Solid Color Epoxy Garage and Light Commercial Floor System

Professional Grade All In One Epoxy Systems

Your Commercial Epoxy Flooring System Consists Of:

An Epoxy Primer, A 100% Solids Pre-Pigmented Epoxy Base Coat, And a 100% Solid Body Coat.

Additional Primers, Moisture Vapor Barriers, and Top Coat Upgrades are Available Below

Need Help? Additional Details Or Browse Our Project FAQ’s

Build Your Solid Color Epoxy Garage and Light Commercial Floor System

Your Solid Color Epoxy Flooring System Consists Of Water Base Primer, And A 100% Solids Pre-Pigmented Epoxy Base Coat.


Additional Primers, Moisture Vapor Barriers, and Tool Upgrades Available Below

Step 1 - Choose Your Base Color *

Step 2 - Choose Your Square Footage

Primers and Moisture Vapor Barrier *

Top Coat *

Application Products and Tools

Total 0

Solid Color Epoxy Garage and Light Commercial Floor System Breakdown

Solid Color Epoxy Garage and Light Commercial Floor System Layers Explained

1Epoxy Primers

Your system begins with a high quality epoxy primer designed to improve adhesion, reduce outgassing, and seal the concrete surface.

Applied directly to properly prepared concrete, this critical first layer helps create a stronger bond between the substrate and your solid color epoxy floor.

Choose our standard WB Epoxy Primer for most concrete slabs, upgrade to a Moisture Vapor Barrier (MVB) for elevated moisture conditions, or use Fusion Primer for wood, previously coated, or difficult substrates.

Coverage rate 200 - 250 SFPG.

Allow primer to cure before Step 2

2Base Coat

The base coat is the heart of your flooring system.

This layer uses a commercial grade, 100% solids, pre pigmented epoxy that delivers rich color, excellent build thickness, and a smooth, uniform appearance.

Installed directly over the cured primer, this layer forms the main body of your solid color epoxy floor.

For slip resistant applications, anti slip aggregates such as silica sand or aluminum oxide can be broadcast into the wet epoxy before moving to the next step.

Coverage rate approximately 133 – 150 SFPG.

Allow base coat to cure before Step 3

3Top Coat

A dedicated topcoat provides the final layer of defense for your solid color epoxy floor.

Without a protective sealer, epoxy can be more susceptible to scratching, scuffing, UV discoloration, staining, and chemical exposure.

Choose the topcoat that best fits your environment, gloss level, chemical resistance needs, and desired working time.

Popular options include urethane, polyaspartic, polyurethane, and specialty performance coatings depending on your application.

Typical cure time 48 – 72 hours before service

Solid Color Epoxy Garage and Light Commercial Floor System | Professional Grade Coating System

If you are looking for a solid color epoxy floor system that delivers true industrial performance, a clean uniform finish, and the durability to handle real world traffic, you are in the right place. This is not a paint kit and it is not a watered down bigbox "epoxy" kit that's nothing but enamel paint. This is a complete commercial grade, solid color epoxy floor system.

One Stop Epoxy Solid Color Epoxy Garage and Light Commercial Floor Systems are designed for contractors, installers, and serious DIY customers who want a uniform colored floor with professional grade materials and coverage rates to manufacturer specifications. These systems are commonly installed in residential garages, lanais, workshops, warehouses, manufacturing facilities, storage rooms, mechanical rooms, and other concrete floors where a clean colored finish is the priority.

Whether you are coating a residential garage floor, a small commercial shop, or a light industrial space, this system is designed to help you build it correctly from the ground up.

What Is a Solid Color Epoxy Floor System?

A solid color epoxy floor system is a multi layer resinous floor system that starts with an epoxy primer, then pre-pigmented 100% solids epoxy and a topcoat to create a seamless, uniformly colored concrete floor. Unlike metallic or flake finishes, the goal is a clean monochromatic appearance with consistent color across the entire surface.

