
Your garage floor is taking a beating from clay soil, summer heat, and daily use. We pour and replace garage slabs built to handle all of it - no shortcuts.

Garage floor concrete in Wichita Falls means removing your old slab, preparing the ground underneath, and pouring a fresh slab designed to handle local clay soil movement - most jobs wrap up in one to two days of work, with the floor ready for vehicles within a week.
A lot of homeowners in Wichita Falls have a garage floor that cracked or started flaking years ago and has been patched over and over. Patching the surface never fixes the real problem - the clay soil underneath that swells when it rains and shrinks when it dries. If you want a floor that holds up, the solution is starting fresh with proper base work.
If your garage is ready for a full makeover, pairing a new slab with decorative concrete finishes is a popular way to make the space look as good as it functions - and it's worth considering while the project is already underway.
If you have hairline cracks that were thin a year ago and are now wide enough to catch a coin, the slab is actively moving. In Wichita Falls, the clay soil underneath swells and shrinks with the seasons, and this tends to get worse each year. Patching buys time but does not solve the problem below.
Walk across your garage floor and listen for a hollow sound when you tap with your heel. If a section feels springy or sounds like there is nothing under it, the soil has shifted away from the slab. A slab that is unsupported underneath can crack or collapse under the weight of a vehicle.
Water that consistently pools in one area means the slab has developed a low spot from settling or an uneven original pour. Standing water accelerates concrete deterioration and works its way under the slab, making the soil movement problem worse over time.
When the top layer of your slab starts peeling away in chips or flakes, the surface has broken down from years of heat, freeze-thaw cycles, or chemical exposure from road salt tracked in on tires. Once flaking starts, it spreads quickly, and patching rarely holds for more than a season.
Whether you need a full tear-out and replacement or a fresh pour on bare ground, we handle the entire project from demolition through finishing. Every pour includes proper base preparation - compacted soil and a gravel layer - that gives the slab a stable foundation under the clay. We also offer decorative concrete options for homeowners who want more than a plain gray slab, including stained and sealed finishes that hold up to the North Texas climate.
If your project extends beyond the garage, we install concrete floor installation for workshops, additions, and interior spaces as well. Every job gets the same base-prep discipline regardless of where the slab lands - because the clay soil in Wichita Falls does not care whether it is inside or outside.
Best for homeowners with cracked, settled, or aging slabs that patching can no longer fix.
Ideal for new garages, additions, or converted spaces that need a first-time concrete floor.
Practical finish options suited to homeowners who want a functional, slip-resistant surface for parking and storage.
For homeowners who want their garage floor to look as good as it functions - with color protection rated for Texas heat.
Wichita Falls sits on heavy clay soil that swells when it absorbs moisture and shrinks when it dries. That movement never really stops, and it is one of the main reasons garage floors here crack and shift faster than in areas with sandy, stable soil. A significant share of homes in Wichita Falls were built in the 1950s through 1970s, when slabs were often poured thinner and not designed for the heavier trucks and SUVs most families park today. If your home is from that era, there is a good chance the garage floor is running on borrowed time. The summer heat adds another challenge - temperatures regularly exceeding 100 degrees mean concrete poured incorrectly can crack before it finishes hardening. Experienced local contractors schedule pours for early morning and use additives that slow drying, which is something worth asking about before you hire anyone.
We work throughout the area and have seen these soil and climate conditions on job sites everywhere from neighborhoods near Wichita Falls to properties out toward Lawton, OK. The base preparation steps that matter most here - soil compaction, gravel sub-base, and proper control joint placement - are not optional extras. They are the difference between a floor that lasts twenty years and one that starts cracking in two.
Call or fill out our contact form and we will get back to you within one business day to set up a time. Most contractors cannot give a firm price without seeing the space - we will come measure your garage and look at the existing slab before quoting anything.
Once you agree on a price, we handle the building permit application with the City of Wichita Falls before any work begins. The permit process usually takes a few business days and is handled entirely on our end - you just need to know it is happening.
The crew breaks up and hauls away the old slab on day one, then grades and compacts the soil underneath. This step is loud and generates a lot of debris, but it is usually done in a single day. The base work here is what separates a slab that holds from one that cracks within two years.
The pour itself moves quickly - a standard two-car garage is usually done and finished within a few hours on day two. Plan on keeping vehicles out for at least seven days while the slab gains strength. Your contractor will give you a clear go-ahead when it is ready for normal use.
Free estimate, no pressure. We respond within one business day and pull all required permits so your project is on record with the city.
(940) 298-1855We pull a building permit from the City of Wichita Falls before any work begins - no exceptions. That means your job is inspected, on record, and will not come back as a problem during a future home sale.
The clay soil in Wichita Falls never stops moving. We compact the subgrade and install a proper gravel base before every pour - the step that most failed slabs skipped. The American Concrete Institute standards we follow exist precisely because base prep determines whether a slab holds for decades or starts cracking within a couple of years.
Wichita Falls regularly sees temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in July and August. We schedule summer pours for early morning and use additives that slow the drying process, because concrete that dries too fast cracks before it finishes hardening. This is something we do on every summer job, not just the ones that cost more.
We have poured and replaced garage floors across Wichita Falls and surrounding communities, from urban neighborhoods near Sheppard Air Force Base to properties farther out in the region. That range of local job experience means we have seen the soil conditions and home ages that show up across this market - and we know what each one requires.
The combination of permit compliance, correct base preparation, and heat-aware scheduling is what separates a garage floor that holds for twenty-plus years from one that starts failing by year three. Those are not upsells - they are the basics done right.
Add color, texture, or a stamped pattern to your new garage slab for a finished look that holds up to North Texas heat and daily use.
Learn moreNew concrete floors for workshops, additions, and interior spaces poured with the same base-prep discipline as our garage slabs.
Learn moreSpring and fall book up fast in Wichita Falls - lock in your project date before the summer heat makes scheduling harder.