Grand Haven, MI
Metallic Epoxy Flooring in Grand Haven, MI
Local metallic epoxy flooring for homeowners and small businesses across Grand Haven and the surrounding area. Starting at $3500.
Metallic epoxy flooring is a multi-layer coating system that bonds directly to concrete and uses metallic pigments to create a high-gloss, three-dimensional finish that looks nothing like a painted floor. Grand Haven Epoxy Flooring installs this system for homeowners in Grand Haven, Michigan who want a garage, basement, or living space floor that can handle real use while looking intentional. It's a practical choice if you're tired of bare, stained, or dusty concrete but want something more distinctive than a standard gray coating. Projects start at $3,500, and the result is a surface that resists chemicals, abrasion, and moisture for years without refinishing.
What This Service Involves
The installation begins with mechanical surface preparation — grinding the concrete to open the pores and remove any existing coatings, sealers, or contaminants that would prevent adhesion. After prep, the crew applies a penetrating primer coat, then the metallic epoxy layer itself, which is manipulated while wet to create the swirling, flowing pattern that gives the finish its depth. A clear topcoat goes on last to protect the metallic layer from UV exposure, scratching, and chemical spills. You'll need to clear the space of vehicles, shelving, and belongings before the crew arrives; the installation team handles everything from that point through final cleanup. The floor is left ready for light use the following day.
When You Need Metallic Epoxy Flooring in Grand Haven
The most common trigger is a concrete floor that's become an eyesore — oil stains in the garage, efflorescence on the basement slab, or years of surface wear that cleaning can't fix. Homeowners also call when they're finishing a basement or converting a garage into a living or workspace and need a floor that fits the upgraded surroundings. New construction is another common situation: bare concrete is functional but unfinished, and epoxy seals it before grime and moisture have a chance to work in. If you're selling the home and the floors look rough in listing photos, that's also a reasonable point to act — a coated floor reads as maintained.
Why These Problems Happen
Concrete looks solid but is actually porous, which means it absorbs everything that lands on it: oil, road salt tracked in from Lake Michigan winters, cleaning chemicals, and groundwater vapor pushing up from below. West Michigan's freeze-thaw cycle accelerates surface degradation — water that seeps into the slab expands when it freezes and slowly breaks down the top layer. Older homes in Grand Haven, many built with uncoated slabs, have had decades of this exposure. DIY paint or big-box epoxy kits typically fail within a year or two because they don't include mechanical prep, and without an open, clean surface the coating peels rather than bonds. A properly installed metallic epoxy system solves the absorption problem at the source by creating a sealed, non-porous surface that water and oil can't penetrate.
What Affects the Cost
The single largest factor is square footage — a two-car garage costs more to coat than a single-car bay, and a full basement more than a utility room. Concrete condition matters almost as much: a slab with significant cracking, previous coatings that need removal, or active moisture issues requires more prep work before coating can begin. The finish itself plays a role too; more complex metallic patterns that require additional product or manipulation time add to the project total. Access can affect cost if the space is difficult to work in — low ceilings, tight doorways, or the need to work around fixed structures like support columns. All metallic epoxy projects at Grand Haven Epoxy Flooring start at $3,500, and the quote you receive reflects your specific floor's actual conditions.
What to Expect from Quote to Cleanup
The process starts with a call or online inquiry, after which a crew member schedules an on-site visit to measure the floor, evaluate the concrete, and discuss finish options with you directly. You'll receive a written quote based on what they find — no estimates over the phone based on square footage alone. Once you approve the quote, you clear the space and the crew arrives with all equipment and materials. On installation day, they grind the surface, repair any cracks flagged during the quote visit, apply the coating system in sequence, and leave the area clean when they go. Before they leave, they'll walk you through cure times, what to avoid during the first 72 hours, and how to clean the floor once it's fully cured.
Common Decision Points
The most meaningful choice most homeowners face is between a standard solid-color epoxy and a metallic system. Solid-color epoxy is durable, lower in cost, and appropriate when you want a clean, utilitarian floor. Metallic epoxy costs more because the product itself is more expensive and the application requires more skill to execute the finish correctly, but it produces a result that looks like a designed surface rather than a coated one. If the floor is in a space people will actually see — a finished garage, a home gym, a basement that functions as living space — the metallic option tends to hold up better to that scrutiny over time. If it's a utility space where appearance is secondary, standard epoxy may be the more sensible call.