Solid color floors are the workhorse of the epoxy world. They are clean, professional, easy to maintain, and built to perform. A properly built solid color epoxy floor system typically includes:

  • Concrete Surface Preparation: The essential foundation for a permanent bond.
  • Epoxy Primer or Moisture Vapor Barrier: Seals the slab and improves long term performance.
  • Pigmented 100% Solids Epoxy Color Coat: The uniform color layer that defines the floor.
  • Optional Second Color Coat: For deeper color saturation or higher film build.
  • Protective Clear Topcoat: The final shield for wear, chemical, and UV resistance.

Each layer plays a critical role in both the final appearance and the long term performance of the floor.

How Solid Color Epoxy Floors Are Built

A solid color epoxy floor is built in a step by step system where each layer affects the final result. When installed correctly, the floor has a clean, even color, a smooth surface, and the chemical and abrasion resistance to hold up under real world use.

Step 1. Concrete Preparation

The concrete must be mechanically ground to open the surface and create the proper concrete surface profile for adhesion. Grinding is a critical part of the system. Acid etching, light sanding, or surface cleaning alone is not an acceptable substitute for proper mechanical preparation and will lead to bond failure. On clean, well profiled concrete that meets the proper conditions, a Fusion Primer may be used as an alternative to grinding.

Step 2. Primer or Moisture Vapor Barrier

We include a primer with every Solid Color Epoxy Floor Kit. An epoxy primer is used to improve bond, reduce outgassing, and create a more uniform substrate for the rest of the system. Primers are especially useful on porous concrete and in situations where surface consistency matters. When upgrading to a Moisture Vapor Barrier (MVB), the MVB becomes your primer coat and is required for slabs with elevated moisture vapor emission rates. Visit our resource center to learn how to test for moisture

Step 3. Pigmented Color Coat

The color coat is the heart of the solid color system. This is a 100% solids pre pigmented commercial grade epoxy that delivers the uniform color you see on the finished floor. Because it is 100% solids and pre pigmented at the factory, you get consistent color, high film build, and the chemistry needed for long term performance. Our epoxy is delivered to you in short fill buckets eliminating the need for epoxy mixing buckets from your local hardware store.

Step 4. Optional Second Color Coat

For high traffic areas, deeper color saturation, or projects where added film build is required, a second color coat can be applied over the first. This is a common upgrade in light commercial and industrial spaces where the floor will see heavy use.

Step 5. Protective Clear Topcoat

The system is then sealed with a protective topcoat to improve wear resistance, scratch resistance, chemical resistance, UV stability, and long term service life. Depending on your project needs, this may be a high performance urethane topcoat or a rapid curing polyaspartic topcoat.

What Makes Solid Color Epoxy Different?

Solid color epoxy floors are different from metallic and flake systems because the priority is performance, uniformity, and clean appearance rather than decorative artistry. When properly installed, a solid color epoxy floor system delivers:

  • Uniform Color Across the Entire Floor: A clean, even finish from wall to wall.
  • A Seamless Non Porous Surface: No grout lines or joints to trap dirt, oil, or chemicals.
  • High Chemical Resistance: Stands up to automotive fluids, cleaners, and most industrial chemicals.
  • Excellent Abrasion Resistance: Built to handle foot traffic, tire traffic, dropped tools, and rolling equipment.
  • Easy Cleaning: Sweep and damp mop. That is most of the maintenance.
  • A Professional Industrial Appearance: The look you expect in a serious shop, warehouse, or commercial space.

Coverage and Build Rate

Solid color epoxy floors are installed at the coverage rates the chemistry was engineered for. Stretching the material thin to cover more square footage does not save money. It costs you film build, color depth, durability, and ultimately the life of the floor.

Color Coat Coverage

Our 100% solids pre pigmented epoxy color coats are applied at approximately 133 - 150 square feet per gallon. At this rate, the color coat is generally installed at roughly 10 to 12 mils thick, which is the proper film build for a true industrial coating.

Why Film Build Matters

Film build is what separates a real epoxy floor from a painted concrete floor. A 10 to 12 mil color coat plus a primer and topcoat gives you a complete coating system that can handle real world traffic, chemical exposure, and abrasion. Hardware store kits are often installed at 3 to 5 mils total, which is one of several reasons they wear off in a season or two.

