Decorative Concrete of Austin hears a version of the same question on almost every estimate call: how do I know what to budget for this? The challenge is that decorative concrete covers a wide range of finishes and project types. A polished interior floor is a fundamentally different project from a stamped concrete patio, and a garage epoxy coating is different from both. What they share is that the final cost depends on variables that can only be assessed in person. This guide explains what those variables are and how to think about budgeting before the estimate.
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ToggleStart With the Surface Type
The first budgeting consideration is the type of surface you are working with. Interior floors, outdoor patios, driveways, and garage floors each have different cost structures because the prep requirements, finish systems, and sealer specifications differ.
Interior floor projects, whether stained concrete, polished concrete, or an epoxy coating, typically involve resurfacing existing concrete. The key variable is what was on the floor previously and what condition the slab is in underneath.
Outdoor projects, including concrete patios, driveways, and pool decks, may involve either new pours or resurfacing with a concrete overlay system. New pours carry excavation, base prep, and forming costs that resurfacing projects do not. The surface type determines which cost structure applies to your project.
Garage floors are a distinct category. Garage floor coatings, typically epoxy or polyaspartic systems, require specific surface prep and a coating designed for vehicle traffic, chemical resistance, and the temperature cycling that Austin garages experience throughout the year.
The Biggest Variable: Slab Condition
For any project that involves resurfacing existing concrete, slab condition is the largest cost driver. A clean slab in good condition that needs only standard diamond grinding before the finish is applied costs significantly less to prep than a slab with any of the following:
- Heavy oil or grease contamination, most common in garages and driveways
- Adhesive residue from old carpet, tile, or vinyl flooring
- Existing sealers or coatings that must be removed before a new finish can bond
- Surface damage including spalling, scaling, or significant cracking
- Moisture issues that require treatment before a coating can be applied
The only way to accurately assess slab condition is an in-person site visit. We cannot tell from photos what a slab actually needs. The estimate appointment is specifically structured to walk the surface, identify prep requirements, and include them in the written proposal so there are no surprises.
Finish Selection and Materials Cost
Once the prep requirements are established, the finish system you choose is the next major cost variable. Every finish type has a range of options within it.
For stained concrete, a basic single-color acid stain on a clean slab sits at one end of the cost range. A multi-layer system with a base acid stain, secondary water-based accent color, decorative borders, and a premium sealer sits at the other. Our stained concrete cost guide covers that breakdown in detail.
For polished concrete, the level of polish measured in grit levels determines how long the polishing phase takes and the quality of the final appearance. See our polished concrete cost guide for a full breakdown of what influences polishing project cost.
For epoxy garage floor coatings, the coating system, whether solid color, flake broadcast, metallic, or solid polyaspartic, affects materials cost directly. Our epoxy garage floor cost guide walks through the variables specific to garage applications.
Sealer Specification
Sealer selection affects both the project cost and the long-term maintenance cost. Exterior surfaces in Austin require UV-stable penetrating sealers formulated for Central Texas heat and sun exposure. Interior surfaces can use a wider range of sealer products, including water-based acrylics, polyurethanes, and epoxy-based sealers with different sheen levels.
The sealer is not a place to cut costs. In Austin’s climate, the right sealer protects the decorative finish from UV degradation, moisture intrusion, and the thermal cycling that concrete experiences between hot summers and occasional hard freezes. Outdoor surfaces typically require resealing every two to three years.
Project Size and Site Access

Surface area affects cost in a straightforward way: larger projects benefit from economies of scale because mobilization and setup cost is the same whether a crew is working on 200 or 2,000 square feet. The per-square-foot cost on a large project is typically lower than on a small one.
Site access affects cost in less obvious ways. For outdoor projects, access for a concrete truck matters. A patio in a backyard with a narrow gate or limited clearance requires more coordination and may affect how the pour is staged. For interior projects, finished spaces with furniture, low clearance, or appliances in place add handling time to the prep and installation phases.
In suburban areas like Leander and Pflugerville where newer construction is more common, sites tend to have more accessible grading and clearer truck access than infill lots in older Austin neighborhoods. Newer slabs in good condition with clear access move efficiently through prep, though newer slab surfaces can also have different prep requirements than aged concrete.
Getting to an Accurate Number
The only reliable way to establish a budget for a decorative concrete project is to have the slab assessed in person. We have completed more than 1,000 projects across Central Texas since 2012 and are fully insured. The free estimate appointment takes the variables above, including surface type, slab condition, finish selection, and site access, and turns them into a written proposal with a clear scope and a firm number.
Contact us to schedule your free estimate. We serve Austin, Cedar Park, Round Rock, Georgetown, Lakeway, Pflugerville, Leander, and the surrounding area.