
Commercial vs Residential Epoxy Flooring: Which Coating Is Right for Your Jacksonville Property?
The “epoxy” rolled onto your neighbor’s garage floor on a Saturday afternoon and the “epoxy”

June 17, 2026
The “epoxy” rolled onto your neighbor’s garage floor on a Saturday afternoon and the “epoxy” laid down in a Jacksonville auto-body shop or distribution warehouse look almost identical from a fifteen-second YouTube clip. Both are glossy. Both are gray with a few colored flakes. Both came out of a two-part bucket. But underneath that mirror finish, they are engineered for completely different loads, completely different chemical exposures, and completely different life expectancies. Choosing the wrong system is one of the most expensive mistakes a property owner in Northeast Florida can make, because once a failing coating delaminates from a slab, you pay twice: once to grind it off, and once to do it right. This guide breaks down how a true commercial epoxy flooring Jacksonville system differs from a residential one, where each belongs, and what the Florida climate does to both during install and over the long haul.
The word “epoxy” is a chemistry family, not a single product. Every epoxy coating starts with an epoxide resin (usually a bisphenol-A or bisphenol-F derivative) and a hardener (typically a polyamine or polyamide). When the two parts mix, they cross-link into a thermoset polymer. The differences between residential and commercial systems live in four places: the resin purity, the hardener chemistry, the total film build, and what gets broadcast into the wet coating.
A typical big-box-store DIY garage kit lays down a total dry film thickness of about 3 to 5 mils — thinner than a credit card. A reputable residential installer using 100% solids epoxy will get you to 12 to 20 mils with a flake broadcast and topcoat. A commercial system starts where residential ends. Light commercial floors run 20 to 40 mils. A self-leveling industrial system in a warehouse or food plant is 60 to 125 mils, and a trowel-applied mortar system for a forklift bay or chemical-resistant containment area can exceed 250 mils — roughly a quarter inch of solid polymer concrete. ASTM D4060 (Taber abrasion) wear rates are not linear with thickness, but you can think of every mil as a buffer between the floor surface and the slab beneath.
Residential 100% solids epoxy is typically a 2:1 mix ratio with a modified amine hardener tuned for room-temperature cure and a long pot life so a homeowner or one-truck crew has time to roll it out. Commercial systems run leaner ratios (often 4:1 or even 1:1 by volume with a higher-purity Novolac or cycloaliphatic amine), shorter pot life, and require power-mix equipment because hand-mixing won’t achieve the molecular blend the spec sheet promises. Novolac epoxies, which are heavily cross-linked, resist acids and solvents that would etch a standard residential floor within weeks.
The other quiet difference is what gets broadcast into the coating. Decorative flake (vinyl chip) on a residential floor is cosmetic. In a commercial spec, the broadcast is functional silica quartz, aluminum oxide, or silicon carbide — graded aggregate that gives the floor an OSHA-compliant slip-resistance profile and dramatically extends the abrasion life. A commercial kitchen floor isn’t pretty by accident; the quartz keeps a line cook from going down when a stock pot spills.
The performance gap shows up in three places: chemical resistance, abrasion resistance, and thermal cycling. None of these matter much in a residential garage. All of them matter every single shift in a Jacksonville business.
A residential epoxy will shrug off the occasional dropped beer and a slow drip of motor oil. It will not survive brake fluid (a polyglycol ether that softens many amine-cured epoxies), DEF, hydraulic fluid, battery acid, or the citric and lactic acids in a commercial kitchen. ASTM D1308 spot-test data on Novolac systems shows 24-hour resistance to 50% sulfuric acid and 98% acetic acid where standard BPA epoxies would whiten and soften in under an hour. If you run a brake shop, a food-prep facility, or a brewery, the chemistry of your floor decides whether your slab is protected or merely decorated.
Forklift wheels — especially hard polyurethane or steel-wheeled pallet jacks — exert point loads up to ten times higher than a passenger-car tire. A residential 12-mil epoxy will start showing wheel tracking and gloss reduction in the first quarter of operation. A 40-mil commercial broadcast quartz system, tested per ASTM D4060 with a CS-17 wheel, typically loses less than 100 milligrams per 1,000 cycles versus 200 to 400 mg for a thinner residential film. Over five years in a 20,000-square-foot Jacksonville distribution center, that delta is the difference between a one-time install and a forced recoat.
Commercial coolers and freezer slabs see 80°F surface swings every door cycle. Heated kitchen floors near fryers and dishwashers see localized thermal shock. Commercial systems are formulated with elastomeric modifiers or applied in conjunction with urethane cement underlayments (Sika Sikafloor PurCem, BASF Ucrete) that flex through thermal cycling without micro-cracking. A standard rigid epoxy in those environments will spider-crack within a season.
