If your floor takes a beating from tools, vehicles, or spills, urethane cement is the coating built for that kind of use - tough, seamless, and easy to keep clean.

Urethane cement flooring in Cleburne is a thick, seamless coating poured directly over your existing concrete slab - it bonds tightly to the surface and cures into a layer that handles heavy loads, chemical spills, wet conditions, and temperature extremes that standard epoxy systems are not designed for, with most residential jobs completed in one to three days.
The key difference between urethane cement and standard epoxy is performance under stress. Epoxy is rigid - it handles everyday residential use well, but can chip or crack under heavy impact or when a slab shifts significantly with seasonal moisture changes. Urethane cement has a slight flex to it, which gives it better impact resistance and makes it more forgiving when the ground moves underneath. It also handles thermal cycling - repeated heating and cooling - better than most other coating types.
For homeowners who want a durable floor that also has a visual statement, our metallic epoxy flooring creates the swirled, high-gloss look that urethane cement does not. For business owners with warehouse floors, shop spaces, or commercial kitchens, our commercial and industrial epoxy floor coatings may also be worth considering alongside urethane cement depending on the specific use case.
If you have patched cracks in your concrete floor before and they keep reappearing, the slab is moving - which is common in Cleburne because of the clay soil underneath. A urethane cement coating applied over a properly prepared surface can bridge minor cracks and create a more stable, unified surface. This is not a fix for major structural problems, but for the seasonal cracking many Cleburne homeowners deal with, it is a practical and lasting solution.
Bare concrete becomes surprisingly slick when water, oil, or grease hits it - and in a garage or laundry room, that happens regularly. If someone in your household has slipped or nearly slipped on your floor, the surface needs attention. A urethane cement floor with a textured finish gives you real grip underfoot even when conditions are wet, which matters in a working garage or utility space.
Concrete is porous, which means it absorbs everything that spills on it over time. If your garage floor has dark oil stains, rust rings from stored equipment, or a fine dust that reappears no matter how often you sweep, the surface has broken down to the point where cleaning alone will not fix it. A urethane cement coating seals the surface so spills stay on top instead of soaking in - cleanup becomes a quick mop rather than a scrubbing project.
If a floor coating applied previously is now lifting at the edges or bubbling in spots, the original installation had adhesion problems - often because the surface was not properly prepared. This is common in older Cleburne homes where a previous owner may have applied a DIY coating over an unprepared surface. A professional urethane cement installation done with thorough surface prep will not have those problems.
Every urethane cement job starts with the same foundation: thorough surface grinding, crack repair, and moisture testing before any coating is mixed. The coating itself is applied in layers, with each layer needing time to set before the next goes on. For garages and utility spaces, we finish with a textured anti-slip surface that provides real grip even when the floor is wet. For workshop spaces with heavy equipment, we can increase the coating thickness for added impact resistance. If your space also benefits from a decorative finish, consider combining a functional urethane cement system with our metallic epoxy flooring as a decorative topcoat layer.
For commercial property owners in Cleburne, urethane cement is often paired with or compared to our commercial and industrial epoxy floor coatings. The right choice depends on the specific demands of your space - we walk through both options during the estimate visit so you can make an informed decision. The American Concrete Institute publishes guidelines on floor and slab construction that inform how we approach coating selection for different use cases.
A standard urethane cement system for homeowners who use their garage for vehicles, tools, or equipment and need a floor that holds up to daily working use.
A broadcast aggregate worked into the topcoat for grip underfoot in wet conditions - recommended for any space that regularly sees water, oil, or mud.
An increased-thickness system for commercial kitchens, food-prep areas, breweries, and industrial spaces that need chemical resistance and high-impact durability.
Included on every project - grinding, crack filling, and moisture testing before any coating is applied, with extra attention to older Cleburne slabs affected by clay soil movement.
Cleburne sits on the Blackland Prairie clay belt that runs through Johnson County - the same soil that causes foundation movement and concrete cracking throughout North Central Texas. That soil swells when it rains and shrinks when temperatures climb into the upper 90s in summer, putting constant seasonal stress on concrete slabs. A significant portion of Cleburne homes were built in the 1960s through 1990s, and those older slabs often have accumulated oil stains, surface wear, and cracks that need proper repair before any coating goes down. Urethane cement's slight flexibility makes it a better fit for slabs that will continue to experience minor seasonal movement than harder, more brittle coating systems. Homeowners in communities like Crowley deal with the same Blackland Prairie soil conditions, and the same prep requirements apply.
Cleburne also has a strong tradition of homeowners using their garages and outbuildings for real working purposes - agricultural equipment, small engine repair, hobby workshops, and vehicle maintenance. That kind of use puts stress on floors that a typical suburban garage coating is not built for. Urethane cement handles heavy loads, resists the fuel and oil spills common in working garages, and can be hosed down without damaging the surface. The National Floor Safety Institute recommends textured coatings in spaces where wet surfaces are common - a consideration worth discussing with your contractor for any working garage or utility space. Homeowners in surrounding communities like Burleson with similar property types find urethane cement the right fit for the same reasons.
Tell us what space you want coated, roughly how large it is, and how you use it. We ask a few upfront questions so we come prepared to the site visit rather than arriving with no context.
We visit your property, check the slab condition, look for cracks and moisture, and assess what the prep stage requires. Your written estimate breaks down prep, materials, and labor separately - a single number without a site visit is a reason to be cautious.
Installation day starts with grinding and cleaning the existing concrete. This removes weak surface material, opens the concrete pores for proper bonding, and addresses any cracks or low spots. It is the noisiest part of the job and takes several hours - the quality of the finished floor depends almost entirely on how well this is done.
The urethane cement goes on in layers, each allowed to set before the next. Light foot traffic is safe after 24 to 48 hours. Before we leave, we walk through the finished floor with you and provide written care instructions and warranty terms.
Free on-site visit. We look at your slab, test for moisture, and tell you exactly what the job involves before you commit to anything.
(682) 847-7365Moisture moving through a slab from the ground below is the leading cause of coating delamination, and Cleburne's clay soil and wet spring seasons make it a real concern. We test before we start, every time. A contractor who does not mention moisture testing before quoting is skipping a step that will determine whether your floor holds up long term.
A large share of Cleburne homes were built in the 1960s through 1990s, and those slabs have specific prep challenges - accumulated oil, old sealers, surface wear, and clay soil-induced cracking. We have worked on these slabs throughout Johnson County and know what each phase of prep requires to get a coating that bonds correctly.
You can verify our registration through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. We carry full insurance and provide written contracts on every project - so you know exactly who you hired and what you agreed to before anyone picks up a tool.
Every estimate we provide breaks down prep, materials, and labor separately. If a quote comes as a single number over the phone without a site visit, that is a signal that the prep work is probably not being accounted for properly. We do not quote jobs we have not seen, because the prep requirements vary too much by slab condition.
Urethane cement is not the cheapest floor coating option, and it should not be - the material and the proper installation process cost more than a basic painted floor. What you are paying for is a surface that holds up to the way you actually use your property for years, not one that looks fine in spring and starts peeling by fall.
A ground-and-polished finish that brings out the natural look of your existing concrete slab without adding a coating layer on top.
Learn MoreMulti-coat epoxy systems for warehouses, shop floors, and commercial spaces with high traffic and chemical exposure requirements.
Learn MoreSpring and fall are the best installation windows in North Central Texas - reach out now to lock in your dates before the season fills up.