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Guide

Metallic Epoxy vs Standard Flake Epoxy

Metallic is the designer choice; flake is the workhorse. Both use the same chemistry — the difference is finish and effect.

· 4 min read
Metallic epoxy side by side with full broadcast flake epoxy

Both are epoxy — they look totally different

Both Metallic Epoxy Floors and standard flake systems use industrial-grade epoxy chemistry and the same diamond-grinding prep. The decorative layer is the difference.

Flake systems broadcast colored vinyl chips into the wet basecoat. The chips give visual variety, texture, and slip resistance. The aesthetic reads as decorative-but-practical — perfect for garages that do real work.

Metallic systems blend reflective pigments into the basecoat and move them with tools during install. The aesthetic reads as designer-art-on-the-floor — perfect for feature spaces with the lighting to show it off.

Designer metallic vs workshop flake

How to choose

Pick flake when the garage does work — gym, shop, multi-bay tool space, kids’ play. Slip resistance and stain-hiding matter more than visual drama.

Pick metallic when the garage is a showpiece — collector car, motorcycle, showroom, feature space. The visual effect matters more than slip resistance, and the lighting can show it off.

Both systems can use a polyaspartic topcoat. Both will last 10-20 years. The choice is aesthetic and use-case driven, not durability driven.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is more slip-resistant? +

Flake. The broadcast layer adds real surface texture. Metallic floors are smoother — anti-slip aggregate can be added to the topcoat if needed.

Which costs more? +

Metallic, typically 20-40% more, depending on the effect complexity and number of color layers.

Can you mix them? +

Yes — we've installed metallic floors with a partial flake border or accent. Less common but possible.

Related Service

Learn more about Metallic Epoxy Floors

Designer metallic epoxy floors with marble- and lava-like depth.

View Metallic Epoxy Floors