Your garage floor takes the weight of vehicles, tools, and desert weather every day. If it is cracking, sinking, or crumbling, we can replace it with a properly poured slab that holds up for years.

Garage floor concrete in Somerton involves removing the old slab if needed, preparing the base, pouring fresh concrete, and finishing the surface - most standard two-car garage floors are completed in one to two days, with vehicles back on the floor after seven days of curing.
If you have been putting off fixing a cracked or uneven garage floor, you are not alone. A lot of Somerton homeowners deal with slabs that were poured without adequate base preparation - and in Yuma County clay soils, that catches up with you fast. The floor settles, cracks widen, and water starts getting underneath. The problem does not fix itself. Whether your garage floor needs a full replacement or a fresher approach to the base, we can give you a straight answer after seeing it in person. Many homeowners who call us about the garage also ask about decorative concrete options for the same space - it is worth discussing on the same visit.
If you can fit a coin edge into a crack in your garage floor, it is past the point of cosmetic concern. Wide cracks let water get underneath the slab, and in Somerton clay-heavy soils, that moisture causes the ground to shift - which makes the cracking worse over time.
Walk across your garage after washing a vehicle. If water collects in low spots instead of draining toward the door, the slab has settled unevenly. This is a common result of soil movement in the Yuma area and tends to get worse, not better, without intervention.
A fine gray powder on the floor or small chunks of surface material coming loose means the top layer of concrete is breaking down. In Somerton's intense sun and heat, this kind of surface deterioration happens faster than in most places - and once it starts, it does not stop on its own.
Many Somerton homes built in the 1990s have original slabs approaching the end of their practical lifespan, especially if they were never sealed. If your floor has a combination of cracking, staining, and unevenness, it is often more cost-effective to replace the whole slab than to patch individual problems.
Our garage floor concrete work covers the full job - demolition and haul-away of the old slab, proper base grading and compaction, the pour itself, and the finished surface. We also work with homeowners who want to go further than a plain gray floor. If you are interested in decorative concrete finishes for your garage - color, texture, or a sealed surface that resists stains - we handle that as part of the same project.
We also offer concrete floor installation for workshops, outbuildings, and utility spaces. If you need a concrete surface somewhere other than the main garage bay - a covered carport, a separate shed slab, or a utility pad - we can include that in the same estimate so you are not scheduling two separate projects.
Best for floors with major cracking, settling, or bases that were never properly prepared.
For garages being added to an existing home or newly built structures needing a ground-up slab.
For homeowners who want a plain floor that resists staining and deterioration from Somerton's UV and heat.
For homeowners who want color or texture built into the floor surface during the original pour.
Somerton sits in the Yuma metro area, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees Fahrenheit. Concrete poured in that kind of heat can dry out and harden too fast on the surface while the interior is still wet - which leads to surface cracking and a weaker slab overall. On top of the heat, much of Yuma County has clay-heavy soils that swell when wet and shrink when dry. That seasonal movement is one of the main reasons garage floors fail prematurely here when the base is not prepared correctly. We account for both factors on every job, scheduling pours for early morning during hot months and compacting the base properly before a single yard of concrete is placed. Homeowners in Yuma face the same conditions, and the same preparation matters just as much there.
Somerton also gets more than 300 sunny days per year, which means UV exposure breaks down unsealed concrete faster here than in almost any other part of the country. Sealing after the pour is not optional maintenance in this climate - it is what keeps your floor from dusting, staining, and deteriorating within a few years of being replaced. We also serve homeowners in San Luis who deal with the same desert soil and UV conditions, and the same standards apply there. According to the American Concrete Institute, hot-weather concreting requires specific mix adjustments and curing steps that are non-negotiable in climates like Somerton's.
Call or fill out our contact form and we will respond within one business day. We will ask a few basic questions about your garage size and what problems you are seeing so we can come prepared.
We come out, measure the space, and assess the existing floor and base. You get a written estimate before any work begins - no phone-only guesswork, and no surprise costs after the work starts.
We clear the old slab if needed, grade and compact the base, and pour the concrete. In summer, we start early to beat the heat. Most two-car garages are poured and finished in a single day.
You can walk on the floor after about 24 hours, but we ask that you keep vehicles off it for a full seven days. We walk you through the finished floor and tell you exactly what to watch for and when it is safe to apply a sealer.
We give written estimates after seeing your floor in person - no obligation, no phone-only quotes.
(928) 655-8943Clay-heavy soils that expand and contract with the seasons are one of the main reasons garage floors fail early in this area. We assess and compact every base before the pour - not as an extra step, but as a baseline requirement on every job.
Scheduling pours for early morning during summer and using mix adjustments to control set time are standard practice for us - not workarounds. The Portland Cement Association sets the standards for hot-weather concreting, and we follow them.
We come out, look at your floor in person, and give you a price in writing. No ballpark figures over the phone, and no changes to the number once the work starts.
Arizona requires concrete contractors to be licensed through the state Registrar of Contractors. You can look up our license status on the ROC website in about two minutes - it is there, it is active, and it is verifiable before you commit to anything.
Every one of those points translates to something you can feel in the finished floor - one that stays level, does not crack within the first Arizona summer, and still looks solid years down the road. That is what we are here to deliver.
Add color, texture, or a sealed finish to your garage floor or any outdoor concrete surface.
Learn MoreNew concrete floors for workshops, outbuildings, and utility spaces beyond the main garage bay.
Learn MoreFall and winter slots fill quickly in the Yuma area - lock in your preferred date before the season books up.