Why Your Epoxy Garage Floor Is Peeling

(And How to Fix It)

Greenville Supreme Epoxy Flooring has been installing epoxy and concrete flooring systems throughout Greenville, SC and the upstate for over 20 years! If your epoxy garage floor is peeling, bubbling, or lifting in sheets, the coating itself is rarely the problem. The problem is almost always what happened — or didn't happen — before the coating went down. Peeling epoxy is one of the most common calls we receive at Greenville Supreme Epoxy Flooring, and in the vast majority of cases, the root cause is identifiable within minutes of looking at the floor.

Why Choose Us

We Do the Prep Right, Every Time

We grind every floor before we coat it. We test for moisture. We repair cracks and spalled areas. We apply vapor barriers where the slab calls for it. Every single job, no exceptions.

That's not extra — that's just how it's supposed to be done.

Professional-Grade Materials Built for

South Carolina

We use 100% professional-grade coating systems — UV-stable materials for outdoor applications, chemical-resistant formulations for automotive and industrial shops, anti-microbial systems for healthcare and food service, and fast-cure polyaspartic for clients who can't afford extended downtime.

Straight Pricing,

No Surprises

We come to your location, look at the floor, and give you a clear estimate based on what's actually there. We're not in the habit of low-balling estimates and tacking on charges once work starts. If something unexpected comes up — like elevated moisture readings or a previous coating that needs to be stripped — we tell you before we proceed, not after.

Get a FREE Estimate

The Number One Cause: Inadequate Surface Preparation

The Concrete Coating Contractors Association estimates that more than 80% of coating failures trace back to improper surface preparation — not product quality, not application technique, not environmental conditions.

Epoxy bonds to concrete at a molecular level, but only when the surface is open, clean, and profiled correctly. Concrete that hasn't been mechanically ground has a surface layer of laitance — a weak, dusty film — that epoxy adheres to instead of the solid aggregate beneath it. When that layer separates from the slab, the coating comes with it.

The two most common prep failures are rolling over bare concrete without grinding first, and coating over existing paint or sealer without removing it. Both produce a coating that bonds to surface contamination rather than concrete, and fails within one to two seasonal cycles. The fix requires complete removal of the failed coating and diamond grinding to a clean, open concrete profile before anything new goes down.

The Second Cause: Moisture Vapor Transmission

Moisture coming up through the slab from below is the second most common cause of epoxy failure in Greenville-area garages — and the one most homeowners don't anticipate.

Concrete is porous. Ground moisture in Greenville's clay-heavy Piedmont soils wicks upward through the slab constantly. If vapor pressure underneath the coating exceeds the coating's bond strength, the coating delaminates from below — often producing a distinctive bubbling pattern before full failure occurs. Greenville averages nearly 50 inches of rainfall annually, and garage slabs throughout the Augusta Road corridor, North Main, and Botany Woods regularly test above acceptable vapor transmission thresholds.

The only way to quantify moisture accurately is with calcium chloride or relative humidity probe testing before coating. When readings are elevated, a specialized vapor barrier primer must go down before the finish system. A coating installed over an untested, high-moisture slab will fail — the timeline varies, but failure is essentially guaranteed.

Why DIY Kits Fail at Higher Rates

Hardware store epoxy kits fail at significantly higher rates than professionally installed systems for two compounding reasons: the product and the process.

Most DIY products are water-based, low-solids formulations — typically 40–50% solids by volume versus 100% solids in professional-grade systems. Lower solids means thinner dry film, weaker bond strength, and lower resistance to hot tire pickup. The process problem compounds it: DIY kits instruct acid etching rather than mechanical grinding. Acid etching cleans the surface but doesn't create the mechanical profile diamond grinding produces — so the coating bonds adequately until temperature cycling or moisture pressure separates it.

What a Correct Fix Looks Like

Recoating over a peeling floor doesn't fix the problem — it adds a layer over the existing failure. A correct remediation requires complete removal of the failed coating via diamond grinding, moisture testing, vapor barrier primer if readings are elevated, crack and spall repair, and application of a 100% solids professional-grade system in the correct sequence.

That process costs more than a surface recoat. It also produces a floor that lasts 15–20 years instead of one to two.

Get a Free Assessment in Greenville

If your garage floor is peeling, covering it with another coating before understanding why it failed makes the next failure worse. Greenville Supreme Epoxy Flooring offers free on-site assessments throughout Greenville County — we identify the failure cause, test for moisture, and give you a straight answer on what a correct fix requires.