
Ormond Beach Concrete is the concrete contractor Flagler Beach homeowners call for stamped concrete, driveways, pool decks, slabs, and flatwork designed to hold up in a salt-air coastal environment. We have served the Florida coast since 2025, work in Flagler Beach on homes from A1A to the streets behind the Intracoastal, and understand what coastal exposure, sandy soil, and the annual hurricane season demand from concrete that has to last. All inquiries receive a response within 1 business day.

Flagler Beach homeowners use stamped concrete on patios, pool decks, and driveways to get a finished look that fits the coastal character of the area without the maintenance that wood decking or pavers demand near saltwater. Stamped concrete poured and sealed correctly for a coastal environment handles the UV exposure and humidity far better than it does when the same process is applied without accounting for the conditions here. See our stamped concrete services.
Many Flagler Beach homes were built in the 1970s and 1980s, and their original driveways are now at or past the point where patching is no longer a cost-effective option. Sandy coastal soil shifts under the slab over time, and driveways on lots near the ocean or the Intracoastal face additional erosion risk during storm events. A replacement driveway poured with corrosion-resistant reinforcement and a proper compacted base handles both the soil movement and the salt-air environment here much better than a patched older surface.
Flagler Beach's climate makes outdoor pools usable through most of the year, and pool decks on homes built in the 1970s and 1980s often show the surface wear that results from decades of sun, chlorine, and ocean-side humidity. Cracked or uneven pool deck concrete is a slip hazard next to water. A resurfaced or newly poured pool deck restores the safe, non-slip surface that any pool area needs and holds up to the coastal moisture conditions here in a way that aged, patched concrete simply does not.
A concrete patio on a Flagler Beach property needs to be built for outdoor coastal use - properly sloped for drainage so standing water does not accumulate after afternoon thunderstorms, and sealed against the salt air and UV exposure that degrade unsealed concrete faster here than a few miles inland. Whether the lot is on the ocean side of A1A or on the quieter Intracoastal side, the drainage and material choices on the day of the pour determine how long the patio holds up.
Flagler Beach properties in FEMA flood zones - and a meaningful number of parcels near the ocean or the Intracoastal fall within those zones - have specific elevation and drainage requirements that affect how a concrete slab is designed and poured. Getting those details right at the start prevents code issues at inspection and protects the structure from moisture intrusion that is much harder to fix after the slab is in the ground.
Flagler Beach homeowners with higher-value properties increasingly choose decorative concrete finishes - staining, exposed aggregate, or colored overlays - for driveways, entries, and outdoor living areas. Decorative finishes applied in a coastal environment need to be sealed correctly and matched to products rated for salt air and high UV, or the finish fades and peels faster than the homeowner expects. Done right, decorative concrete gives a Flagler Beach property a finished look that fits the setting and holds up to the conditions.
Flagler Beach is a small city of about 5,000 residents sitting directly on the Atlantic coast, and the fact that State Road A1A runs right through the heart of town tells you everything about how exposed the properties here are. Homes within a few blocks of the ocean face constant salt air that corrodes metal fasteners, degrades unsealed concrete faster than inland wear patterns suggest, and shortens the replacement cycle on any exterior material that is not specified for coastal use. Even properties a mile or two back from the beach feel the effects - the humidity, the salt in the air, and the sandy coastal soil conditions are a constant backdrop for any outdoor concrete work here. A large share of Flagler Beach's housing stock was built in the 1970s and 1980s, which means it is now 40 to 50 years old. Those homes are at the age when concrete driveways, pool decks, and patios from the original construction have cycled through multiple rounds of patching and are ready for full replacement.
