keep reappearing - or a crack has grown longer or wider over the past year - the slab itself may be failing. In Corona, this is often tied to the expansive clay soils that shift with seasonal wet and dry cycles, putting ongoing stress on the concrete from below. Surface patches cannot fix a slab that is moving.
Walk the floor and notice whether any section feels higher or lower than the rest, or whether a car tire rolls over a noticeable bump. Heaving or settling - where one section of the slab rises or drops relative to another - is a sign the ground underneath has shifted. This is common in parts of Corona with clay-heavy soil and typically means replacement rather than patching.
If the top layer is peeling off in chips, developing small pits, or leaving fine gray dust on your tires and shoes, the surface has deteriorated beyond what a coating or patch can fix. This kind of breakdown often happens when concrete was poured in hot weather without proper curing - a real risk in the Inland Empire - or when the original mix was too watery.
A properly finished garage floor is slightly sloped toward the door so water drains out. If you notice puddles forming in the middle or back of the garage after rain blows in or after you wash the floor, the slab was either poured without the right slope or has settled unevenly over time. Standing water accelerates concrete deterioration and creates a slip hazard.
Our garage floor work covers the full scope of what it actually takes to do the job right. We handle demolition of the old slab, haul-away of the broken concrete, grading and compacting the base, placing steel mesh or rebar reinforcement, and pouring the new slab to the right thickness for your specific use - typically four inches for a standard passenger vehicle, and five to six inches in areas that will see heavier loads. We also cut control joints at proper intervals to guide any future cracking into straight, manageable lines instead of random ones. If you want your new floor tied into other concrete work on your property, we can also handle concrete floor installation for shop spaces, utility rooms, and commercial slabs. And if you are looking for a finish that goes beyond plain gray, our decorative concrete options - including broom finishes, trowel finishes, and exposed aggregate - can transform how your garage looks and feels.
Every project includes a written estimate before work begins, permit handling through the City of Corona, and a final walkthrough with you before we leave the site. We do not subcontract this work - the crew you meet at the estimate is the crew that shows up on pour day.
Best for floors with structural cracking, heaving, or slabs over 25 years old.
Ideal for additions, conversions, or structures that need a fresh slab from the ground up.
For homeowners who want a broom, trowel, or decorative finish on a new or resurfaced floor.
Corona sits in the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees. Extreme heat causes freshly poured concrete to dry too fast on the surface, which weakens it and can cause cracking or a dusty, flaky finish. This is why the best window for a garage floor pour in Corona is fall through early spring - and why an experienced crew will schedule the pour for early morning during warmer months and use curing compounds to slow the drying process. If a contractor offers to pour your floor at noon in July without a plan for managing the heat, that is a sign they have not done this work in the Inland Empire before.
Many neighborhoods in Corona - especially those built in the 1980s and 1990s - sit on clay-heavy soil that expands when wet and contracts when dry. That movement is one of the main reasons garage floors in older Corona neighborhoods crack and heave over time. The fix is not a thicker patch - it is a properly prepared base that accounts for the soil conditions specific to your property. We do the same careful base work for homeowners in Riverside and Ontario, where similar soil conditions affect slab performance.
We respond to all inquiries within 1 business day and schedule a visit to see your garage in person. A quote given over the phone without a site visit is not reliable - we need to see the existing floor, the size of the space, and what the ground looks like before giving you a number.
After the site visit, you receive a written estimate covering demolition, haul-away, base prep, pour, finish, and permit fees. Nothing is hidden. If the scope changes once we open up the floor, we discuss it with you before moving forward.
We handle the City of Corona permit process before any work begins. This typically adds a few business days but protects you with an official record of the work. Once permits are in hand, we confirm your start date and what you need to do to prepare the space.
The crew demolishes and removes the old slab, grades the base, sets forms, places reinforcement, and pours the new concrete. After curing, we walk the finished floor with you before we leave. You will be off the floor for about 48 hours on foot and seven days for vehicles.
We respond within 1 business day. There is no obligation to move forward after the estimate - it is just a conversation. After you submit, someone from our office calls to schedule a free on-site visit where we look at your floor, answer your questions, and give you a written number.
(951) 416-3795We hold a California C-8 Concrete Contractor license, which is the specific trade license the state requires for this work. That means our crew has demonstrated competency to the Contractors State License Board - not just experience, but verified qualifications. Your project is covered by our liability insurance and workers compensation from day one.
We pull every required City of Corona permit before work begins and coordinate the inspection when the job is done. This creates an official record that the work was inspected and passed - something that matters when you sell your home or file a claim. Contractors who offer to skip permits are shifting legal and financial risk onto you.
We have poured garage floors across Corona and throughout the Inland Empire, from Riverside to Chino Hills. Local experience means we know how Corona's clay soils behave, what the city's permit office expects, and how to schedule pours around the summer heat - knowledge that saves you time and protects your investment.
We respond to every inquiry within one business day and provide a written estimate after seeing your project in person. You will never receive a high-pressure sales call from us - the estimate is a no-obligation conversation about what the job actually requires and what it will cost.
Every one of these proof points matters to a homeowner who is handing over a check and a key. We combine the licensing and permit compliance that protects you legally with the local knowledge that protects your slab structurally - so your new garage floor is still holding up a decade from now. Installation standards published by the American Concrete Institute inform every step of how we approach this work.
Add color, texture, or a stamped pattern to your new garage floor or other concrete surfaces for a finish that goes beyond plain gray.
Learn moreNew concrete floors for shops, utility rooms, additions, and commercial spaces - same quality base prep and finishing as our garage work.
Learn moreCracks and uneven surfaces only get worse over time - a replacement now costs far less than dealing with the damage a failing slab causes to your vehicles and belongings.