Garage floor buying guide
Florida conditions make slab evaluation and system selection especially important
Hot garages, humid air, wet vehicles, wind-driven rain near open doors, coastal sand, and strong sunlight can all affect how a coated floor is used and maintained. Moisture vapor moving through concrete can also affect adhesion if the slab and system are not properly evaluated.
Indoor garage floors may need a system designed for vehicle tires, stains, cleaning, and occasional sunlight near the door. Outdoor patios and lanais need products specifically approved for UV exposure, weather, wet traffic, and temperature changes.
Ask how the proposal addresses slab moisture, surface temperature, dew point, direct sunlight, exterior exposure, texture, and the expected installation conditions. Product data and installer procedures should match the project rather than relying on a generic Florida coating label.
Items to compare
- Moisture vapor and slab testing questions
- Surface temperature, humidity, dew point, and application timing
- UV exposure near garage doors and on outdoor concrete
- Wet vehicles, sandy shoes, cleaning, and drainage
- Texture for patios, lanais, and other wet-service areas
- Product-specific temperature and cure requirements
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Frequently asked questions
Does humidity ruin garage floor coatings?
Humidity alone does not automatically cause failure, but application conditions, moisture in or below the slab, dew point, and product limitations must be considered during preparation and installation.
Are exterior patio coatings different from garage coatings?
Often yes. Outdoor systems may need different UV stability, flexibility, texture, and weather exposure ratings than coatings intended only for enclosed interior concrete.
