
Cracked, uneven, or crumbling garage floor? We handle the full job - demo, base prep on Springdale clay soil, reinforced pour, and proper drainage slope so water moves out, not in.

Garage floor concrete in Springdale involves removing the old slab if needed, grading and compacting the ground underneath, placing reinforcement, and pouring a new slab finished to drain properly - most residential jobs take one to two days of active work, with a full curing period of about 28 days before heavy loads or coatings are applied.
Most homeowners contact us after noticing cracks that keep coming back, puddles that form after rain, or a surface that has started to flake and crumble. Those signs usually mean the slab has moved with the soil or never had the base prep it needed in the first place. Whether you need a full replacement or are not sure yet, the first step is an in-person look at the floor and what is underneath it.
If you are also thinking about how the garage floor connects to the rest of your home, take a look at our concrete floor installation service for commercial or shop-style floors with similar structural requirements.
Small hairline cracks are common and not urgent. But if you can fit a pencil tip into a crack, or if cracks are spreading across the floor in a pattern, the slab has shifted with the soil. In Springdale's clay-heavy ground, this is a common sign that a full replacement conversation is needed rather than repeated patching.
Walk your garage floor after rain and look for puddles near the center or walls instead of the door. Pooling water means the slab has settled unevenly over time. It makes the space harder to keep dry and accelerates surface damage - both problems that only get worse if you wait.
If the top layer of your floor is peeling off in thin chips or turning dusty when you sweep, the surface has started to break down. This often happens on older slabs that were never sealed or that went through years of freeze-thaw cycles without protection. Once surface deterioration starts, it tends to accelerate.
Many Springdale homes built in the late 1980s and 1990s have original garage slabs now approaching or past the end of their useful life. If your floor is in that age range and showing any of the signs above, an honest professional assessment will tell you whether repair or replacement makes more sense for your situation.
Our garage floor work covers everything from a basic replacement pour to a fully finished slab ready for coatings. Most jobs start with breaking out and hauling away the old concrete, then addressing whatever the ground underneath needs - compaction, gravel base, moisture barrier - before a single drop of new concrete goes in. The pour itself includes steel mesh or rebar reinforcement, proper slope toward the door, and control joints cut in the right places to manage how the slab cures.
For homeowners who want more than plain gray, we can prepare the surface for coatings, epoxy, or a decorative concrete finish applied after curing. We also do floor pours for shops, detached garages, and utility buildings where the requirements are similar to a residential garage but the loads may be heavier.
For floors that have shifted, crumbled, or settled beyond repair.
For garages with a dirt or gravel floor being converted to concrete.
For spaces where heavier vehicles or equipment require a thicker slab.
For homeowners planning to add epoxy or a protective finish after curing.
Springdale sits on clay-heavy soil that expands when it absorbs rain and shrinks when it dries out. That movement puts stress on concrete from below, which is why so many Springdale garage floors develop cracks and uneven sections over time - not because the concrete was bad, but because the ground underneath was never properly prepared or has shifted with the seasons. The area also goes through regular freeze-thaw cycles between November and February, where temperatures drop below freezing at night and rise above it during the day, putting additional stress on slabs that were not poured or cured correctly.
A large share of Springdale homes were built during the rapid growth of the 1990s and early 2000s, and many of those original garage slabs are now 25-plus years old. Homeowners across the metro area - from neighborhoods near Fayetteville to communities in Bentonville - are finding that their original floors need replacement rather than just repair. We work throughout the Northwest Arkansas region and understand what local soil and climate conditions require.
Call or submit the form and we respond within 1 business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your garage - size, condition, whether you have an existing slab - so the estimate visit is efficient and you are not waiting long to get started.
A contractor comes to measure the space, check the existing slab condition, and assess the ground. You get a written estimate that includes everything - demo, base prep, the pour, and permits if needed. No surprises added after you agree to the job.
The crew breaks out the old slab, hauls away the debris, and then grades and compacts the ground. This is the most important step for long-term durability, especially in Springdale's clay soil - we take it seriously and do not rush past it.
Concrete goes in on pour day, the surface is finished and sloped, control joints are cut, and the slab starts curing. You can walk on it in 24 to 48 hours, but vehicles should stay off for at least a week. Full strength takes about 28 days.
We respond within 1 business day - no obligation. After you submit, someone from our office will call to schedule a free on-site estimate where we can see the floor in person and give you an accurate number.
(479) 510-0119We hold an active license with the Arkansas Contractors Licensing Board, which is required for this type of work in Arkansas. You can verify it - we are not asking you to take our word for it. That credential protects you if something goes wrong and ensures the work meets state standards.
We have poured garage floors across Springdale and 11 other communities in the region. That range means we understand the soil conditions, permit offices, and local expectations - not just for one neighborhood, but across the metro. Local knowledge changes how we approach every prep step.
Springdale requires permits for garage floor replacements in many cases. We handle the application, the inspection coordination, and the paperwork - you do not have to deal with the Building Safety Division yourself. The permit cost is included in your quote, not added later.
A lot of Springdale homeowners come to us not sure if they need a patch or a full pour. We will tell you what we actually see - not what sells the bigger job. If repair makes sense, we say so. If the slab needs replacement to last, we explain why and show you the evidence before you decide.
We combine local licensing, regional experience, and a straightforward approach to estimates so you know exactly what you are getting before any work starts. That combination is what keeps homeowners across Springdale and Northwest Arkansas calling us back for additional projects.
Add color, texture, or a stamped pattern to your concrete surfaces for a finished look that holds up to Springdale weather.
Learn moreCommercial-grade floor pours for shops, warehouses, and utility buildings where heavier loads require a different spec than a residential slab.
Learn moreSpringdale's clay soil and freeze-thaw winters mean a rushed or poorly prepped floor will not last - call now and we will tell you exactly what your floor needs.