Every major concrete surface finish explained — from broom and trowel to polished, stamped, and exposed aggregate
A complete 2026 reference covering concrete finishes types and uses for floors, driveways, paths, walls, and structural elements. Includes texture comparisons, slip resistance, maintenance needs, cost indicators, and application guidance for each finish type.
The right concrete surface finish affects aesthetics, slip resistance, durability, maintenance, and cost. This guide covers every major finish type used in UK residential, commercial, and civil construction in 2026.
A concrete finish is not just cosmetic — it directly influences slip resistance, wear resistance, cleanability, water runoff, and long-term durability. An inappropriate finish for the application — such as a smooth steel-trowelled surface on an external ramp — creates a serious safety hazard. Selecting the correct finish type at specification stage is as critical as the mix design itself, and should be confirmed before concrete is placed.
Concrete finishes fall into two broad categories: structural/functional finishes — applied immediately after casting to achieve a specific surface profile for performance — and decorative finishes, which may be applied after the concrete has hardened. Both categories have applications across residential, commercial, and infrastructure projects, and the distinction guides the timing, tools, and trades involved in their execution.
Most in-situ concrete finishes must be applied within a narrow window after casting, determined by the concrete's setting time, ambient temperature, and mix design. Too early and the surface tears; too late and the concrete resists the finishing tool. Understanding the properties of the fresh concrete — bleed water timing, initial set — is essential for achieving consistent, defect-free finishes on every pour.
Each finish type suits specific applications. Outdoor and trafficked surfaces require higher texture ratings for slip resistance. Interior and decorative applications prioritise smoothness and aesthetics.
Choosing the right finish from the many concrete finishes types and uses available requires balancing aesthetics, safety, function, and budget. Below, each major finish type is explained with its method, typical applications, advantages, and limitations — covering everything from the most basic site-applied textures through to high-end decorative systems used in commercial interiors and landscape architecture in 2026.
Most common outdoor finish in UK construction
A stiff-bristled broom is dragged across freshly floated concrete to create parallel grooves. The depth and coarseness of the texture depends on bristle stiffness and timing relative to set. It is the standard finish for driveways, footpaths, ramps, and car parks across the UK — providing reliable slip resistance in wet conditions at minimal additional cost.
Smooth, dense, hard-wearing interior surface
Steel trowelling — by hand or power float machine — closes the surface of the concrete, producing a smooth, dense, hard-wearing slab. Used extensively for warehouse floors, factory floors, retail units, and domestic garage slabs where flatness, abrasion resistance, and easy cleaning are priorities. Not suitable for external use without additional surface treatment due to low slip resistance when wet.
Decorative texture with natural aggregate revealed
The surface cement paste is removed — by washing and brushing before final set, or by acid etching after hardening — to expose the decorative aggregate beneath. Aggregate type (granite, flint, gravel, recycled glass) determines the final appearance. Popular for residential driveways, patios, and pathways where a natural stone-like appearance is desired with good slip resistance.
High-gloss interior floor — mechanical grinding process
Achieved through sequential grinding with diamond-tipped abrasive pads (progressively finer grits from 30 to 3000+), combined with chemical hardeners (sodium or lithium silicate densifiers) that react with free lime to create a glass-hard, highly reflective surface. Polished concrete floors are increasingly popular in UK commercial, retail, and high-end residential projects for their low maintenance, longevity, and aesthetic versatility. See acoustic performance considerations for polished floors.
Patterned surface replicating stone, brick, or slate
Rigid or flexible polyurethane stamps are pressed into freshly placed concrete — coloured with integral pigment or surface-applied colour hardener — to create patterns that replicate natural stone, slate, brick, cobblestone, or timber. A release agent prevents the stamps from bonding. Widely used for UK domestic patios, driveways, pool decks, and decorative paths. Requires periodic resealing every 2–5 years to maintain colour and surface integrity.
