The first thing people see — and the hardest-working slab you own
Your driveway sits in full sun, takes the full weight of every vehicle, and catches oil drips, tire marks, and every afternoon thunderstorm. Left bare, concrete stains, dusts, and cracks; a decorative coating seals it under a hard, colored surface that lifts the whole front of the house and shrugs off the abuse.
A driveway is the most demanding outdoor coating we do — it needs both serious hot-tire and traffic durability and UV stability. That means a diamond-ground slab, a polyurea base for a deep bond, and a UV-stable polyaspartic top coat so it never yellows in the sun.
Why prep is non-negotiable on a drivewayFull sun plus hot tires plus heavy loads is the toughest test a residential coating faces. Rolled-on or acid-etched driveway paint fails fast here. A mechanically ground profile is what lets the coating survive it. More on why polyaspartic wins outdoors →
What driveway coating includes
- Diamond grinding. The slab is mechanically ground to open the surface and create a bonding profile — no acid wash shortcuts.
- Crack & joint repair. Cracks, spalls, and control joints are repaired and blended.
- Polyurea base. A tough, fast-curing base coat sets the color and grips the slab.
- Anti-slip broadcast. Aggregate is broadcast in for wet-weather and tire traction.
- UV-stable top coat. A polyaspartic clear seals it — tire-mark-resistant, stain-resistant, and color-fast in the sun.
Finishes & curb appeal
Driveways look best in finishes that read as architectural, not garage-flashy: solid slate and charcoal tones, natural-stone textures, and subtle flake blends that hide tire marks and dirt between washes. We can match or complement your garage floor so the driveway, apron, and garage flow together as one clean approach to the house.
A note on badly broken slabsCoatings resurface sound concrete — they don't rebuild it. If a driveway is heaving or badly broken up, we'll tell you honestly on the walkthrough whether it needs slab repair first. No point coating a slab that's failing underneath.
