When you get competing quotes for a garage floor coating, most contractors will tell you they install a 3-coat polyaspartic system. Some of them are telling the truth. Most of them aren’t.
The difference between a true 3-coat system and the 2-coat shortcut that’s become standard in this industry isn’t just a number. It’s the reason floors peel. It’s the reason warranties get denied. And it’s the reason we’ve spent 16 years installing floors the way we do — with three full coats of polyaspartic coating, none of which is the flake.
Many companies in the Colorado Springs area now offer a 2-coat system, where they broadcast or throw the flake into the first coat of a rolled-on floor. They’ll tell you it’s the same. It isn’t. Don’t be fooled when a contractor counts the flake as one of the coats — a true 3-coat system gives you three layers of coating in addition to the flake.
Three coats are actually better than two
What “3 Coats” Actually Means — and Why It’s Being Misrepresented
Here’s what a legitimate 3-coat polyaspartic coating installation looks like:
- Coat 1 — Base coat (primer). Applied directly to the diamond-ground concrete. This is the bonding layer. It needs to soak into the open pores of the concrete undisturbed — no flake, no shortcuts.
- Coat 2 — Color coat. Applied over the cured base. The decorative flake is broadcast into this coat while it’s still wet, then the excess is swept off after it cures.
- Coat 3 — Polyaspartic topcoat. The protective finish layer. UV-stable, chemical-resistant, and the coat that determines how long the floor performs.
What most 2-coat contractors do instead: they skip the dedicated base coat and broadcast the flake directly into the first coat of resin. Then they apply a topcoat. Two coats total — but they call it three by counting the flake broadcast as a separate step.
That’s not a 3-coat system. And it’s not just a technicality. There’s a specific reason it causes floors to fail — and it comes down to surface tension.
The Science Behind Why 2-Coat Systems Fail
When polyaspartic coating is rolled onto concrete, surface tension is present in the wet film — the same phenomenon you see when water beads on a surface. For the coating to bond properly, that surface tension needs to stay low enough that the resin can soak into the millions of microscopic pores opened up by diamond grinding.
When a contractor broadcasts decorative flake directly into that first wet coat, the chips physically pull the resin toward them. This increases surface tension and prevents the resin from penetrating the concrete the way it needs to. The coating cures sitting on top of the floor rather than bonded into it. That’s what causes peeling and delamination — not a product failure, but an installation failure.
This is documented by Slide-Lok, whose products we use exclusively. Slide-Lok’s formulations include specific additives designed to manage and release surface tension during installation — but only when the system is applied correctly, with a dedicated base coat applied before the flake is introduced. The adhesion strength difference this produces is measurable: Slide-Lok’s pull-off strength test (ASTM D4541) documents the bond strength a correctly installed system achieves.
A 2-coat contractor using the same Slide-Lok label doesn’t get the same result if the process is wrong. The product is only as good as the installation sequence behind it.
Installing your Polyaspartic flooring to last
Why Most Contractors Do It Anyway
The 2-coat process is faster and cheaper to install. Broadcasting the flake into the base coat saves one full product coat and cuts labor time — which is how some contractors can offer a lower price point and market it as a same-day installation. (If you’ve seen competitors advertising “1-day coating,” that’s typically what it means: a 2-coat system compressed into a single visit.) That’s the business model, and it’s a legitimate one if the customer understands what they’re getting.
Most don’t. Because most contractors don’t explain any of this — they just say “3-coat system” and move on.
The floor will look identical on day one. The difference shows up in year two or three when the coating starts to lift at the edges, bubble in traffic areas, or delaminate under hot tires. By then, the contractor is long gone and the homeowner is looking at removal costs on top of a new installation.
We’ve been called in to remove and redo those floors. It’s not a rare situation — it’s one of the most common jobs we get.
If you’re still weighing polyaspartic against epoxy, we cover that comparison in detail — including why epoxy fails specifically in Colorado conditions — in this article.
Questions to Ask Before You Accept a Quote
Any contractor claiming to install a 3-coat polyaspartic system should be able to answer these without hesitation:
- “Is the base coat applied and fully cured before the flake is introduced?” A yes confirms a true 3-coat sequence. A vague answer — or “we do it all in one pass” — is a red flag.
- “What product do you use for each coat?” The base, color, and topcoat should each be 100% polyaspartic. If you hear “epoxy base” or “hybrid,” you’re not getting a full polyaspartic system.
- “Do you count the flake as one of the coats?” If yes, the system is 2 coats. If they hesitate on this question, that’s your answer.
- “Does your warranty cover peeling and delamination — and what voids it?” A legitimate warranty will have specific language about installation method. A contractor who can’t point to that language likely doesn’t have one worth reading.
The right contractor won’t be bothered by these questions. We welcome them.
Why Our Process Is the Only One We’ll Warranty
The residential lifetime warranty we offer against peeling and delamination isn’t a marketing statement — it’s a direct consequence of how the floor is built. We can offer it because we know the base coat had no flake interference, the resin bonded into the concrete the way it’s supposed to, and the surface tension was managed correctly at every stage.
A 2-coat installation doesn’t qualify for that warranty. Not because we won’t cover it — but because we won’t install it.
Every floor we put down uses the same 3-coat sequence, the same Slide-Lok products, and the same diamond-ground surface preparation. That consistency is what 1,000+ installations and a 5.0 rating are built on.
If you’d like to see the color and flake options available for your floor, or learn more about what sets our installation standard apart, both are worth a look before you request your estimate.
Ready to See the Difference a Proper Installation Makes?
We’ve been installing true 3-coat polyaspartic floors in the Colorado Springs area for 16 years — over 1,000 installations, a 5.0 rating across 88 Google reviews, and a lifetime warranty we can stand behind because of how every floor is built.
Your free estimate includes a concrete assessment, a walkthrough of the installation process, and a full look at your color and finish options. No pressure. No shortcuts.