
Cracked, uneven, or flaking concrete floors are a fixable problem. We pour reinforced slabs for garages, patios, and room conversions - prepped for Chino Hills clay soil so your floor lasts.

Concrete floor installation in Chino Hills starts with ground preparation - compacting soil, laying a gravel base, and placing reinforcement - then the slab is poured, leveled, and finished in one to three days depending on the area size.
Most homeowners come to us with one of a few situations: a garage floor that has cracked and stained past the point of patching, a patio that has settled unevenly, or a room they are converting that needs a fresh slab. In Chino Hills, the clay-rich soil under many homes is the main reason floors degrade faster than expected - without proper ground prep, the slab is fighting the soil from day one.
Floor installation often pairs well with other concrete work. If you are setting up a new garage space, a garage floor concrete pour gives you a surface built for vehicle weight. Or if you are creating outdoor living space, we can combine floor work with concrete pool decks for a coordinated finish.
A hairline crack here and there is normal in older concrete, but if you are noticing cracks that are spreading, widening, or have sections that sit at different heights, the slab underneath is moving or failing. In Chino Hills, clay-rich soil shifts with seasonal wet and dry cycles, which accelerates this kind of damage. Once a slab starts moving unevenly, patching the surface is usually just a temporary fix.
If water sits in low spots rather than draining away, your floor has likely settled unevenly over time. This is a common problem in hillside neighborhoods like Chino Hills, where soil movement can cause one section of a slab to drop slightly relative to another. Standing water also creates a slip hazard and can work its way under the slab and make the problem worse.
Concrete that has started to flake or pit on the surface - called spalling - is breaking down from the inside out. This often happens when the original pour was not done correctly, or when the surface has been exposed to years of oil, chemicals, or pressure washing. Once spalling starts, it tends to spread, and a new floor is usually more cost-effective than repeated patching.
If you tap the floor and hear a hollow sound, or if it feels slightly springy underfoot, there may be a void forming beneath the slab. This can happen when soil erodes or settles away from the underside of the concrete. Left alone, a hollow slab can eventually crack or collapse under weight - it is worth having a contractor take a look.
We pour new concrete floors for garages, patios, walkways, room conversions, and any other interior or exterior surface that needs a solid, level base. Every job starts with proper subgrade preparation - we compact the soil, add a gravel base, and place steel reinforcement before a drop of concrete goes down. That preparation is what most homeowners cannot see but what determines whether the floor still looks right in ten years. We also offer decorative finishes including broom, trowel, and exposed aggregate for outdoor areas, and we can match an existing surface if you are extending a current slab. For garage and workshop spaces, we work alongside our garage floor concrete service to pour slabs built for vehicle and equipment weight.
When a project calls for removing an old slab before the new pour, we handle demolition and hauling as part of the job. Outdoor spaces that combine a new floor with water features or seating areas can also incorporate concrete pool decks into the scope so everything is poured and finished to match. We pull permits through the City of Chino Hills when required and keep you informed at each step.
Best for homeowners replacing a cracked or stained garage slab who need a surface built for vehicle and storage loads.
Right for outdoor entertaining areas where you want a level, finished surface that holds up through Chino Hills wet-dry seasons.
Ideal for garage-to-living-space or basement projects where the existing floor is not smooth, level, or thick enough for the new use.
Suitable for homeowners who want more than plain gray concrete - broom, trowel, exposed aggregate, or polished finishes available.
Chino Hills sits on hillside terrain with significant clay-rich soil that swells when wet and shrinks in the summer heat. That movement puts stress on concrete slabs from below - which is why proper ground preparation and reinforcement are not optional extras here, they are the baseline. Chino Hills also regularly sees summer temperatures above 95 degrees, and pouring concrete in extreme heat is genuinely tricky. When it is too hot, the concrete can dry too fast on the surface before it has fully cured underneath, which leads to cracking and a weaker finished floor. Experienced local contractors schedule summer pours for early morning and take extra steps to keep the slab moist while it cures. The Portland Cement Association covers hot-weather concreting guidelines in detail, and the California Contractors State License Board lets you verify any contractor license in about 30 seconds.
We work regularly in Chino Hills and nearby Rancho Cucamonga, where HOA pre-approval for concrete work is common. We ask about HOA requirements during every estimate visit so there are no surprises after work starts.
Reach out by phone or the contact form and we will follow up within one business day. We ask a few questions about the area you want poured, how you plan to use it, and whether there is an existing slab to remove before we visit.
We come to your Chino Hills home, measure the area, check the existing surface or ground condition, and look for anything that could affect the job - drainage, soil that needs extra prep, or HOA restrictions. You get a written estimate with no obligation.
If your project requires a city permit, we handle the application and inspections. We let you know what to clear before the crew arrives - vehicles out of the garage, furniture off the patio, planters moved. A fully cleared space makes the job go faster and cleaner.
We prepare the ground, place reinforcement, pour and finish the slab, and cut control joints before we leave. We walk you through the curing timeline so you know when the floor is ready for foot traffic, vehicles, and heavy use - and what to watch for as it hardens.
Free on-site visit. Written quote before any commitment. Permits handled when required.
(909) 760-1029Chino Hills clay moves with the seasons - it swells in winter and shrinks in summer. We compact the subgrade and add a proper gravel base before every pour so your slab has a stable foundation that handles that movement instead of cracking because of it.
We work across Chino Hills, Chino, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, and eight other cities nearby. That regional footprint gives us direct experience with the soil conditions, permit offices, and HOA processes that affect concrete work across Southern California.
Chino Hills summers regularly push above 95 degrees. We schedule summer pours for early morning and take steps to keep the slab properly moist during curing - because rushing a pour in high heat produces a weaker, cracked surface that shows up in the finished floor.
You get a written estimate that spells out what is included - prep work, reinforcement, finish, and cleanup - before any work starts. The price you agree to is the price you pay. No scope creep, no surprises on the final invoice.
When you hire us for concrete floor installation in Chino Hills, you are getting a crew that prepares the ground correctly, pours to the right thickness for how you plan to use the space, and handles permits when they are required. That is the combination that produces a floor still worth looking at years from now.
Extend your outdoor concrete project to a pool surround poured and finished to match your new floor.
Learn moreA garage-specific slab poured thicker and reinforced to handle the daily weight of vehicles and heavy storage.
Learn moreSummer and fall schedules fill fast in Chino Hills - call or submit your request today to lock in your project date.