Concrete Polishing Cost Calculator by Square Footage and Gloss Level

Estimate the cost to polish an existing concrete floor based on square footage, CPAA gloss level, aggregate exposure class, slab condition, and optional densifier, dye, or sealer finishes. Built for flooring contractors, facility managers, and homeowners comparing bids.

Updated June 2026 Free, No Signup Required Sources Cited No Data Stored or Transmitted Reviewed by site author

Floor Polishing Inputs

ft²
Include the finished area plus any enclosed openings, per standard estimating practice.
Level 4 requires grit of 800 or higher and the most polishing passes, per CPAA finished gloss classification.
Deeper cuts to reach Class C or D exposure require additional grinding passes.

Planning note

This calculator prices polishing an existing cured slab. It does not include new concrete placement, which is covered by the concrete cost per square foot calculator.

Gloss Level and Aggregate Exposure Reference

The Concrete Polishing Association of America (CPAA DEF-PC-100, Revision 05) defines finished polished concrete using two independent scales: aggregate exposure class and finished gloss level. Contractors typically quote against these classifications rather than vague terms like "matte" or "shiny."

Gloss Level Suggested Grit Range Minimum Passes Appearance
Level 1 - Flat (Ground) Below 100 4 Flat appearance, no to very slight diffused reflection.
Level 2 - Satin (Honed) 100 to 400 5 Matte appearance with slight diffused reflection.
Level 3 - Semi-Polished 800 and higher 6 Reflected objects visible but not sharp.
Level 4 - Highly Polished 800 and higher 7 Mirror-like, sharp and crisp reflection.
Aggregate Class Approx. Cut Depth Appearance
Class A - Cream Very little Little to no aggregate exposure, uniform paste surface.
Class B - Salt and Pepper 1/16 in Fine aggregate exposure with little medium aggregate visible.
Class C - Medium Aggregate 1/8 in Medium aggregate exposure, occasional large stone visible.
Class D - Large Aggregate 1/4 in Large aggregate exposure, minimal fine aggregate visible.

Source: Concrete Polishing Association of America, DEF-PC-100 Revision 05 (June 2012), Aggregate Exposure and Finished Gloss classification charts.

What Polished Concrete Actually Costs

National mid-range pricing for basic polished concrete work runs about $7.89 to $9.34 per square foot as of May 2026, based on Homewyse unit-cost estimating data for 4-inch, fibermesh-reinforced 3,500 PSI slabs with a trowel finish. Regional guides show a wider practical range.

Cleveland, OH market (2026)

Concrete floor polishing runs $3 to $8 per square foot. A standard two-car garage near 400 square feet lands between $1,200 and $3,200 installed.

National decorative range

Basic polished finishes commonly run $3 to $12 per square foot, while decorative options with dye, stain, or heavy aggregate exposure can reach $15 or more per square foot.

Equipment production rate

Planetary grinding and polishing machines run roughly 200 to 450 square feet per hour per pass, which is why multi-pass, high-gloss jobs take longer and cost more per square foot.

General contractor markup

If a general contractor supervises the polishing subcontractor, add 13% to 22% to the subcontracted total, per Homewyse unit-cost notes.

Sources: Homewyse Cost to Polish Concrete, May 2026; Cleveland Concrete Coatings 2026 Concrete Floor Polishing Costs; HomeGuide Polished Concrete Floor Cost 2026.

Sample Cost Scenarios

Scenario 1

1,000 sq ft residential basement, Level 3 gloss, Class A exposure

Area: 1,000 ft²

Condition: Good, no cracks

Add-ons: Densifier + polish guard

Base rate at Level 3, residential: approx. $4.75/ft²

1,000 x $4.75 = $4,750 labor + materials

Densifier + guard add roughly $0.55/ft² = $550

Estimated total: approximately $5,300

This falls within the $3 to $12/ft² national range for semi-polished residential floors without heavy decorative work.

