
Cracked, flaking, or settling garage floor? We pour reinforced concrete slabs with proper base preparation so your floor handles Cheyenne's freeze-thaw cycles for decades.

Garage floor concrete in Cheyenne means removing the old slab (if there is one), grading and compacting the ground underneath, and pouring fresh reinforced concrete to a minimum of four inches thick - most standard two-car garage jobs run one to three days of active work, with parking held off for about a week afterward.
The part most homeowners don't think about is what happens under the surface. Cheyenne sits on clay-heavy soils that shift with moisture changes, which is the main reason older garage floors crack and settle. Getting the base right before the pour is the most important step in the whole job. If your floor has been crumbling for years, it's usually a base problem, not just a surface problem.
Thinking about upgrading beyond a plain gray slab? Our decorative concrete service can add color or a polished finish, and our concrete floor installation work covers commercial and basement floors as well.
Hairline cracks are normal. But if you can fit a pencil tip into a crack, or see diagonal fractures running from corners, the slab has moved in a way that won't fix itself. In Cheyenne, this usually means the clay soil underneath shifted - and patching the surface without addressing that is a short-term fix at best.
If the top layer of your garage floor is peeling or breaking off in pieces, freeze-thaw damage has reached the core of the slab. This is especially common in Cheyenne homes where the original floor was never sealed. Once spalling starts, it gets worse every winter.
A floor that visibly slopes in an unexpected direction, or where water pools near the door or walls after snowmelt, has settled unevenly. Water sitting against the foundation can cause bigger problems over time, so this is worth addressing before it becomes a drainage issue.
Homes built in Cheyenne before the 1990s often have garage floors that were poured thin, without reinforcement, and without the base preparation that is standard today. If your home is in a neighborhood like Morningside or South Greeley, there is a good chance the original floor is at or past the end of its useful life.
Our garage floor work covers full slab replacement from demo to finish. We break out and haul away the old floor, grade and compact the base, set forms, pour reinforced concrete at the right thickness for your use, and finish the surface with the right texture - smooth enough to sweep, textured enough to be safe when wet. Control joints are cut before the concrete sets to give it a planned place to expand and contract.
For homeowners who want more than a plain gray floor, we also offer decorative concrete finishes including epoxy-ready surfaces and colored concrete. If you are doing interior work beyond the garage, our concrete floor installation service handles basement slabs and workshop floors as well.
Best for floors that are cracked, settled, or approaching 25+ years old.
For garages being built or expanded where no previous slab exists.
Recommended for anyone parking heavy vehicles, trailers, or storing equipment.
For homeowners who want a cleaner look - stained, polished, or epoxy-ready.
Cheyenne sits at about 6,100 feet and sees temperatures swing from well below zero in winter to the 90s in summer. That repeated freezing and thawing puts real stress on concrete - water works into tiny surface pores, freezes, expands, and slowly breaks the slab apart from the inside. A garage floor that holds up here needs to be mixed, poured, and sealed for those conditions specifically. Homeowners in Laramie deal with the same high-altitude climate challenges, which is why we apply the same approach there.
On top of the climate, much of the Cheyenne area sits on expansive clay soils that move with moisture changes - and that movement is often what causes slabs to crack or settle in the first place. Homeowners in newer subdivisions on the north and west sides of town, and those in older neighborhoods closer to downtown, both deal with this. Customers in Fort Collins share some of the same soil challenges along the Front Range, which informs how we approach base preparation across the whole region.
We respond within 1 business day. We will ask a few quick questions about your garage size and whether there is an existing floor to remove, then schedule a free on-site visit before giving you a firm price.
We come to your property, measure the space, look at the existing floor and soil conditions, and give you a written estimate that spells out thickness, base prep, reinforcement, and finish. No surprises.
We remove the old slab and haul it away, then compact the base carefully - this step takes longer than most people expect, and it is the most important part of the job. The pour typically takes four to eight hours depending on garage size.
You can walk on the floor after 24 hours and park a car on it after about a week. We seal the floor once it has fully cured and walk you through the finished job before we leave.
We respond within 1 business day. There is no obligation - just a free on-site estimate. After you submit, someone from our office will call you to schedule a time to come measure your space and walk through the options.
(307) 475-1948We carry a current Wyoming contractor license through the Department of Workforce Services and hold both liability and workers' compensation coverage. You can verify both before signing anything - we hand them over without hesitation.
We spend real time on compaction and grading before any concrete is poured. That extra step is why our floors don't develop the cracking and settling patterns you see in work that was rushed. The Portland Cement Association backs this standard: proper base prep is the most important factor in slab longevity.
At 6,100 feet, Cheyenne's winters stress concrete differently than lower-elevation markets. We use air-entrained mixes designed to handle repeated freeze-thaw cycles, and we include sealing as part of every completed project - not as an optional add-on.
From Laramie to Fort Collins, we work across the region and bring the same preparation standards to every job. Homeowners in all 12 areas we serve get the same thorough base prep and climate-appropriate mix design.
Our preparation and material standards are grounded in what actually works in Cheyenne's climate - not just what is cheapest to install. For technical standards on garage slab thickness and reinforcement, the American Concrete Institute publishes detailed guidelines that inform how we spec every job.
Upgrade your garage floor beyond plain gray with stamped patterns, stained color, or a polished finish designed to survive Cheyenne winters.
Learn moreBasement slabs, workshop floors, and commercial concrete floors poured with the same base preparation and reinforcement standards as our garage work.
Learn moreContact us today for a free on-site estimate - the sooner you book, the better your spot in this season's schedule.