
Your garage floor takes a beating every day. We pour and replace garage slabs in Florence built to handle the heat, shifting desert soils, and real-world use without cracking apart in a few years.

Garage floor concrete in Florence starts with removing the old slab, grading and compacting the soil underneath, and pouring fresh concrete to a finished surface. Most jobs take one to two active workdays, with a curing period of at least seven days before you can park on it.
If your current slab is cracked, uneven, or just worn out, a full replacement gives you a clean start. The prep work - grading, compacting, and setting the right base - is what separates a floor that holds up from one that starts cracking again within a few years. Pinal County's shifting clay soils make that prep step especially important here.
Once the slab is poured and cured, you can take it further. Many Florence homeowners pair their new garage floor with decorative concrete finishes - epoxy-style surfaces or colored concrete that turns a plain gray slab into something worth showing off.
A hairline crack here or there is normal. But if cracks seem wider or longer than they were last year, the slab is actively moving. In Florence, this often means the clay soils underneath are shifting with the wet and dry seasons, and the slab can no longer hold together on its own.
If part of your garage floor gives slightly when you walk on it, or a section rocks like a loose tile, the concrete has likely separated from the soil beneath it. A slab with voids underneath can crack suddenly under the weight of a vehicle - that is a safety issue worth addressing.
If your floor leaves gray powder on your shoes or tires, or looks pitted and rough, the top layer is breaking down. Florence's intense UV exposure and extreme heat accelerate this kind of surface wear, especially on slabs that were never sealed. Once the surface starts flaking, it will not stop on its own.
A properly poured garage floor slopes slightly toward the door so water drains out naturally. If puddles form in the middle or back of your garage, the floor has settled unevenly or was never graded correctly. Standing water leads to staining, surface damage, and moisture problems over time.
We handle everything from full slab replacement to new pours for garage additions. Whether you need a basic broom-finish slab at four inches thick or a heavier pour for a workshop or heavy equipment, we size the job to what you actually need. Every pour includes rebar or wire mesh reinforcement and properly spaced control joints so cracking is guided, not random.
Want to go beyond plain gray? We also work with homeowners who want their garage floor paired with decorative concrete finishes or who want to continue the project into an adjacent concrete floor installation inside the home. We can plan both jobs together so the prep and scheduling line up.
Suits homeowners whose existing floor has structural cracks, voids, or severe settlement that patching cannot fix.
Suits new garage additions or bare-earth garage floors that need a fresh concrete surface from scratch.
Suits homeowners parking large trucks, running workshops, or storing heavy equipment who need five or six inches of concrete.
Suits homeowners who want their garage floor to look as good as the rest of the house, with color or texture options.
Florence regularly sees summer highs above 110 degrees F. Fresh concrete poured in that heat dries too fast on the surface before the inside has fully set, which leads to cracking and a weaker slab. Experienced local contractors schedule pours for early morning in summer, use retarding additives, and cover the slab with wet burlap or plastic sheeting to keep the curing process even. If a contractor does not mention heat management when you ask, that is a warning sign. The Portland Cement Association publishes detailed hot-weather concreting guidance that local crews should follow.
The soil across Pinal County also contains clay that expands when wet and shrinks when dry. That movement pushes up and pulls away from the underside of slabs over time - especially after monsoon storms. Homeowners in Coolidge and Casa Grande face the same soil conditions, and we apply the same ground-prep discipline across the whole region. A gravel base layer and thorough compaction before the pour are the difference between a floor that lasts and one that cracks again within a few seasons.
We reply within one business day. We will ask about your garage size, whether your existing slab needs to come out, and what finish you have in mind. No pressure, just basic questions so we can give you a realistic estimate range before the site visit.
We come out to measure the space, check the existing slab, and look for signs of soil movement or drainage problems. You get a written estimate that breaks down exactly what is included - no line items that appear after the work starts.
We clear the old slab if needed, grade and compact the soil, and lay the gravel base. The pour is scheduled for early morning in summer months to stay ahead of the heat. The crew stays until the surface is finished and the slab is covered for curing.
Plan to keep your car parked elsewhere for at least seven days. Once the slab is ready, we walk you through the control joints, care instructions, and sealing schedule. Sealing is strongly recommended in Florence's climate and can be done at the same visit.
We reply within one business day. No sales pitch, just a straight answer on scope and cost.
(520) 434-1306Pouring concrete in Florence's summer heat requires a specific plan - early start times, retarding additives, and covering the slab during curing. We follow this process on every summer pour so the slab sets evenly and does not surface-crack before it has even cured.
Pinal County's clay soils shift with the seasons, and that movement is the leading cause of premature slab failure in this area. We compact the subgrade and install a proper gravel base on every job - not as an upsell, but as the standard we hold ourselves to.
Replacing a garage slab in Florence typically requires a permit through Pinal County Development Services. We handle that paperwork on your behalf, which means an inspector signs off on the finished work. That inspection record protects you at resale and with your insurance company.
You get a written breakdown covering labor, materials, demolition, and any sealing before we schedule anything. If the scope changes during the job, we tell you in writing before the cost changes. No surprises on the final bill.
Every one of these points comes down to one thing: protecting your investment in a climate and soil environment that punishes shortcuts. When the prep, pour, and permit are handled correctly from the start, your garage floor stays solid for years without callbacks or surprises.
Take your new garage slab further with stained, stamped, or textured finishes that add color and character to a plain gray floor.
Learn MoreExtend the project inside your home with a matching interior concrete floor installation planned alongside your garage pour.
Learn MoreFall and spring book fast in Pinal County - reach out now to lock in your pour date before the calendar fills up.