Epoxy Floor Contractor in Port Huron, MI

Port Huron's location right on the water means homes here deal with more humidity, more moisture, and more wear on basement and garage concrete than most inland areas.

Why Port Huron Homes Need Moisture Resistant Flooring

Being this close to Lake Huron and the St. Clair River means higher humidity levels almost year-round, and that moisture finds its way into basement and garage concrete over time. Untreated, it leads to that musty smell, dusty floors, and concrete that never quite feels dry — even with a dehumidifier running.

Signs your Port Huron home could use an epoxy floor:

Flakes epoxy garage floor finish for durability and style by DS Epoxy Floors LLC in Michigan

Epoxy Coating for Garage Floors in Port Huron, MI

Garage floors here take on more than oil and tire marks — road salt off the highway, moisture tracked in from boats and trailers, and humidity that never fully clears out. An epoxy coating for garage floors handles all of it with one sealed, chemical-resistant surface.

Built for what Port Huron garages deal with:

michigan basement

Epoxy Floor Contractor for Basements in Port Huron, MI

As a local epoxy floor contractor for basements in Port Huron, we test moisture levels before we ever apply a coating — it's the step a lot of cheaper jobs skip, and it's the reason some epoxy floors fail within a year near the water. Once we confirm the slab is ready, we apply a sealed, moisture-resistant system that's built to hold up in this climate specifically.

What you get:

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FAQs

Yes — in fact, that's exactly where epoxy performs best compared to other flooring options. We test moisture levels in the concrete before installation to make sure the floor is sealed properly for this climate.

We test for moisture before every basement installation, use industrial-grade materials, and handle the entire job with our own crew — no subcontractors. You get one team accountable from start to finish.

Yes. Our epoxy coatings are sealed against salt, slush, and de-icing chemicals, so they won't pit or break down the way bare concrete does over a Michigan winter.

Yes, including the surrounding St. Clair County communities along the water.