Decorative Concrete
Add color, texture, or a stamped finish to your garage floor or other concrete surfaces.
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Cracked, crumbling, or shifting garage floors are a common problem in Rosemead. We pour and replace concrete garage slabs that hold up to local soil conditions and heavy daily use.

Garage floor concrete in Rosemead involves removing the old slab, preparing the base, and pouring fresh concrete sized to your garage - most standard two-car replacements run between $1,500 and $4,500 depending on size, demolition scope, and finish, with the job itself taking two to four days of active work.
A lot of Rosemead homes were built in the 1950s and 1960s, and the original garage slabs from that era were often poured thinner than today's standards. If your floor is cracking, shifting, or has hollow spots, it is worth getting a professional assessment before committing to repeated patches. If you are also considering updating the look of the floor, our decorative concrete options let you combine a new slab with a finished surface in the same project.
If you can fit a pencil tip into a crack in your garage floor, or one side sits higher than the other, that is more than normal settling. In Rosemead, this movement is often caused by clay soil expanding and contracting with seasonal moisture changes. It tends to get worse over time if left alone.
A properly poured garage floor slopes slightly toward the door so water drains out. If you notice puddles sitting in the middle or back of your garage, the slab has settled unevenly or was never poured with the right slope. Standing water accelerates surface wear and can soften the base underneath.
If the top layer of your floor is peeling, pitting, or breaking off in pieces, the surface has started to deteriorate. This happens on older slabs - common in Rosemead homes from the 1950s through 1970s - that were poured with a weaker mix or have absorbed years of oil and moisture.
If your home was built in that era and the original slab is still in place, it may have been poured thinner than today's standards. The base underneath may have also shifted significantly over the decades. A contractor walkthrough can tell you honestly what you are dealing with.
Most garage floor jobs fall into one of two categories: full replacement or resurfacing. Full replacement is the right call when the slab has structural damage, has shifted, or when the base underneath has failed. We tear out the old concrete, haul it away, compact the subbase, and pour a fresh slab to today's thickness standards. If you want a clean, finished look, we can also incorporate a decorative concrete finish as part of the same project.
When the existing slab is structurally sound but just worn or stained, resurfacing applies a new layer on top without the cost of a full tear-out. We also offer interior concrete floor installation for workshops, utility rooms, and converted spaces where you need a clean, durable surface. A site visit is the only reliable way to know which option fits your situation - we will give you a straight answer after seeing the floor in person.
For slabs with structural cracks, settlement, or base failure - the complete tear-out and repour solution.
For structurally sound slabs that are worn or stained on the surface - a new layer without full demolition.
For homeowners who want a clean, finished look in their garage with color or a smooth sealed surface.
Much of the San Gabriel Valley, including Rosemead, sits on clay-heavy soil that swells when it gets wet and shrinks when it dries. That constant movement is one of the main reasons garage slabs crack and shift in this area - and it is why proper base preparation before a pour matters more here than in areas with stable sandy soil. A large share of Rosemead homes were built in the 1950s through 1970s, meaning many original garage slabs from that era are thinner and less reinforced than what would be poured today. Summer temperatures that regularly climb into the 90s also mean that concrete work needs to be scheduled carefully - pours in intense heat can dry too fast on the surface and develop a weak top layer. Experienced local contractors know to work early in the morning during hot stretches and keep the surface moist while it cures.
We work across Rosemead and surrounding cities, including Baldwin Park and El Monte. If your property has an HOA, check with them before booking - some neighborhoods in Rosemead require written approval before exterior concrete work begins. A reputable contractor will help you navigate that step.
Call or message us and describe the problem - cracks, pooling water, flaking, or just an old floor you want replaced. We will schedule a time to come look at the garage in person before giving you a price, because the condition of the base and the size of the job both affect the cost. We reply within one business day.
When we visit, we check the existing slab, look at the base, and measure the space. If a full replacement is needed, we pull a permit from Los Angeles County before work begins. This is normal and protects you - do not be alarmed if it adds a few days to the start date.
The crew breaks up and hauls away the old slab, then compacts the ground underneath and adds gravel if needed. This step determines how long your new floor will last. Expect a full day of work before any new concrete is poured.
Concrete is poured, spread, and finished with control joints cut in before it fully hardens. Plan on keeping vehicles off the floor for at least seven days. Before we leave, we walk you through the finished job and answer any questions about sealing and care.
We come to your garage in person, assess the slab, and give you a written quote at no charge. No pressure, no obligation.
(626) 517-0570Much of the San Gabriel Valley sits on clay-heavy soil that moves with moisture. We compact and grade the subbase specifically for these conditions before we pour anything, so your slab does not crack on the same schedule as the one we replaced.
Garage floor replacements in Rosemead fall under Los Angeles County building department oversight. We handle the permit application for you and factor the fee into your written quote - no surprise paperwork, no back-and-forth with the county on your end.
You get a line-by-line written quote covering demolition, base prep, the concrete pour, and finishing. The number you agree to at the start is the number you pay at the end. We do not start until you are confident in the scope and the price.
We tell you what your slab actually needs. If resurfacing is the right call instead of a full tear-out, that is what we will say. A contractor who recommends full replacement without walking the site is not giving you an honest assessment.
Every job we do is backed by a written estimate and proper permits through American Concrete Institute-standard practices. If you want to verify a contractor license before hiring anyone, the California Contractors State License Board lets you look up any contractor in seconds.
Add color, texture, or a stamped finish to your garage floor or other concrete surfaces.
Learn MoreProfessional concrete floor pours for interior spaces, workshops, and utility areas.
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