We prepare the base, set the forms, place reinforcement, and pour a slab at the thickness your use calls for, from a standard car garage to a shop floor that has to carry heavier equipment. The surface is finished flat with a slope to the door so water drains instead of pooling.
Control joints are cut where they belong, so the slab cracks along the lines you choose rather than randomly across the floor.
What we handle
- Compacted granular base for a stable, long-lasting slab
- Reinforcement sized to the load the floor will carry
- Slope to the overhead door for proper drainage
- Saw-cut control joints to manage cracking
What affects your quote
- Slab thickness, based on whether it is for cars or heavier equipment
- Base preparation and how much grading or fill the site needs
- Drainage, slope, and any floor drain you want included
- Access for the concrete truck or whether a pump is required
Common questions
- How thick should a garage slab be?
- A typical residential garage floor is four inches, while shops or slabs carrying heavier vehicles often need more. We size the thickness and reinforcement to how you will use the space.
- Will the slab crack?
- All concrete moves. We control where it cracks with a compacted base, proper reinforcement, and saw-cut joints, so any cracking follows the joints rather than showing across the floor.
- Do you pour slabs for detached garages and shops?
- Yes, attached garages, detached garages, and shop floors across the GTA, Durham, Halton, Peel, York Region, and Simcoe County.
Request a Garage Slabs Quote
Tell us about your project and we'll get back to you within one business day. Straight answers, no runaround.