Common Applications

Solid color epoxy floor systems are installed across a wide range of residential, commercial, and light industrial spaces where performance, cleanliness, and a uniform appearance matter most.

  • Residential garages and home workshops.
  • Florida lanais and screened patios.
  • Mechanical rooms and utility rooms.
  • Storage rooms and stockrooms.
  • Light manufacturing and assembly areas.
  • Warehouses and distribution facilities.
  • Auto repair shops and detail bays.
  • Veterinary clinics and pet kennels.
  • Commercial kitchens and back of house spaces.
  • Fire stations, sheriff substations, and municipal buildings.
  • Hangars and equipment storage.
  • Pharmaceutical, food service, and processing back rooms.

What Can Be Included in a Solid Color Epoxy Floor System?

Every concrete slab is different, which is why solid color epoxy floor systems should be built around actual jobsite conditions rather than treated as one size fits all packages. Depending on the specific needs of your project, your professional system may include:

  • Epoxy Primer: For improved substrate wetting, superior adhesion, and reduced outgassing.
  • Moisture Vapor Barrier: High performance epoxy for slabs with elevated moisture vapor emission rates.
  • Fusion Primer: A specialized solution for use when concrete conditions and profiles are favorable.
  • 100% Solids Pigmented Color Coat: The essential foundation for color uniformity and film build.
  • Optional Second Color Coat: For added thickness and deeper color saturation in high traffic areas.
  • Crack and Joint Repair Materials: For leveling the substrate before the coating process begins.
  • Urethane or Polyaspartic Topcoat: High performance clear seals for durability and chemical resistance.
  • Anti Slip Additives: For traction in wet service areas, ramps, and exterior lanais.

Instead of a one size fits all approach, our every available option strategy allows you to build the right system for your specific floor without paying for materials you do not need or leaving out components that matter.

Topcoat Selection Matters

We offer multiple topcoats because the final layer is a critical part of the system. It affects the physical protection of the floor, the gloss level, the UV stability, and the long term maintenance requirements.

Polyaspartic Topcoat

We offer our Poly Gloss 85 Slow Go polyaspartic topcoat. This system provides 60+ minutes of working time and lays down like a sheet of glass. It is the only product in our lineup that combines incredible ease of use with elite performance and excellent gloss retention. Polyaspartic is the top choice for solid color floors that need fast return to service and superior UV stability.

Urethane Topcoat

Urethane topcoats are often selected when added scratch resistance and long term wear performance are the primary priorities. In many environments, they are an excellent choice for preserving the appearance of the floor. Keep in mind that a slight orange peel texture is a natural characteristic of a urethane top coat.

Choosing the Right Finish

The correct topcoat choice depends entirely on your specific environment, the level of foot or vehicle traffic, expected chemical exposure, UV sun exposure, and how the floor will be utilized day to day. A garage in direct Florida sun has different needs than a back of house commercial kitchen.

Is a Solid Color Epoxy Floor DIY Friendly?

A solid color epoxy floor is the most DIY friendly system we offer. It is more forgiving than metallic or flake systems because there is no decorative manipulation step. The goal is a clean even coat, not artistic movement. That said, the chemistry, concrete prep, and application standards are the same as our professional systems. This is not a one gallon hardware store kit.

Critical Professional Advice: This is not a big box store kit that is essentially enamel paint. Professional grade 100% solids epoxy requires proper concrete grinding, precise mix ratios, and proper application technique. The system is forgiving compared to a metallic floor, but it is not forgiving compared to a paint job.

