
Old garage floors in Northeast Ohio crack, flake, and heave after years of freeze-thaw stress. We pour new concrete floors that hold up through the worst Ohio winters without falling apart in three years.

Garage floor concrete in Cuyahoga Falls means removing your old damaged slab, preparing the base underneath, and pouring a fresh concrete floor that hardens into a solid, level surface - most jobs take two to four days, with a one-week wait before parking on it.
If your floor is cracking, flaking, or holding puddles, those are signs the original slab is past its useful life. Homes built in the 1950s through 1970s - a large share of Cuyahoga Falls housing stock - often still have their original floors, which have been through 50 or more winters of freeze-thaw stress.
Many homeowners upgrading their garage floor also look into decorative concrete options like epoxy coatings or stained finishes that turn a plain utility floor into a space you actually want to use.
Small hairline cracks are normal, but if a crack has gotten wider than the thickness of a quarter or started branching out, the slab is moving in ways that won't fix themselves. In Cuyahoga Falls, repeated freeze-thaw cycles accelerate this process year after year. Waiting longer makes replacement more expensive, not less.
If the top layer of your floor is peeling off in thin chips or feels soft underfoot, road salt and winter moisture have destroyed the surface. This is extremely common in Northeast Ohio garages and tends to spread quickly once it starts. Once the protective surface is gone, the damage reaches the structural layer fast.
Water that pools in the same places after rain or snowmelt means the floor has settled unevenly. You might also feel a slight dip when walking across the floor, or notice your garage door no longer closes smoothly. Uneven settlement rarely corrects itself.
If your home was built in the 1950s, 1960s, or 1970s and the garage floor has never been replaced, it has been through 40 to 70 winters of freeze-thaw stress. Even if it looks okay on the surface, the slab may be thinning from below or have hidden voids underneath. An inspection can tell you whether repair is still an option.
Our garage floor work starts with proper base preparation - compacting and leveling the ground beneath the slab. That invisible step is what determines whether a floor lasts 30 years or starts cracking in three. We pour slabs at the right thickness for residential use, cut control joints to manage expansion and contraction, and finish the surface to your preference. For homeowners who want more than a plain broom finish, we also offer concrete floor installation with specialty coatings and finishes suited to garages, workshops, and utility spaces.
Beyond the garage, we handle full replacement projects for homeowners who need their old slab removed and hauled away before a new pour begins. Whether your garage is detached or attached, a single-car bay or a three-car setup, the process is the same: demo the old floor, prep the base, pour fresh concrete, and let it cure properly before you drive back in.
Ideal for homeowners who want a clean, durable floor with a broom finish and proper control joints.
Best when the existing floor is too damaged to resurface - we break it out, haul it away, and start fresh.
For homeowners who want an epoxy coating, stain, or trowel finish instead of a standard broom finish.
Cuyahoga Falls sits in Northeast Ohio's snow belt, where temperatures regularly drop below freezing from November through March and lake-effect snow events can pile up fast. Concrete poured without accounting for local freeze-thaw conditions deteriorates quickly. The Portland Cement Association notes that properly mixed and cured concrete is far more resistant to the repeated expansion and contraction that cracks Ohio garage floors - and that starts with getting the water-to-mix ratio right and protecting the pour during curing. You can learn more at cement.org.
We serve homeowners across the area, including Stow, OH and Munroe Falls, OH, where housing stock from the same mid-century era presents the same freeze-thaw challenges. If your home was built before 1980 and still has its original garage floor, there is a good chance it is overdue for an honest assessment.
We respond within 1 business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your garage size and whether your old floor needs to come out before giving you a ballpark range.
We come to your property, inspect the existing floor and drainage, and give you a written estimate that breaks down every part of the job - no single-number surprises when the invoice arrives.
We remove the old slab if needed, compact the base to the right density, and pour the new floor with proper control joints. The pour day typically takes four to eight hours depending on garage size.
You can walk on the floor within 24 hours, but vehicles need to wait about seven days. We walk you through the curing process and tell you exactly when the floor reaches full strength - around 28 days.
We respond within 1 business day - no obligation to move forward. After you submit, someone from our office will call to schedule a free on-site estimate at a time that works for you.
(234) 432-0129We carry general liability insurance and workers' compensation on every job. That protects you if anything goes wrong during demolition or the pour - and it is the first thing a legitimate contractor should be able to confirm without hesitation.
We give you a written estimate that breaks down materials, labor, and any permit costs before a single shovel hits the ground. There is no obligation to move forward, and no price that climbs after you agree to it.
We mix, pour, and finish every slab to handle the conditions specific to Cuyahoga Falls winters - not a generic national standard. The American Concrete Institute publishes concrete durability requirements that inform every pour we do.
We work in this area full time, which means we know the permit process at the City of Cuyahoga Falls Building Department and the specific soil and drainage conditions that affect how slabs settle here.
Choosing a contractor for a garage floor replacement comes down to two things: honest assessment of whether repair or replacement makes more sense for your specific slab, and a crew that does the base prep right before the concrete truck ever arrives. That invisible preparation is what separates a floor that lasts 30 years from one that starts cracking in three.
Add color, texture, or stamped patterns to transform your garage floor into a finished living space.
Learn MoreInterior concrete floors for workshops, basements, and commercial spaces poured to exact specifications.
Learn MoreSlots fill up fast in spring - contact us now to lock in your project before the summer rush.