Garage Floor Paint & Epoxy Coatings
Floor paint is a purpose-built category: the surface, traffic level, and chemical exposure all determine which coating you need. Paint Outlets carries a focused selection of floor coatings, from epoxy floor paint and concrete floor paint to porch and floor paint, backed by the full Benjamin Moore professional lineup.
What to Know Before You Buy Floor Paint
Floor paint is a purpose-built category: the surface, traffic level, and chemical exposure all determine which coating you need. Paint Outlets carries a focused selection of floor coatings, from epoxy floor paint and concrete floor paint to porch and floor paint, backed by the full Benjamin Moore professional lineup.
Surface type and traffic level determine everything. Concrete floor paint products are built differently from wood floor finishes. Epoxies and urethane-based coatings are chemically reactive systems that bond to the substrate and cure to a hard, chemical-resistant film. Acrylic floor coatings are single-component and easier to apply, but they sacrifice durability in high-traffic, hot tire, or chemical-exposure environments.
Before any coating goes down, the floor needs to be properly prepared. A clean, dry substrate is the baseline. Any previous coating must be removed or thoroughly abraded, and grease or curing compounds cleaned off completely. Use our sanding and abrasives supplies for mechanical prep on wood surfaces, and reach for a bonding primer when adhesion is uncertain.
Key variables to consider before selecting a floor coating:
- Surface: concrete, wood, tile, or masonry?
- Use: residential garage, commercial facility, porch, or interior floor?
- Traffic: foot traffic only, or vehicle and equipment load?
- Chemical exposure: oil, salt, solvents?
- Finish: low sheen, satin, or gloss?
The Right Floor Paint for Every Surface
Porch and Floor Paint for Many Surfaces
Wood porches, basement concrete floors, and interior wood floors need a porch and floor paint that moves with the material, resisting cracking and peeling as wood expands and contracts with temperature and humidity changes. For exterior wood surfaces, pair it with a compatible exterior primer from our exterior paint collection for complete protection. For Deck surfaces consider a Woodluxe Solid Stain for longer durability.
Floor Paint for Wood: Interior Applications
Interior hardwood floors that need a stained or pigmented finish call for a different system. Our Lenmar® floor finishes are waterborne and solvent-based professional wood coatings used by floor finishing contractors. Any floor that needs patching or repair work before the finish goes down should be addressed first.
Best Floor Paint for High-Traffic Garage Floors
High-traffic garage floors need a coating that handles more than foot traffic. Vehicle weight, hot tires, oil drips, road salt, and repeated abrasion all break down standard floor paint within a season. For these conditions, the right answer is an epoxy-based garage floor coating, specifically the Polyamide Epoxy HP4000 or the 100% Solids Epoxy HP4300 from Benjamin Moore's HP line.
Both systems build a thick, chemically resistant film on concrete that standard acrylic floor paint cannot match. If the floor also needs a non-slip surface for safety compliance, the HP Anti-Slip Aggregate HP6300 mixes directly into your floor coating. For contractor crews running multiple garage jobs, call (248) 598-0311 ext. 2 for bulk pricing and job-site drop-ship. Check the monthly ProSaver deals for any active promotions on HP floor products.
How to Apply Epoxy Floor Paint for Concrete
Applying epoxy floor paint to concrete follows a defined sequence, and skipping any step compromises the final result. Here is the standard process used by professional painters:
1. Surface prep: Clean the concrete thoroughly. Remove all grease, oil, and curing compounds. Grind or acid-etch the surface to open the concrete's pores and create a mechanical profile for the epoxy to grip.
2. Repair cracks and holes: Fill any cracks or spalls with a compatible patching compound and allow it to cure fully before coating.
3. Prime if required: For porous or previously coated concrete, apply a compatible bonding primer first. Some HP epoxy systems are self-priming on properly profiled concrete.
4. Mix the epoxy: Two-component epoxy systems like the HP4000 and HP4300 require precise mixing of Part A and Part B at the specified ratio. Work in batches sized to your pot life.
5. Apply: Roll or brush the epoxy within the application window. Most professional-grade systems require application between 50°F and 90°F. Maintain a wet edge to avoid lap marks.
6. Allow full cure: Light foot traffic is typically possible within 24 hours, but vehicle traffic requires full cure, usually 5 to 7 days. Do not rush this stage.
