Metallic Floors

Metallic Epoxy 101: What It Is, How It's Made, and Why No Two Look the Same

By The Epoxy Company·6 min read·North Texas Epoxy Flooring
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Of everything we install, metallic epoxy gets the most reactions. Homeowners send us photos of showrooms, man caves, and commercial spaces with that signature swirling, three-dimensional lava-flow look — and the question is always the same: "Can you do that?"

We can. And the result at your house will be completely different from the reference photo — which is actually the point.

Here's everything you need to know about metallic epoxy: how it works, what drives the final look, and how to think about color selection for your space.

What Is Metallic Epoxy, Exactly?

Metallic epoxy is a 100% solid epoxy coating mixed with metallic pigment powder — extremely fine metallic particles that are suspended in the liquid resin as it's applied. The magic happens when the coating is spread: the metallic particles migrate, settle, and swirl in patterns influenced by the applicator's technique, air movement in the space, and the natural flow of the material.

No two installations look exactly alike. The same color combination applied in two different garages by the same crew will produce different patterns — different veining, different swirl directions, different concentrations of metallic depth. That's not a defect; it's what makes the finish look like liquid stone rather than painted concrete.

The Technical Reality Metallic epoxy requires more skill than standard flake systems. The applicator has to work quickly (the chemistry cures fast), read how the material is flowing, and know when to leave it alone. Overworking the surface kills the effect. This is not a DIY-friendly system.

How the Look Gets Made: The Process

The installation process for metallic starts the same way every install does — with thorough surface prep.

Surface Preparation — Same diamond grind and moisture vapor barrier process as our flake systems. Metallic epoxy is even less forgiving of inadequate prep than flake — any surface contamination or moisture will show up in the finish.

Base Coat — We apply a solid-colored polyurea base coat matched to your metallic color scheme. For lighter metallics we use a white or light gray base; for darker tones we go dark gray or charcoal. The base coat affects how the metallic pigment reads in light.

Metallic Layer — The metallic epoxy is mixed and applied in sections. This is the artistic phase. Our crew works the material with squeegees, rollers, and air — sometimes using a propane torch carefully to move and settle the pigment. The combination creates the flowing veins and depth that makes metallic floors look alive.

Topcoat — Once the metallic layer cures, we apply polyaspartic topcoat to seal and protect the finish. This is what gives metallic floors their high-gloss depth and makes them durable enough to actually live with.

Color Selection: How to Think About It

This is where most homeowners get stuck, because the choices feel overwhelming. Here's how we walk clients through it.

Start with the room's dominant tones

Look at the walls, the cabinets if it's a garage, the cabinetry if it's a basement. You want the floor to either complement those tones or contrast with them intentionally. A charcoal metallic floor under white cabinets is a strong, clean contrast. A silver metallic under gray walls reads monochromatic and modern.

Consider the light

Metallic floors look dramatically different under natural light vs. fluorescent overhead lighting vs. LED strips. Warm metallics (golds, bronzes, coppers) look richer in warm lighting. Cool metallics (silvers, blues, pearls) pop under cooler lighting. If you can, think about your space at different times of day.

Our most-requested color combinations

Midnight Blue
Deep navy with silver veining. Most-requested for show garages.
Titanium
Dark charcoal with bright silver. Clean, modern, works with everything.
Molten Bronze
Warm amber tones with copper highlights. Stunning under warm lighting.
Obsidian
Near-black with deep charcoal swirls. Dramatic and upscale.
Pearl White
Off-white with iridescent shimmer. Brightens a space dramatically.
Forest Jade
Deep emerald tones with gold and silver veins. One of our favorites.

These are just starting points. We'll bring physical color samples to your estimate so you can see them in your actual space, under your actual lighting.

Metallic vs. Flake: Which Should You Choose?

Both are excellent systems. The choice comes down to what the space is for and what statement you want to make.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I pick an exact pattern from a photo?
Not exactly — and that's by design. Metallic epoxy is inherently unique to each install. We can work toward the style and feel of a reference photo (more defined veining, more blended, more swirly) but the result will be your floor's specific version of that aesthetic. Most clients end up preferring their floor over the reference photo.
How durable is metallic epoxy compared to flake?
Topcoated metallic floors are very durable — resistant to chemicals, oils, and normal abrasion. They're slightly more susceptible to surface scratching from dragging sharp objects than thicker flake systems, but nothing that affects the floor's appearance under normal use. We include UV-stable topcoat on all metallic installs to prevent yellowing.
How long does a metallic install take?
One day for the install. Light foot traffic in 12–24 hours, vehicles back in 48–72 hours. Same timeline as our flake systems.
Does metallic epoxy work on basement floors?
Yes — it's one of the best applications for metallic. Basements often have lower light and benefit from a reflective finish. Our moisture vapor barrier step is especially important on basement slabs.
What does it cost compared to a flake system?
Metallic is typically 20–30% more per square foot than our flake systems due to the material cost and the additional skill required. It falls under our Pro/Flagship tier pricing. We'll give you an exact number at your free estimate.

See What Metallic Looks Like In Person

We bring color samples and reference photos to every free estimate. No obligation, no pressure.

Request a Free Quote 📞 817-818-6925
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