This website was built by a small team that became interested in polished concrete after years of watching the same questions come up in homeowner forums, facility management groups, and design magazines. People love the look of a mirror-finish concrete slab in a showroom or a sleek matte floor in a modern kitchen, yet they struggle to find clear, neutral information about how the finish is actually achieved and how much it costs in their own state.
Our mission with is simple: gather what we have learned from working alongside grinders, sealers, and dye specialists, and turn that knowledge into articles that an ordinary reader can use to make an informed decision. We focus on the United States market, with regional notes for every state we have been able to research in depth. When a topic depends on local code, we say so and point readers toward the agency that has the final word.
Editorial approach. Each article is drafted by a contributor who has either spent time on polished concrete job sites or who has interviewed installers in the relevant region. Drafts are reviewed by an editor for clarity, accuracy of the technical vocabulary, and tone. We try to avoid hype, we flag opinions as opinions, and we update older articles when industry practices change. If a reader spots a mistake, we want to know about it and we will publish a correction.
What we do not do. We are not contractors. We do not visit job sites ourselves. We do not bid on projects, nor do we manage subcontractors. Our role is editorial. When an article mentions a service provider it is because we believe the company brings useful information to the conversation, not because we manage the relationship between that company and a prospective customer.
How we work with readers. Most of our visitors are property owners weighing polished concrete against tile, epoxy, or hardwood for a specific room. We are happy to point them to the articles that answer their question, to suggest realistic dollar ranges, and to remind them that a written quote from a licensed installer is always the best basis for a decision. Other visitors are facility managers, architects, and interior designers who need a refresher on grit sequences, densifier chemistry, or maintenance schedules. We try to serve both audiences in plain language.
Get in touch. The shortest path to a real human on our team is the form on our page. You can also call us at during regular business hours. We read every message, even when our reply is a polite note saying we are not the right people to answer.
Thank you for reading. We hope the website helps you make a confident decision about your floor.
Polished concrete floors in the United States, USA
usually call after looking at a tired concrete slab in a warehouse, showroom or modern residential space. Polished concrete is the existing slab itself, mechanically refined through a series of diamond-grinding passes from coarse (40 grit) to fine (3000 grit), with a densifier and stain guard applied at the right stage.
The result is the original slab transformed into a hard, dense, reflective surface that reads as polished stone. There is no coating sitting on top, so there is nothing that can chip, peel or hot-tire fail. The slab is the floor.
Polished concrete estimate in the United States, USA by phone
Call (844) 623-0663The grinding and polishing process
- Phone quote.Square footage, slab age, target gloss, color. Most quotes firm after one call.
- Grind and expose.Heavy diamond grinders cut at 40 grit. Installers repair joints and cracks in matching color.
- Densify and stain.Lithium silicate densifier penetrates and hardens. Optional acid stain or water-based dye. Stain guard final treatment.
- Polish.Progressive grit passes 200, 400, 800, 1500, up to 3000. Gloss locked at target meter reading. Photo handover.
Talk to a polished concrete installer in the United States, USA
One call. A written quote. Licensed pros near you.
Call (844) 623-0663Frequently asked questions
How much does polished concrete cost in the United States, USA?
Standard cream-polish residential and light-duty runs $4 to $7 per square foot. Showroom mirror-grade with aggregate exposure and dye is $7 to $12 per square foot. Warehouse-scale (10,000+ sq ft) drops to $3 to $5 range. Quoted firm after the call.
How is this different from epoxy?
Epoxy is a coating that sits on top of the slab. Polished concrete is the slab itself, ground and densified. Epoxy can chip, peel, hot-tire pickup. Polished concrete cannot, there is no coating to fail.
Do you serve United States?
Yes, installers are dispatched . One call confirms availability and a written estimate.
How long does the install take?
Residential rooms run two to three days. larger floors 5,000 to 20,000 sq ft run a week to two weeks. The space is dust-controlled with wet grinding and HEPA vacuum.
Are the installers insured?
Every installer dispatched is . Certificate of insurance available before work begins.