Have questions about which epoxy system is right for your concrete floor? Call (248) 598-0311 ext. 6 for online order support, or stop in at any of our three Michigan locations.
Garage Floor Coating: Paint vs. Epoxy
This question comes up constantly. The short answer: epoxy wins for most garage floors. A garage floor coating built on an epoxy system bonds to concrete at a molecular level, resists hot tires, oil and road salt, and holds up to vehicle traffic in ways that standard acrylic floor paint does not.
The tradeoff is prep time and application complexity. Epoxy systems require thorough surface preparation, precise mixing, and application within a specific temperature range. If you want to get a serviceable result quickly for a light-duty residential garage, a quality single-component acrylic concrete floor paint is a legitimate option, but will not stand up to hot vehicle tires.
For contractor crews doing commercial or industrial floor work, the HP line gives you the full range: 100% solids epoxy, polyamide epoxy, urethane topcoats, and anti-slip aggregate. Check the current ProSaver deals for any active promotions on floor coatings and supplies.
Order Online or Pick Up at Any of Our Three Michigan Stores
Paint Outlets ships floor paint and floor coatings nationwide via UPS, with most orders out the door same or next business day. Prefer to pick up in person? All three locations, Shelby Township, Rochester Hills, and Macomb, offer curbside pickup. Free local delivery is available within our service area.
Need a large order? Call (248) 598-0311 ext. 2 for bulk pricing on 48+ gallons, with drop-ship to your job site available. Have questions about which coating system is right for your floor? Call ext. 6 for online order support, or stop in and talk to our team.
Floor Paint FAQs
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The right floor paint depends on the surface. For concrete garage floors, an epoxy floor paint or DTM enamel gives you the hardness and chemical resistance you need. For wood porches or interior hardwood floors, use a purpose-built porch and floor paint or a penetrating floor finish. Benjamin Moore's Ultra Spec® HP floor coatings are engineered for concrete and masonry. For wood floors, our Lenmar® wood floor finishes offer professional-grade durability in clear and tintable options.
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Yes, when you pick the right product for the surface. Floor paint seals and protects against foot traffic, moisture, and staining, and it is one of the most cost-effective ways to refresh a worn concrete, tile, or wood surface. The key is proper surface prep: clean, dry, and free of contaminants. Visit our patching and repair and sanding collections to make sure your floor is ready before the first coat goes down.
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Yes. Benjamin Moore's HP line includes self-leveling epoxy coatings for smooth, flat concrete floors. The 100% Solids Epoxy HP4300 is a maximum-build formula that self-levels on application, filling minor surface imperfections. For best results, floors should be clean, profiled, and free of previous coatings. Call us at (248) 598-0311 for guidance on whether your floor is a good candidate for a self-leveling system.
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For concrete floors, sanding is rarely the right prep method. Grinding or acid etching is the standard approach to open the concrete's pores and give the coating something to grip. For wood floors, light sanding is recommended to remove gloss from any previous finish. Skipping surface prep is the leading cause of floor paint failure. If you need primers to improve adhesion, we carry bonding primers that can bridge some surface prep gaps, but they are not a substitute for proper mechanical preparation.
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Polyurea coatings are frequently cited as significantly stronger than standard epoxy, with higher tensile strength, faster cure times, and greater resistance to abrasion and UV degradation. For most residential and commercial garage floor applications, however, a quality epoxy system like the HP4300 or HP4000 delivers more than adequate performance. If you are working on an industrial floor application with extreme load or chemical exposure requirements, call us at (248) 598-0311 before selecting a coating system.
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Epoxy is the stronger answer for most garage floors. Standard floor paint wears quickly under vehicle traffic, hot tires, and chemicals. A garage floor coating built on an epoxy system, like the HP4000 or HP4300, bonds to concrete at a molecular level, resists oil and salt, and lasts years longer than a brushed-on acrylic. If budget is a factor, the DTM Acrylic Enamel HP3320 is a cost-effective middle ground. Either way, surface prep determines longevity more than the product itself.
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A single-component acrylic garage floor coating is the most accessible option for homeowners on a tighter budget. For competitive pricing, check our rotating ProSaver deals for floor coatings and supplies. If you are buying 48+ gallons, call ext. 2 for bulk pricing and drop-ship to your job site. Whichever product you choose, proper prep and a bonding primer will extend the life of any floor coating significantly.