Why Coat a Garage Floor?
An uncoated concrete garage floor is porous. It absorbs oil and other automotive fluids, staining permanently within weeks of regular use. It can absorb moisture from below — particularly in Kenosha's humid climate — which contributes to dusting (the fine concrete powder that appears when moisture moves through the slab). Coatings solve all of these problems simultaneously.
- Oil and chemical resistance: Drips from vehicles, lawnmowers, and power equipment wipe up rather than absorbing into the surface
- Moisture barrier: Reduces concrete dusting and helps manage vapor transmission from below
- Durability: Coated floors resist abrasion from foot traffic and vehicle tire wear significantly better than bare concrete
- Appearance: A clean, uniformly coated floor with decorative flake broadcast makes a garage feel like an actual room rather than utilitarian space
- Easier maintenance: Sweep or hose down rather than scrubbing stained concrete
The Three Main Coating Options
Epoxy
The most well-known option and historically the most common. Epoxy is a two-part product (resin + hardener) that bonds to properly prepared concrete and cures to a hard, durable surface. Quality epoxy coatings perform well in temperature-controlled garages — but have limitations in Kenosha's conditions:
- UV yellowing: Standard epoxy is not UV-stable. In Kenosha's intense summer sun, garage floors with any direct sun exposure (even through an open door) will yellow and amber over 2–4 years. UV-stabilized topcoats can help but don't eliminate this.
- Temperature sensitivity during installation: Epoxy should not be applied when the concrete or air temperature is below 50°F or above 90°F. Kenosha summers make this a narrow installation window — morning hours from April through September.
- Moisture sensitivity: Epoxy requires very low concrete moisture content at the time of application. On Kenosha slab-on-grade floors with high humidity during summer, this can be a challenge. Moisture testing before application is essential.
- Tile staining: Hot tire pickup (where hot vehicle tires pull coating off the floor in sheets) is a documented issue with lower-quality water-based epoxy products.
Polyurea and Polyaspartic
These newer coating technologies address most of epoxy's Kenosha-specific weaknesses:
- UV stable: Polyurea and polyaspartic coatings don't yellow in sunlight — a significant advantage for Kenosha's conditions
- Faster cure time: Full cure in 24 hours (vs. 72+ hours for epoxy), reducing downtime
- Wider temperature window: Can be applied in a broader range of temperatures, more forgiving in Kenosha's summer heat
- Better hot tire resistance
- Higher cost: Typically 20–40% more expensive than comparable epoxy systems
For a garage in Kenosha with any sun exposure, polyaspartic is generally the better long-term investment. The UV performance difference is substantial.
Surface Preparation: The Step That Determines Everything
The leading cause of garage floor coating failure is inadequate surface preparation. Coatings bond to the top layer of the concrete — if that layer is contaminated with oil, compromised by moisture, or structurally weak, the coating will delaminate regardless of quality.
Proper preparation requires:
- Mechanical grinding or shot blasting (not acid etching alone) to create a surface profile that the coating can mechanically bond to
- Oil contamination treatment: Existing oil stains must be treated with degreaser and allowed to fully penetrate before grinding
- Crack and spall repair before coating application — coatings bridge over hairline cracks but telegraph through any significant surface defect
- Moisture testing: ASTM F2170 or calcium chloride test to verify the slab is dry enough for the specific coating system
If your floor has existing damage — spalling, significant cracking, or surface scaling — our concrete repair and restoration team should assess it before coating. Coating over damaged concrete doesn't fix the underlying problem and compromises the coating's adhesion. Our garage floor service covers both new floor pours and preparation for coating systems.
Ongoing Maintenance for Coated Garage Floors
- Sweep regularly to remove abrasive grit that can micro-scratch the surface over time
- Hose down or mop with pH-neutral cleaner — avoid harsh chemical cleaners that can degrade the coating
- Clean chemical spills promptly, especially brake fluid (one of the few chemicals that can damage cured epoxy and polyurea)
- Place furniture pads under heavy storage shelving to prevent point-load indentation on softer coating systems
- Inspect the coating annually for areas of delamination — early spot repair is far cheaper than full recoating
A quality polyaspartic coating in a typical Kenosha residential garage should last 10–15+ years with basic maintenance.