The commercial spec book is a different world from the home-improvement aisle. A handful of systems show up again and again in Northeast Florida industrial and institutional builds.
Armor Seal 1000 HS and Armor Seal 33 are workhorse 100% solids epoxies used in light-to-medium commercial environments — automotive service bays, mechanical rooms, light manufacturing. Typical spec is a 6 to 12 mil dry film over a properly prepped slab. The 1000 HS variant is moisture-tolerant on cure, which matters when humidity climbs into the 80s during a July install.
Tnemec Series 282 is a high-build polyamide epoxy frequently spec’d into healthcare, pharmaceutical, and food-grade environments because of its smooth, easy-clean surface and resistance to disinfectants. A common Tnemec assembly in a Jacksonville surgical suite is a 282 base over a 201 epoxy primer with an integral cove base — total system around 30 to 40 mils.
For aggressive thermal and chemical environments — commercial kitchens, breweries, dairy plants, cold-storage warehouses around Jacksonville’s port — urethane cement systems like Sikafloor PurCem and BASF Ucrete are the gold standard. These are 3/16-inch to 3/8-inch trowel-applied mortars that withstand 200°F+ steam cleaning, deep-freeze cycling, and lactic/citric acid exposure. They cost more, but they outlast three or four cycles of epoxy.
Residential epoxy isn’t inferior — it’s targeted. For the loads and exposures of a private garage, basement, sunroom, or patio, a properly installed residential system will deliver fifteen to twenty years of service for a fraction of the cost. Apex Epoxy Flooring installs three residential systems most weeks of the year in Jacksonville, St. Johns, Nocatee, and the beaches.
Polyaspartic (a subclass of polyurea) cures in 60 to 90 minutes per coat, which means a homeowner can roll a car back into the garage the next morning. UV stability is excellent — no ambering or yellowing in west-facing garage doors. Typical Jacksonville polyaspartic install is a moisture-mitigating primer, a pigmented polyaspartic base, a full chip broadcast, and a clear polyaspartic topcoat with anti-slip additive. Total system: 18 to 25 mils, installed in a single day.
A two-day install with longer pot life and a slower, more forgiving roll. The base epoxy is 100% solids (no solvents, no VOCs), the chip broadcast is full or partial, and a polyurethane or polyaspartic topcoat carries the UV and abrasion protection. Total dry film around 15 to 20 mils. This system is more wallet-friendly than a full polyaspartic build and well-suited to garages, basements, and laundry rooms.
For homeowners who want a designer look — basements, finished pool decks, indoor-outdoor lanais — a quartz broadcast or a designer flake blend over a tinted epoxy base looks stunning and wears well. These systems are residential in load class but use commercial-style aggregate broadcasts for slip resistance, which is a smart compromise around pools and outdoor entertaining areas.
Every coating manufacturer publishes a tech data sheet assuming ideal conditions. Northeast Florida is rarely ideal. Three local realities drive 80% of the on-site decisions a competent installer makes.
Most epoxy resins are spec’d for 50 to 85% relative humidity at the surface during cure. Jacksonville in July routinely hits 90%+ ambient RH, and dew point can put condensation on a slab even inside a closed garage. Epoxy that flashes off with surface moisture entrained will blush, fish-eye, or fail to cross-link in the top mil — meaning the floor looks fine for 30 days, then peels in sheets. The fix is a humidity-tolerant primer (Sherwin-Williams Armor Seal 1000 HS, Sika Sikafloor 161 W) and disciplined timing — early-morning installs when dew point is well below slab temperature.
Jacksonville’s water table is shallow. Slabs on grade — especially older 1960s-1980s pours without a proper vapor barrier — have continuous hydrostatic vapor drive from below. Before any commercial install, a serious installer runs a calcium chloride test (ASTM F1869) to measure moisture vapor emission rate in pounds per 1,000 square feet per 24 hours, and ideally an in-situ relative humidity probe (ASTM F2170) reading slab RH at 40% depth. Anything over 3 lbs/1,000 sqft/24 hrs MVER, or 75% RH at depth, demands a moisture-mitigation primer (Sherwin-Williams Floortex or Aquafin VB) before the topcoat goes on. Skip this step, and the floor blisters from below within a year.
Concrete in a Jacksonville parking deck or roll-up-door warehouse hits 130-150°F on a summer afternoon. Most epoxies have a maximum substrate temperature of 90°F for application — above that, pot life collapses, the resin flashes before it wets out, and you get pinholes. The discipline is early-start installs (often 4 AM or 5 AM in July), spot-cooling with industrial fans, or scheduling the project for the shoulder season (October-April) when slab temperatures are workable all day.
