The mirror floor everyone stops to look at.

Metallic epoxy resin floors with a deep, marbled, mirror-like finish. The showpiece option for garages and showrooms, worked by hand so no two floors are the same.

What you get

Mirror depth

Metallic pigment dispersed through the coat gives a floor with real depth and movement.

One of a kind

Each pour is worked by hand, so your floor is unique to your space.

Sealed and tough

Locked under a clear topcoat that protects the effect and takes daily use.

Colour blends

From subtle silver-greys to bold blues and coppers, matched to the colour you are set on.

How it works

01

Tell us the details

Tell us the effect you are chasing and we spec a metallic pour to match.

02

Quote in writing

One price for the full pour, in writing. The number we send is the number you pay.

03

New floor laid

Grind, prep, pour, work the metallic, seal and cure.

What is a metallic epoxy floor

Metallic epoxy flooring is poured with reflective pigment suspended in the resin, then worked while wet to create the marbled, lit-from-within look. Because it is worked by hand, the pattern is unique every time, which is exactly the appeal.

It is the natural choice for a showroom or a resin garage floor you treat as a room. For a tougher, more uniform finish, compare it with our flake floors. Where a floor sees strong sunlight, our guide to whether epoxy resin yellows explains how we keep the colour true.

Grip without killing the shine

A high-gloss metallic can be slippery wet, so where you need grip we add a fine anti-slip into the topcoat in a way that keeps the depth and the reflection.

Where a metallic floor earns its place

A metallic pour is the showpiece finish, but it is not the right answer for every room. Here is where it shines and where a plainer, tougher finish serves you better.

SpaceMetallic?Why
Showroom, retail, receptionIdealThe moving, marbled look does the selling the moment someone walks in
Home garage or games roomGreatA garage floor you treat as a room, not a workspace
Working garage or workshopConsider flake insteadA busy floor hides scuffs and grit better with a speckled flake finish
Commercial kitchen or washdownPick quartzWet, heavy-duty areas want grip and toughness over shine

Where we work

Across Leicestershire and the East Midlands

We lay metallic floors across Leicestershire and the East Midlands, including Leicester and Loughborough. See everywhere we cover.

Common questions

Can you lay a metallic epoxy floor yourself?
DIY metallic kits are sold, but the effect lives or dies on two things a kit cannot give you: proper slab prep, and hand-working the pigment while the resin is going off. Get either wrong and the floor lifts, or the metallic comes out muddy rather than marbled. Of all the finishes, it is the one we would most caution against doing yourself.
Is metallic epoxy flooring the same as a metallic resin floor?
Same thing. Epoxy is the resin we pour for this finish, so "metallic epoxy flooring" and "metallic resin flooring" describe the same floor. The metallic look comes from the pigment we work through the coat while it is wet.
Is every metallic floor different?
Yes. The effect is worked by hand while the resin is wet, so no two floors come out identical. Tell us the look you are after and we spec a pour to match.
Is it slippery?
It can be glossy, so for garages and wet areas we add a fine anti-slip into the topcoat without losing the mirror depth.
Does it scratch easily?
The clear topcoat is hard-wearing. Grit is the main risk to any gloss floor, so a mat at the door and the odd re-coat down the years keeps it sharp.
How long does a metallic epoxy floor last?
Laid properly over a sound slab, a metallic resin floor lasts for years. The clear topcoat takes the daily wear, and when it eventually dulls we can re-coat it without redoing the whole floor.
What is the difference between metallic epoxy and regular epoxy?
Regular epoxy lays a flat, single colour. A metallic floor uses reflective pigment worked through the resin while it is wet, so you get depth, movement and a marbled, mirror-like look instead of a flat tone. The same hard-wearing resin sits underneath, it is just a very different finish.
Are there any downsides to a metallic epoxy floor?
Two honest ones. A high-gloss finish shows grit and scuffs more than a matt floor, so it wants a mat at the door and the odd re-coat. And because each pour is worked by hand, you are buying a one-off effect, not a sample you can match exactly. We talk both through before you commit.

Get your free quote.

Tell us about the space and we'll email your fixed-price written quote inside two working days.