Scenario 2

8,000 sq ft warehouse, Level 2 gloss, Class B exposure, cracked slab

Area: 8,000 ft²

Condition: Cracks and joints need repair

Type: Industrial, contractor installed

Base rate at Level 2, industrial: approx. $3.25/ft²

8,000 x $3.25 = $26,000 base labor + materials

Crack repair adjustment: +8% = $2,080

Estimated total: approximately $28,080

Large industrial floors benefit from lower gloss levels and per-square-foot economies of scale, but crack repair on older slabs adds real cost that many online quotes omit.

Errors That Skew Polishing Estimates

Confusing gloss level with aggregate exposure

A Level 4 highly polished floor can still be Class A cream with no visible stone. Gloss and aggregate exposure are independent CPAA scales, and pricing depends on both.

Ignoring slab prep condition

Existing coatings, mastic, or paint must be mechanically removed before polishing, which adds a full extra grinding pass that basic square-footage quotes often leave out.

Skipping the densifier line item

Chemical densifier hardens the surface and is treated as a separate material cost by most contractors, not bundled silently into the labor rate.

Assuming DIY always wins on cost

Planetary grinder rental plus consumable diamond pads can run $250 to $400 per day. On floors over roughly 1,500 square feet, rental days and pad wear frequently erase the labor savings versus a contractor bid.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to polish a concrete floor per square foot? +

Polished concrete typically runs $3 to $15 per square foot depending on gloss level, aggregate exposure, and floor condition, with a national average near $7.89 to $9.34 per square foot for basic mid-range work as of May 2026 (Homewyse).

What is the difference between gloss level 1 and gloss level 4 polished concrete? +

CPAA DEF-PC-100 defines Level 1 (Flat/Ground) using grit up to 100 with no to very low sheen, and Level 4 (Highly Polished) using grit of 800 or higher with a mirror-like reflection. Higher levels need more grinding passes and cost more labor time.

Does polishing an existing slab cost less than a new poured slab? +

This calculator prices polishing an existing cured slab and does not include new concrete placement. Slabs with cracks, spalling, or coatings needing removal add prep labor, which is factored in as a condition adjustment.

What is aggregate exposure and does it change the price? +

Aggregate exposure describes how much sand and stone show through the ground surface, classified by CPAA as Class A (Cream) through Class D (Large aggregate, roughly 1/4 in cut depth). Deeper cuts to reach Class C or D generally cost more than a Class A cream finish.

Is DIY concrete polishing cheaper than hiring a contractor? +

DIY grinder rental can lower labor cost on small floors under about 500 square feet. Professional-grade planetary grinders, diamond tooling, and densifier application require experience, so larger or high-gloss projects usually favor a contractor.

What is included in a typical polished concrete cost estimate? +

A complete estimate includes multi-pass diamond grinding, crack and joint repair, chemical densifier, final polishing passes, and often a topical sealer or guard. Equipment mobilization and site protection are typically bundled into the contractor labor rate.

How long does it take to polish a concrete floor? +

Production rates run roughly 200 to 450 square feet per hour per pass (Homewyse equipment allowance data). A typical 400 to 500 square foot residential floor often takes one to two working days including prep, multiple grinding passes, densifier cure time, and final polish.

Sources and Methodology

  • Concrete Polishing Association of America, DEF-PC-100 Revision 05 (June 2012), Aggregate Exposure and Finished Gloss classification definitions. Source
  • Homewyse, "Cost to Polish Concrete," May 2026 unit-cost estimate data. Source
  • Cleveland Concrete Coatings, "2026 Concrete Floor Polishing Costs in Cleveland." Source
  • HomeGuide, "How Much Do Polished Concrete Floors Cost? (2026)." Source
  • American Society of Concrete Contractors (ASCC) Concrete Polishing Council, Aggregate Exposure Chart, February 2024. Source

Rates used in this calculator are default planning estimates derived from the ranges above. Always request itemized written quotes from local contractors before budgeting a final project cost.

Disclaimer This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes. For permitted structural work, foundations, multi-story construction, retaining walls over 4 feet, and commercial projects, calculations must be verified by a licensed structural engineer per IBC 2024 §1604. ConcreteCalculate.com is not liable for structural decisions made from these estimates.

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