Pricing varies with slab condition, prep requirements, mobilization, and color/aggregate choice, but the Jacksonville market generally falls in predictable ranges. Treat these as starting points — every floor gets a moisture test and a prep assessment before a firm number lands.
Standard 2-car garage polyaspartic with chip broadcast: $4 to $7 per square foot installed, or roughly $1,800 to $3,200 for a typical 450-square-foot garage. Single-day install. Includes diamond grinding, crack repair, one chip color, and a clear topcoat with anti-slip.
Office, retail, light service bay, veterinary clinic, fitness studio: $6 to $10 per square foot. A 3,000-square-foot showroom or service area lands around $18,000 to $30,000. Spec typically includes shot blasting or heavy grinding, moisture mitigation primer, 20-30 mil epoxy or hybrid epoxy/polyaspartic, integral or applied cove base where code requires.
Warehouse with forklift traffic, commercial kitchen, brewery, pharmaceutical: $10 to $25 per square foot. A 10,000-square-foot Jacksonville distribution center floor with a 40-mil quartz broadcast system runs $100,000 to $180,000 depending on prep. Urethane cement systems for cold-storage or aggressive-chemical environments push the upper end. These are 10-to-20-year systems with proper maintenance, which is what makes the math work.
The temptation to save money by spec’ing a residential-grade kit for a business — or having a handyman who “does garages” handle the warehouse — is the most common reason Apex Epoxy Flooring gets called back to a commercial property within 18 months. Here is where it always goes wrong.
Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation food-service codes require a smooth, easily cleanable transition between floor and wall. A residential epoxy installed flat against a baseboard creates a seam that traps food debris and breeds bacteria. A commercial spec includes an integral cove — a 4 to 6 inch radiused upturn formed in epoxy mortar — that meets health inspector standards on day one.
A glossy residential epoxy in a gym becomes a liability the first time someone sweats. Commercial fitness floors use a broadcast aggregate (quartz or aluminum oxide) and a satin urethane topcoat that holds an ADA slip-coefficient above 0.6 wet, per ASTM D2047.
Pallet jack wheels concentrate 1,500 to 3,000 pounds onto a contact patch the size of a quarter. A 15-mil residential coating crushes and tracks within months. A 40-mil broadcast quartz commercial system distributes the load and survives the duty cycle. If a forklift, pallet jack, or stand-up reach truck will touch the floor, the residential spec is wrong.
The reverse mistake is just as common. A homeowner reads about Tnemec or urethane cement and asks for a “commercial-grade” garage floor. For 95% of residential applications, this is wasted money — three to four times the cost for performance the floor will never need.
Your car weighs 4,000 pounds spread over four contact patches the size of your hand. Hot tires, road salt in winter (less of an issue in Jacksonville), occasional oil drips — none of this stresses a 20-mil polyaspartic system. Spending $15,000 on a 40-mil industrial broadcast for a residential garage is buying durability you won’t use.
A finished basement or sunroom sees foot traffic and furniture. A 15-mil decorative chip system performs beautifully and stays within a sensible budget. The aggressive chemical resistance of an industrial Novolac is irrelevant in a space where the worst spill is a glass of wine.
Outdoor residential surfaces need UV stability and slip resistance — both of which are addressed by a polyaspartic with quartz broadcast. An industrial epoxy on an outdoor patio will chalk and yellow in the Florida sun within a year because most industrial epoxies are not UV-stable. The right answer is a residential-class polyaspartic, not a heavy commercial system.
Polyurea garage floor coating offers a smart, long-term solution for homeowners looking to improve both the look and performance of their space. With its fast-curing application, it stands up to Florida’s climate and daily use without losing its appeal. For those seeking durability, safety, and a polished finish, polyurea flooring delivers both function and style that lasts.

The “epoxy” rolled onto your neighbor’s garage floor on a Saturday afternoon and the “epoxy”

How Florida Humidity Affects Epoxy Floor Installation (And How Apex Gets It Right) Florida’s humidity

You’ve got an existing coating on your garage floor — maybe a DIY kit, maybe
For just $2,700, give your 3-car garage a professional epoxy flooring finish backed by our lifetime warranty. Fill out this form below to take advantage of this limited time offer!
For just $2,300, give your 2-car garage a professional epoxy flooring finish backed by our lifetime warranty. Fill out this form below to take advantage of this limited time offer!
For just $2,700, give your 3-car garage a professional epoxy flooring finish backed by our lifetime warranty. Fill out this form below to take advantage of this limited time offer!
For just $2,300, give your 2-car garage a professional epoxy flooring finish backed by our lifetime warranty. Fill out this form below to take advantage of this limited time offer!
Ready to upgrade your garage with Apex Epoxy Flooring? Fill out the form below, and let us handle the rest. Whether it’s a 2-car or 3-car garage, we’re here to deliver top-notch service.