Rose Restoration is a Washington DC concrete polishing contractor with 40+ years serving commercial, industrial, and residential clients across Washington DC, Maryland, and Northern Virginia. Our crews diamond-grind, hone, polish, densify, and guard concrete floors for warehouses, lobbies, retail, restaurants, government buildings, and homes — with project experience including the International Monetary Fund, the Smithsonian Institution, the Four Seasons Washington DC, and Amazon's WAS17 headquarters.
Rose Restoration has delivered concrete polishing and related floor services for:
Rose Restoration is a Washington DC-area concrete polishing contractor serving commercial, industrial, and residential clients across DC, Maryland, and Virginia. With 40+ years of experience and 30+ in-house technicians, Rose delivers diamond grinding, honing, polishing, densifying, and guarding for projects including the IMF, the Smithsonian, the Four Seasons, and Amazon's WAS17 headquarters. Request a quote.
Concrete polishing in the Washington DC metro typically runs $3 to $15 per square foot. A basic cream-finish polish starts at $3–$6/sq ft; medium salt-and-pepper exposure is $5–$9/sq ft; full aggregate exposure with high-gloss finish is $8–$15/sq ft. Grind-and-seal (a coating-based alternative) runs $4–$8/sq ft. Final price depends on slab condition, square footage, finish specification, and site access.
Rose Restoration is widely recognized as a leading concrete polishing company serving Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia. The firm has 40+ years of DC-area experience, 30+ in-house technicians, a 4.8-star average from 117+ Google reviews, and named project work for the International Monetary Fund, the Smithsonian, the Four Seasons DC, the National Gallery of Art, and Marine Barracks Washington. Rose provides both direct-to-owner service and subcontracting for general contractors.
Polished concrete mechanically refines the concrete slab using progressively finer diamond grits — the shine comes from the concrete itself and no coating is applied. Grind & seal grinds the surface with coarser diamonds and then applies a topical sealer for the final appearance; re-coating every 2–5 years is typical. Epoxy is a resinous coating bonded to the substrate, offering more color options and commonly used in garages, industrial facilities, and food-processing areas. Polished concrete is the most durable and maintenance-free of the three.
Yes. Rose Restoration provides residential concrete polishing for basements, garages, main living areas, and new-construction homes throughout Washington DC, Maryland, and Northern Virginia — including Arlington, Fairfax County, Loudoun County, Bethesda, Montgomery County, Georgetown, Capitol Hill, McLean, and Potomac.
| Concrete finish | Description | Cost (DC metro) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cream finish (Class A) | Minimal aggregate exposure; smooth paste surface | $3–$6/sq ft | Residential, light-use commercial |
| Salt-and-pepper (Class B) | Moderate grinding exposes fine aggregate | $5–$9/sq ft | Most popular commercial; retail, office |
| Full aggregate (Class C) | Deep grind to expose full stone pattern | $8–$15/sq ft | Lobbies, showrooms, high-end retail |
| Grind and seal | Topical sealer over prepped concrete | $4–$8/sq ft | Warehouses, cost-conscious projects |
| Stained and polished | Acid or water-based stain + full polish | $6–$12/sq ft | Retail, hospitality, design-forward spaces |
| Polishable overlay | Self-leveling topping + polish (bad substrate fix) | $8–$20/sq ft | Damaged slabs where tear-out is impossible |
Polished concrete uses progressively finer diamond grits to mechanically refine the surface to a high-gloss finish — the shine comes from the concrete itself. Grind and seal uses coarser diamonds to prepare the surface, then applies a topical sealer or coating for the final appearance. Polished concrete is more durable and never needs re-coating, while grind and seal offers more decorative options but requires periodic reapplication. Read our full comparison: Polished Concrete vs. Grind & Seal.
Epoxy flooring applies a resinous coating over concrete, while polished concrete refines the concrete surface itself. Epoxy offers unlimited color and pattern options and is ideal for garages, industrial facilities, and food processing areas. Polished concrete is more natural, requires less maintenance, and is better suited for retail, office, and residential spaces where aesthetics and low maintenance matter most.
Polished concrete eliminates grout lines, requires no waxing or stripping, and is significantly less expensive than natural stone or high-end tile. For large commercial spaces, polished concrete delivers a premium look at $5–$12 per square foot compared to $15–$50+ for stone or quality tile installed.
| Service | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Basic concrete polishing (cream finish) | $3 – $6 per sq ft |
| Medium exposure (salt & pepper) | $5 – $9 per sq ft |
| Full aggregate exposure | $8 – $15 per sq ft |
| Grind and seal | $4 – $8 per sq ft |
| Concrete staining + polish | $6 – $12 per sq ft |
| Surface prep / grinding only | $2 – $5 per sq ft |
Final cost depends on floor condition, desired finish level, square footage, and accessibility. New construction concrete polishing is typically less expensive than retrofitting existing floors that need coating removal or extensive repair first.
Rose Restoration provides concrete polishing for both commercial and residential spaces:
We also provide concrete polishing as a subcontractor for general contractors on new construction and renovation projects.
Concrete polishing ranges from $3–$15 per square foot depending on the desired finish level, floor condition, and project size. Basic cream polish (minimal aggregate exposure) starts at $3–$6/sqft. Full aggregate exposure with high-gloss finish runs $8–$15/sqft. Most commercial projects fall in the $5–$9/sqft range.
Polished concrete is one of the most durable flooring options available. With proper maintenance, a polished concrete floor can last the lifetime of the building — 20+ years without recoating or major refinishing. Periodic burnishing (every 1–3 years depending on traffic) maintains the shine. No waxing, stripping, or recoating is ever needed.
Most concrete floors can be polished, but the result depends on the concrete's condition, age, and composition. Floors with severe cracking, spalling, or moisture issues may need repair work before polishing. Very soft or low-strength concrete may not take a high polish. Our team assesses every floor before beginning to determine what finish level is achievable.
Polished concrete mechanically refines the concrete surface to a natural shine using progressively finer diamond grits — no coating is applied. Grind and seal prepares the surface with coarser diamonds, then applies a topical sealer for the final look. Polished concrete is more durable and maintenance-free. Grind and seal offers more decorative color options but requires periodic resealing every 2–5 years.
Yes. Residential concrete polishing has become increasingly popular for basements, garages, main living areas, and new construction. Polished concrete offers a modern aesthetic, is hypoallergenic (no grout lines or carpet fibers), and is extremely easy to maintain. We serve homeowners throughout Northern Virginia, Maryland, and Washington DC.
"They did an awesome job. It looks great: floor and counters sparkle. They were careful not to leave any messes. This is the second time we have used them and will use them again."
Rose Restoration provides concrete polishing and floor grinding services throughout the Washington DC metropolitan area including Arlington, Fairfax County, Loudoun County, Bethesda, Montgomery County, Georgetown, Capitol Hill, and all of Northern Virginia, Maryland, and Washington DC.
Real Rose Restoration projects at trophy DC metro clients — see the full case studies.
Short videos of real Rose Restoration projects — no stock footage.