Important DIY Considerations

  • Professional Chemistry: This is 100% solids industrial epoxy, not a hardware store kit. The mix, the open time, and the application method are entirely different.
  • Substrate Preparation: The concrete must be properly ground or must meet the ideal conditions required for a Fusion Primer.
  • Defect Visibility: Epoxy will not fill in surface imperfections. Cracks, divots, and surface defects must be repaired and leveled first.
  • Precision Mixing: Mix ratios and working times must be followed to the letter. Because this is a chemical reaction, close does not count.
  • Roller Technique: Solid color coats are typically rolled. A consistent rolling pattern, proper film build, and a maintained wet edge are required to avoid lap marks and roller stripes.
  • Thermal Constraints: Application in temperatures below 50 degrees or above 85 degrees can lead to avoidable challenges or total system failure.
  • No Shortcuts: Skipping steps or rushing the process will be visible in the finished floor.

For best results, the system should be installed as a full multi layer flooring system, not as a shortcut application.

Why Buy a Solid Color Epoxy Floor System From One Stop Epoxy?

There are plenty of solid color epoxy kits online, but many leave out critical materials, understate coverage needs, or oversimplify the installation process. One Stop Epoxy Solid Color Epoxy Floor Systems are built differently.

Built Like Real Floors Are Built

These systems are structured around the way professional solid color floors are actually installed in the field, not around stripped down product bundles designed to look cheaper on a screen.

Professional Grade Materials

We use 100% solids pre pigmented industrial epoxy. This is not watered down paint in epoxy clothing. These are the same materials used by commercial contractors installing floors for warehouses, manufacturing facilities, and light industrial spaces.

Realistic Coverage Rates

Coverage and film build are everything in a real epoxy floor. Systems that are undersized may save a few dollars on the front end but leave you with a thin coating that fails years before it should.

System Flexibility

Not every project needs the exact same build. This page gives you the ability to customize your system around your specific slab condition, color choice, and performance expectations.

Build Your Solid Color Epoxy Floor the Right Way

A solid color epoxy floor system should do more than just paint concrete. It should create a seamless, uniform, durable coating that performs for years. Choose your color, select your topcoat, and add any upgrades your slab condition requires. Then, build a floor that holds up because it was built right.

Frequently Asked Questions About Solid Color Epoxy Flooring

What is a solid color epoxy floor?

A solid color epoxy floor is a multi layer coating system that uses 100% solids pigmented epoxy to create a seamless, uniformly colored surface over prepared concrete. The system typically includes a primer, a pigmented color coat (sometimes two), and a protective clear topcoat. The result is a clean, monochromatic floor that is durable, easy to clean, and resistant to chemicals and abrasion.

How long does a solid color epoxy floor last?

When installed correctly over properly prepared concrete, a solid color epoxy floor typically lasts 10 to 15 years in a residential garage and 5 to 10 years in a high traffic commercial environment. The lifespan depends on traffic volume, chemical exposure, maintenance, and the topcoat used. A high performance urethane or polyaspartic topcoat will extend the service life of the system significantly.

Does a solid color epoxy floor require grinding?

Yes. Mechanical grinding is required for proper adhesion in nearly all cases. Acid etching or pressure washing is not sufficient. Skipping concrete grinding is the number one cause of epoxy floor failure. In some cases, a Fusion Primer can be used as an alternative when the concrete meets the proper conditions and profile, but this is the exception, not the rule.

Is a solid color epoxy floor slippery?

Solid color epoxy floors can be slippery when wet, especially with a high gloss topcoat. For interior dry service areas, slip is rarely an issue. For garages, lanais, ramps, and any area that may get wet, an anti slip additive can be added to the topcoat to improve traction.

Anti slip additives should only be used when needed, as they will change the look and feel of the floor. Instead of a smooth surface, the floor will take on a textured, sandpaper like feel that will be both seen and felt, and it will make routine cleaning more difficult. A light orange peel texture, which is a natural characteristic of urethane topcoats, can also provide modest improvement in traction without an additive.

Will a solid color epoxy floor yellow over time?

Ambering is primarily a concern with white and very light colored epoxy floors. The epoxy resin itself can amber over time when exposed to UV light. This is typically not noticeable in darker colors such as blues, blacks, dark grays, and browns. With white, light gray, or tan floors, some ambering should be expected over the years, especially in areas exposed to direct sunlight.