Architectural concrete — formwork texture retained
The texture of the formwork — rough-sawn timber boards, profiled steel, or patterned liners — is deliberately retained on the concrete surface after striking. This architectural or fair-faced concrete finish is highly specified in contemporary UK architecture for exposed walls, columns, bridge abutments, and feature elements. Surface quality depends entirely on formwork design, release agent application, concrete mix consistency, and pour sequence.
Rock salt crystals are broadcast onto freshly trowelled concrete and pressed in, then dissolved away with water after hardening — leaving a pitted, dimpled texture reminiscent of natural stone. The salt finish is popular for pool surrounds and outdoor entertainment areas in warmer climates, though it is less common in the UK due to frost susceptibility. The surface pits can trap moisture in freeze–thaw conditions, potentially leading to surface scaling over time.
A dilute hydrochloric or phosphoric acid solution is applied to hardened concrete to dissolve surface cement paste, opening the pore structure and creating a lightly textured, slip-resistant surface. Acid etching is commonly used to prepare polished concrete floors for subsequent coatings, sealers, or overlays — or as a standalone finish to rejuvenate tired slab surfaces. Strict PPE and environmental precautions are mandatory. Full neutralisation and rinse-down are required before any coating is applied.
Colour is introduced either as an integral pigment mixed throughout the concrete (iron oxide pigments are the most UV-stable) or as a dry-shake colour hardener broadcast onto the surface and trowelled in — producing a more intense, wear-resistant coloured layer. Integral colour is lower intensity but consistent throughout; surface-applied colour hardener produces a stronger colour effect but is limited to the top few millimetres. Both methods are widely used in combination with stamped or broom finishes for UK residential projects.
The concrete surface is ground to a consistent level (typically 400–800 grit) and then sealed with a clear penetrating or film-forming sealer. This produces a matte to satin finish — smoother than exposed aggregate but with more character than a full polish. Honed concrete is a popular mid-range option for UK commercial floors, retail units, and domestic kitchens where a natural, understated appearance is preferred over the high gloss of a fully polished floor.
The table below compares the key concrete finishes types and uses by application, slip resistance, relative cost, and maintenance requirements — providing a quick reference for specification in 2026.
| Finish Type | Primary Use | Indoor / Outdoor | Slip Resistance | Relative Cost | Maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broom / Brushed | Driveways, paths, ramps | Outdoor | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ High | £ Low | Low |
| Steel Trowel / Power Float | Warehouse, garage, factory floors | Indoor | ⭐⭐ Low (when wet) | £ Low | Low |
| Exposed Aggregate | Patios, driveways, pool surrounds | Outdoor | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ High | ££ Medium | Medium (sealing) |
| Polished | Commercial / retail / residential floors | Indoor | ⭐⭐⭐ Medium | ££££ High | Low (daily clean) |
| Stamped / Imprinted | Patios, driveways, pool decks | Outdoor | ⭐⭐⭐ Medium | £££ Medium-High | Medium (reseal 2–5 yrs) |
| Board-Marked / Off-Form | Architectural walls, columns, bridges | Both | ⭐⭐⭐ Medium | £££ Medium-High | Low–Medium |
| Honed / Grind & Seal | Commercial floors, kitchens, retail | Indoor | ⭐⭐⭐ Medium | £££ Medium-High | Low (reseal periodic) |
| Acid Etched | Surface prep, rejuvenation, coatings | Indoor / Outdoor | ⭐⭐⭐ Medium | ££ Medium | Low–Medium |
| Coloured / Pigmented | Decorative residential & commercial | Both | Varies by base finish | ££ Medium | Medium (reseal) |
| Salt Finish | Pool surrounds, outdoor entertaining | Outdoor | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ High | ££ Medium | Medium |
External concrete surfaces must achieve a minimum Pendulum Test Value (PTV) of 36 under UK Highways guidance and BS 8300 for accessible surfaces. Broom, brushed, and exposed aggregate finishes consistently achieve PTV 45–65+. Smooth trowel finishes can fall below PTV 20 when wet — completely inappropriate for external use without additional surface treatment or anti-slip additive in any sealer applied.
