Decorative Concrete
Upgrade your garage floor or outdoor surfaces with stamped, stained, or textured decorative finishes.
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Cracked, hollow, or crumbling? We replace garage floors in Jurupa Valley with properly prepared slabs built for clay soil and triple-digit summers.

Garage floor concrete in Jurupa Valley means removing the old slab, preparing the ground with proper soil compaction and a gravel base, then pouring fresh concrete leveled and finished to a durable surface - most residential jobs take one to three days on-site, plus a week before driving on it.
A lot of homeowners in Jurupa Valley are dealing with slabs that were poured in the 1980s or 1990s - often thinner than current standards and without proper base work. When the clay soil underneath shifts through wet winters and dry summers, those older slabs crack and settle. Repairing the surface repeatedly without addressing the base just delays the same problem.
If you are updating your garage, our decorative concrete service is a popular add-on for homeowners who want a finished, coated floor rather than plain gray concrete.
Small hairline cracks are common and do not always mean trouble. But if you can fit the edge of a coin into a crack, or if cracks are spreading in a spiderweb pattern, the slab's structural integrity is compromised. In Jurupa Valley, this kind of cracking is often caused by clay soil shifting through wet winters and dry summers - a cycle that puts stress on any slab that was not built for it.
Walk slowly across your garage floor and listen for a hollow sound when you step - it sounds almost like tapping on a drum. That hollow feeling means the soil underneath has settled or washed away, leaving the slab unsupported. This is a safety issue and tends to get worse over time, not better.
If the top layer of your floor is peeling off in chips or crumbling when you sweep it, the surface has deteriorated past the point where a coating or patch will hold. This kind of breakdown is common in older Jurupa Valley homes where the original slab was poured thin and never sealed against the region's heat and dry conditions.
A properly installed garage floor is slightly sloped toward the door so water drains out. If you are seeing puddles sitting in the middle or back of your garage, the slab has settled unevenly or was never graded correctly. Standing water accelerates concrete deterioration and can seep under the slab, making the soil movement problem worse.
We handle full garage floor replacements from start to finish - demolition and haul-away of the old slab, soil compaction, gravel base installation, and a fresh pour at the right thickness for your use case. Standard residential garages get a four-inch pour; if you plan to park a heavy truck or store large equipment, we can pour thicker. Every floor gets control joints cut in before the concrete hardens, giving it a designed place to flex instead of cracking randomly across the surface. We also pull the required permit from the City of Jurupa Valley so you have an official inspection record on file.
For homeowners who want more than a plain gray slab, we offer concrete floor installation options that include smooth trowel finishes, broom textures for traction, and epoxy-ready surfaces for those who plan to add a coating after curing. Many clients ask about sealing or coating after the pour - we will walk you through the right timing and options before the job is done.
The best option for most homeowners - a properly prepared four-inch slab with control joints, built to handle Jurupa Valley soil conditions.
Suits homeowners who park trucks, RVs, or heavy equipment and need a slab that handles the extra load without cracking.
A trowel-finished surface prepared specifically for homeowners planning to add an epoxy or polyurea coating after the 28-day cure.
A slightly textured surface that resists slipping when wet - a practical choice for garages used as workshops or utility spaces.
Jurupa Valley sits in the Inland Empire, where summer temperatures regularly climb above 100 degrees and much of the soil contains a high share of clay. When concrete is poured in extreme heat without proper precautions, the surface dries too fast before the slab has fully hardened underneath - leading to hairline cracks that appear within days of the pour. A contractor working here needs to schedule pours for early morning in summer months and actively manage moisture during curing. The clay soil is the other challenge: it swells when wet in winter and shrinks when dry in summer, putting constant stress on any slab that was not built on a well-compacted, properly drained base. According to the American Concrete Institute, proper subgrade preparation and curing practices are the most important factors in long-term slab performance.
A large share of Jurupa Valley's housing stock was built in the 1980s and 1990s, meaning many garage slabs are now 30 to 40 years old and were poured to less rigorous standards than what is used today. We work throughout Jurupa Valley and the broader Inland Empire, including homeowners in Riverside and Chino. If your neighborhood was developed in that era, there is a good chance the original slab is at or near the end of its designed lifespan.
We respond within 1 business day. No quotes over the phone - we schedule a visit to your property to assess the existing slab, soil, and drainage before giving you a price.
We look at the existing floor, check for hollow spots and drainage issues, and give you a written estimate covering demolition, base prep, concrete thickness, finish, and permit. No line items hidden.
For a full slab replacement we pull the required permit from the City of Jurupa Valley. We handle the paperwork - you do not need to make a single call. Work starts only after the permit is in hand.
We break out and haul away the old slab, compact the soil, lay a gravel base, and pour the new concrete. A city inspector signs off before the project is closed out, so you have a clean record on file.
Free estimate, written quote, permit handled. No surprises when the invoice arrives.
(951) 393-1148Jurupa Valley's clay-heavy ground is one of the leading causes of slab failure in the Inland Empire. We assess ground conditions before any concrete is poured and build the base to match what we find - not a generic spec. That is the difference between a floor that lasts 40 years and one that cracks in five.
We pull the building permit from the City of Jurupa Valley on every full slab replacement - no exceptions. That triggers an official inspection, which gives you a clean record when it matters: a home sale, an insurance claim, or a future repair. We handle this process start to finish.
Pouring concrete in 100-plus-degree heat without proper precautions is one of the most common causes of garage floor cracking in the Inland Empire. We schedule pours for early morning in hot months and actively manage moisture during curing - so the floor you get in August is just as strong as one poured in March.
Every concrete contractor in California must hold a valid CSLB license to legally work on your home. You can check any license on the California Contractors State License Board website in about 60 seconds - it confirms insurance coverage and whether any complaints have been filed.
Every project starts with an honest on-site assessment and a written quote. No line items added after the crew leaves.
Upgrade your garage floor or outdoor surfaces with stamped, stained, or textured decorative finishes.
Learn more →Interior concrete floor installations for workshops, basements, and living spaces requiring a durable, finished surface.
Learn more →Slots fill up fast in spring and fall - the best windows for pouring concrete here. Call or request a free estimate now to lock in your project date.