The more direct and intense the sunlight, the faster the ambering process will occur. A UV stable topcoat, such as a polyaspartic or urethane, is highly recommended to help maintain the original appearance. These topcoats slow the process significantly, but they will not entirely prevent the underlying epoxy from ambering over a very long period of time.

Can a solid color epoxy floor be installed in a garage?

Yes. Garage floors are one of the most common applications for solid color epoxy. The system handles tire traffic, dropped tools, automotive fluids, and routine cleaning. Keep in mind that solid color floors do not hide concrete imperfections the way a full flake floor does. Any cracks, divots, or surface defects must be repaired and leveled during prep, or they will be visible in the finished floor.

Can I install a solid color epoxy floor myself?

A solid color epoxy floor is the most DIY friendly system we offer. With proper concrete prep, accurate mixing, and good roller technique, a careful DIY customer can produce a great looking floor.

For smaller floors up to 400 square feet, one person can manage the installation, though a second set of hands is always helpful for cutting in edges and maintaining a wet edge. For floors between 400 and 1,000 square feet, two people is recommended. Larger projects of 1,000 square feet and up benefit from three people to keep the work moving and the wet edge consistent across the surface.

How thick is a solid color epoxy floor?

A solid color epoxy floor is a multi layer system, and the total thickness is the result of each layer working together. In most professional installations, the system will fall in the range of approximately 18 to 30 mils total, depending on the number of color coats and the topcoat selected.

The typical system breakdown is as follows:

  • Primer or Moisture Vapor Barrier: Approximately 4 to 12 mils.
  • 100% Solids Epoxy Color Coat: Approximately 10 to 12 mils.
  • Optional Second Color Coat: Approximately 8 to 10 mils.
  • Topcoat Sealer (Polyaspartic or Urethane): Approximately 4 to 8 mils.

Each layer plays a vital role in adhesion, color depth, durability, and overall mechanical strength. A floor with a single color coat and a topcoat is more than sufficient for most residential garages. Light commercial and industrial spaces benefit from the added film build of a second color coat.

What is the difference between solid color epoxy, flake epoxy, and metallic epoxy floors?

Solid color epoxy floors deliver a clean, uniform monochromatic appearance and are the most cost effective and DIY friendly system. They are ideal when performance, cleanliness, and consistency matter more than decorative effect.

Flake epoxy floors add vinyl flakes to the color coat, creating a textured, multi tone finish. Flake floors are excellent at hiding concrete imperfections and provide built in slip resistance due to the textured surface they create.

Metallic epoxy floors are decorative systems that use metallic pigments to create marbled, flowing, one of a kind patterns. They are the most expensive and labor intensive of the three and require a perfectly prepared substrate because any concrete imperfections will telegraph through the finished surface.

Each system has its place. Solid color is the working person's epoxy floor. Flake is the all around residential and light commercial favorite. Metallic is the showpiece.

How do you clean and maintain a solid color epoxy floor?

Solid color epoxy floors are remarkably easy to clean because they are seamless and non porous. Regular sweeping and occasional damp mopping with a neutral cleaner is usually all that is required to maintain the surface. For tougher spots, a soft bristle brush and a mild degreaser will do the job. Avoid harsh acidic or alkaline cleaners and abrasive scouring pads, as these can wear down the protective topcoat over time. For commercial floors, a daily sweep and a weekly auto scrub with a neutral cleaner is the standard.

Advanced Solid Color Epoxy Flooring Questions

Can solid color epoxy be applied over an existing coating?

In most cases, no. Solid color epoxy should be installed directly over properly prepared concrete. Existing coatings must be removed through mechanical grinding unless they are fully bonded and can be properly profiled and tested. Even when an existing coating appears sound, full removal is the safer and recommended approach to prevent bond failure. The new system is only as strong as what it is bonded to.

How do you avoid roller stripes and lap marks in a solid color floor?