Beyond general wear, Hurricane Nicole made a direct landfall near Flagler Beach in November 2022, causing significant damage to homes, roads, and concrete throughout town. Storm surge and wind-driven rain expose weaknesses in flatwork that looked stable before the storm - undermined bases, poorly sealed surfaces, and drainage that does not move water away from foundations fast enough. The City of Flagler Beach requires permits for most concrete work, and properties in FEMA flood zones have additional elevation and drainage requirements that affect how work must be designed and documented. A contractor who does not know those requirements before starting a job creates compliance problems that fall on the homeowner to resolve.
Our crew works throughout Flagler Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete contractor work here. A1A is the reference point for everything in this town - properties on the ocean side of A1A have the most direct coastal exposure, while the streets on the west side back up to the Intracoastal Waterway and have their own drainage and flood zone considerations. The Flagler Beach Pier is the most recognizable landmark in the city, and the neighborhoods near it - whether oceanfront or just a few blocks back - are some of the most active areas for the kind of flatwork replacement and new concrete projects we handle most often.
Flagler County has been one of the fastest-growing counties in the country for several consecutive years, and that growth shows up as a mix of long-established homes that need renovation work and newer construction on lots that were recently cleared. Both types of projects come with different site conditions and permit requirements, and understanding which you are dealing with before writing an estimate matters. Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area just south of town is a place most Flagler Beach residents know, and the neighborhoods near it represent the kind of established, owner-occupied residential area where we do a steady amount of concrete work.
We also serve the communities Flagler Beach homeowners are most connected to. If you are in Palm Coast to the north, which is where many Flagler Beach residents shop, work, and access services, we cover that area as well. And for customers further up the coast toward Ormond Beach, we handle concrete work across the full stretch of the northeast Florida coast.
We respond within 1 business day. Let us know your Flagler Beach address and what you have in mind - a new driveway, a pool deck, stamped concrete, or a slab - and we will schedule a free on-site visit that works with your schedule.
We assess the soil, drainage, proximity to the ocean or Intracoastal, existing concrete condition, and any FEMA flood zone considerations before writing a detailed estimate. You see every cost line in writing before we start - no surprises when the invoice arrives.
Most concrete work in Flagler Beach requires a city permit, and we handle the application on your behalf. Coastal flood zone properties may need an additional review step. Permit turnaround is typically one to two weeks, and we give you a confirmed start date in writing once approval is in hand.
We show up on the confirmed date, complete the work, and clear the area before we leave. You receive a walkthrough and written curing instructions so you know exactly when the surface is ready for foot traffic, furniture, vehicles, and regular use.
We serve all of Flagler Beach - from the homes right on A1A to the quieter streets near the Intracoastal. No commitment required, just a free assessment and a written estimate that tells you exactly what the job will cost.
(386) 284-1728Flagler Beach is a small oceanfront city in Flagler County, sitting between Palm Coast to the north and the Volusia County line to the south. Most of the housing stock is single-family homes on modest lots - many of them narrow beach-town parcels built close to the street - and the split between ocean-side and Intracoastal-side streets gives the town two distinct residential characters. Homes on the east side of A1A face the Atlantic directly, while properties on the west side are quieter and back up to the Intracoastal Waterway. The town is small enough that most residents know the Flagler Beach Pier, the stretch of A1A through downtown, and Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area as the anchors of the community. Homeownership rates here are high, residents tend to stay, and the combination of rising property values and an aging housing stock makes maintenance and renovation investment common.
Flagler County as a whole is one of the fastest-growing counties in the United States, and while the city itself has stayed small, the growth of Palm Coast right next door means the area has the infrastructure and services of a larger community while keeping a small-town residential feel. For concrete work, that growth context matters: permits, inspectors, and code enforcement are active and consistent in Flagler County, and homeowners benefit from working with a contractor who keeps current with local requirements. We serve all of Flagler Beach and the surrounding Flagler County area, and we treat every job here the same way we treat work near our home base - with full permits, honest estimates, and concrete that is built for the conditions it will actually face.
Call us or send a message and we will respond within 1 business day. Free on-site assessment, written cost breakdown, and concrete work built for coastal Florida - no pressure, no runaround.