Jackson Epoxy Flooring

Jackson, MI

Metallic Epoxy Flooring in Jackson, MI

Local metallic epoxy flooring for homeowners and small businesses across Jackson and the surrounding area. Starting at $3500.

Metallic epoxy flooring is a multi-layer coating system applied directly to concrete that produces a high-gloss, three-dimensional finish using pigment suspended in a clear epoxy base. Jackson Epoxy Flooring installs this system for homeowners across Jackson, Michigan who want a floor that looks significantly better than bare or painted concrete and holds up to daily use. It's a strong fit if you're finishing a garage, renovating a basement, or upgrading a living space where durability and appearance both matter. The result is a seamless, non-porous surface that resists stains, moisture, and abrasion for years without constant maintenance.

What This Service Involves

The installation starts with mechanical surface preparation — typically diamond grinding the concrete to open the slab's pores and ensure the epoxy bonds properly. Any cracks or divots are patched during this step. The crew then applies a primer coat, followed by the metallic pigment layer, which is worked with tools while wet to create the marbled, flowing visual effect. A clear topcoat goes on last, adding chemical resistance and gloss. You don't need to do any prep work yourself, but you do need to clear the space of furniture, vehicles, and stored items before the crew arrives so nothing interrupts the process.

When You Need Metallic Epoxy Flooring in Jackson

The most common reason homeowners call is a garage or basement floor that's become an embarrassment — stained, pitted, or just the dull gray slab that came with the house. Others are finishing a basement for living or entertaining use and want a floor that looks intentional rather than utilitarian. Remodels and home-sale prep are frequent triggers too, since a finished floor has visible impact on how a space photographs and shows. If your current floor is flaking, absorbing oil stains, or collecting moisture that makes it look perpetually dirty, that's a sign the bare concrete is working against you.

Why These Problems Happen

Bare concrete is porous, which means it absorbs whatever lands on it — oil, water, road salt tracked in from Michigan winters, and general grime. Over time, freeze-thaw cycles common in Jackson cause the surface layer to pit and spall, especially in garages exposed to outdoor temperature swings. Painted or sealed floors that weren't properly prepped eventually peel because the coating never bonded to the slab in the first place. DIY epoxy kits rarely solve this because they skip mechanical grinding, relying instead on acid etching that leaves the surface too smooth for a durable bond. The result is a floor that looks fine for a season and then starts lifting.

What Affects the Cost

Metallic epoxy flooring in Jackson starts at $3,500, and several factors move the final number from there. Square footage is the biggest driver — a two-car garage floor costs more than a single-car bay simply because more material and labor are required. The condition of the existing slab matters too: a floor with significant cracking, deep pitting, or previous coatings that need to be removed requires more prep time, which adds to the total. Tight access — a narrow garage door opening, low ceiling clearance, or a space with multiple columns — can slow the grinding and coating steps. Color complexity and the specific metallic effect you choose also affect material costs, since some pigment combinations require additional layers to achieve the depth you're after.

What to Expect from Quote to Cleanup

The process starts with a phone call or message where you describe the space and share a few photos. From there, an on-site walkthrough is scheduled so the floor can be measured and inspected directly — this is where prep requirements and any concrete repair needs become clear. On installation day, the crew arrives with grinding equipment, patches any problem areas, and works through the primer, metallic, and topcoat layers in sequence. The space is cordoned off during cure time, and you'll get clear instructions on when foot traffic and vehicle traffic are safe to resume. Before the crew leaves, they walk the floor with you to confirm the finish meets what was discussed.

Common Decision Points

The most practical decision most homeowners face is whether to go with a full metallic epoxy system or a simpler solid-color epoxy. A solid-color system costs less and installs faster, but it doesn't produce the same depth or visual character — it reads as a coated floor rather than a finished one. Metallic epoxy makes more sense when the space is visible from living areas, when you're investing in a renovation you expect to last, or when you want the floor itself to be a feature rather than a background. If the space is purely functional storage, a solid-color system may be sufficient; if it doubles as a workshop, gym, or entertainment area, the metallic system holds up to heavier scrutiny from both guests and daily use.

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Frequently asked questions

How does the quote process work for metallic epoxy flooring?
You start with a call or message, share photos of the space, and we schedule an on-site walkthrough to measure the floor and assess its condition. The final quote reflects actual square footage, surface prep needed, and any special handling — not a rough estimate based on photos alone.
How long does a metallic epoxy floor last?
A properly installed metallic epoxy system on a well-prepared concrete slab typically lasts 10 to 20 years in a residential setting. Longevity depends on how much foot and vehicle traffic the floor sees and whether minor surface damage is addressed early.
How long will the project take, and when can I use the floor again?
Most residential metallic epoxy projects take two to three days from surface prep through final topcoat. You can typically walk on the floor within 24 hours of the final coat, though full cure for vehicle traffic takes closer to 72 hours.
Can metallic epoxy go over my existing concrete floor, or does it need to be replaced?
In most cases the existing slab is kept — the prep work, not replacement, is what makes the coating bond correctly. Cracked or significantly damaged concrete may need patching or grinding before the system is applied, but full slab replacement is rarely required.
What's not included in the base price?
Moving heavy equipment, built-in cabinetry, or large stored items out of the space is typically the homeowner's responsibility before the crew arrives. Any structural concrete repair beyond standard crack patching may be quoted separately after the on-site assessment.
Call (517) 768-4871