Power-floated and polished surfaces are the most abrasion-resistant due to the densification of the surface layer during finishing. For industrial floors subject to forklift traffic, BS 8204-2 specifies maximum abrasion class (AR) values — the harder the finish, the lower the wear depth under the standard test. Surface hardeners (sodium silicate, lithium silicate) applied to power-floated floors further improve wear resistance at modest cost.
Open-textured finishes — broom, exposed aggregate, salt finish — absorb water and staining agents more readily than sealed or polished surfaces. Application of a penetrating silane/siloxane sealer significantly reduces water ingress in textured outdoor finishes, helping prevent freeze–thaw damage, oil staining, and biological growth. Sealed stamped and polished concrete offer the best stain resistance of all finish types.
Polished and honed finishes suit contemporary interiors; stamped and exposed aggregate suit traditional or natural-look landscaping. Off-form architectural concrete has its own specification discipline — surface class (SCA to SCD) is defined in CIRIA C766 and must be agreed with the architect before formwork design begins, as achieving a consistent Class B or Class A surface requires precise planning, experienced operatives, and carefully selected mix proportions.
Hot weather accelerates concrete stiffening, drastically narrowing the finishing window. Cold weather retards set, increasing the risk of finishing too early and incorporating bleed water into the surface — causing a weak, dusty top layer. Both extremes require adapted procedures per BS EN 13670. Solar protection sheeting, curing compounds, or polyethylene sheeting must be applied promptly after finishing to prevent premature drying regardless of finish type.
Basic broom and trowel finishes add negligible cost to the concrete placement operation. Exposed aggregate adds £8–£20/m² for retarder, washing, and labour. Stamped concrete typically ranges £50–£120/m² installed in the UK. Polished concrete floors — including grinding, densifying, and sealing — range from £40/m² (basic hone) to £120+/m² for full high-gloss polishing with aggregate exposure, depending on slab condition and grit sequence used.
In the UK, concrete floor finish flatness and surface regularity for industrial floors is governed by BS 8204-2:2003+A1:2009 (Screeds, bases and in-situ flooring — concrete wearing surfaces) and the TR34 Free Movement Tolerances document published by the Concrete Society. Slip resistance for pedestrian surfaces is assessed per BS 7976 using the Pendulum Test, with a minimum PTV of 36 required for level surfaces and 40+ recommended for ramps and areas used by the elderly or mobility-impaired.
For architectural fair-faced concrete, CIRIA C766: Control of Cracking in Reinforced Concrete Structures (2018) and the Concrete Society Technical Report 52 (TR52) provide specification and workmanship guidance on surface finish classes. Air-entrained concrete mixes used in XF3 and XF4 environments require particular care during power floating — excessive floating collapses the air void system and defeats its freeze–thaw protection purpose.
Sound insulation and impact noise guidance for concrete floor systems — relevant for polished and hard floor finishes.
🫧How air entrainment affects finishing workability and freeze–thaw resistance for outdoor concrete surfaces.
🔎Inspection and condition assessment — critical before applying any new finish to an existing concrete slab or floor.
🏗️Foundation and subbase preparation procedures that directly influence the long-term performance of finished concrete slabs.
The primary UK references for concrete floor finish quality — covering surface regularity, abrasion resistance, and workmanship tolerances for industrial and commercial concrete wearing surfaces. Essential for specifying power-floated and polished floors.
Concrete Society →The Pendulum Test standard for measuring slip resistance of pedestrian surfaces. UK Health & Safety Executive and CIRIA recommend minimum PTV 36 for level surfaces in 2026. Critical for specifying external finishes on any publicly accessible concrete surface.
HSE Slips Guidance →Technical Report 52 covers specification and achievement of plain formed (off-form) concrete surface finishes — covering surface class definitions, acceptable defect limits, and repair criteria for architectural fair-faced concrete elements.
Retaining Wall Guide →