Roller stripes and lap marks are the most common appearance issue with solid color floors. They are caused by inconsistent film build, working the material after it has begun to set, or losing the wet edge. To avoid them, work in manageable sections, roll in one consistent direction, back roll at the same pressure across the entire section, and keep a steady wet edge moving across the floor. A 3/8 inch nap roller cover is the standard for most solid color applications.

What temperature range is best for installing solid color epoxy floors?

Most solid color epoxy systems perform best between 65°F and 80°F. Higher temperatures reduce your working time and can cause the material to set before it fully levels, while lower temperatures increase viscosity and slow the cure significantly. It is critical to check the actual surface temperature of the concrete, as slabs can be substantially colder than the air temperature, especially in Florida garages early in the morning. The concrete must also be at least 5°F above the dew point at the time of application to avoid moisture related defects.

Do you need a moisture vapor barrier under a solid color epoxy floor?

If the concrete slab has elevated moisture vapor emission rates, a dedicated moisture vapor barrier epoxy must be installed prior to the color coat. Unresolved moisture issues can cause delamination, bubbling, blushing, or color defects in the finished floor. In Florida specifically, moisture is a real concern on any slab on grade with no vapor barrier underneath, on slabs in shaded or covered areas, and on any slab where past coating failures suggest moisture is present. When in doubt, test the slab or default to a moisture vapor barrier primer.

What causes bubbles or outgassing in solid color epoxy floors?

Bubbles are typically caused by outgassing from the concrete pores or air introduced during aggressive mixing. Outgassing occurs when air trapped within the concrete escapes as the slab warms up during application. To minimize this, always use a primer, mix your epoxy using a cage mixer at 300 to 450 RPM, avoid installing during a rising slab temperature, and back roll the color coat to release any air that has worked its way to the surface.

Why does a solid color floor look streaky or uneven?

A streaky or uneven solid color floor is almost always the result of one of three issues: inconsistent film build during application, not properly mixing the pigment back into the resin during the mix step, or applying the color coat over a substrate that was not properly primed. Pre pigmented epoxy must be boxed and mixed thoroughly before application, applied at the specified coverage rate, and back rolled in a consistent direction. Stretching the material to cover more square footage is a common cause of streaking.

Is a polyaspartic topcoat recommended over a solid color epoxy floor?

Yes. A polyaspartic topcoat is one of the best choices for a solid color epoxy floor, especially in environments with UV exposure or where fast return to service is needed. Traditional polyaspartics with 10 to 20 minute working times are often avoided because the short open time can leave behind a heavy orange peel texture. However, our Poly Gloss 85 Slow Go offers 60+ minutes of working time, which allows the material to level out and produce the smooth, glass like finish that pairs perfectly with a clean solid color floor.

Can a solid color epoxy floor be installed on a Florida lanai?

Yes, and lanais are one of the most common solid color applications we see in Central Florida. A few considerations matter for lanai installs. First, the slab is often subject to higher moisture exposure, so a moisture vapor barrier primer is frequently the right call. Second, sun exposure on a south or west facing lanai is intense, which makes a UV stable topcoat such as a polyaspartic the right choice. Third, lanais get wet, so an anti slip additive in the topcoat is recommended for safety. With those three considerations addressed, a solid color epoxy lanai floor will hold up beautifully for many years.

How soon can I walk on and drive on a new solid color epoxy floor?

Cure times vary by product, temperature, and humidity, but a typical solid color system with a polyaspartic topcoat is ready for foot traffic in 12 to 24 hours and vehicle traffic in 48 to 72 hours. A urethane topcoat is generally ready for foot traffic in 24 hours and vehicle traffic in 72 hours. Full chemical cure, which is when the floor reaches maximum hardness and chemical resistance, takes approximately 5 to 7 days. Avoid placing heavy items, dragging objects, or exposing the floor to harsh chemicals during the full cure window.

5-Star Rated Business

Positive feedback from a growing number of happy customers

Hassle-Free Checkout

Search for products, add them to cart, and checkout with ease

Nationwide Shipping

Across the United States with no minimum order requirement

Satisfaction Guaranteed

We are a team of experienced floor installers ready to assist you