
Supreme Cocoa Concrete is the concrete contractor Cocoa Beach homeowners call for pool decks, driveways, and patios that hold up against salt air and daily sun - serving the island with licensed work and permits handled on every project.

Nearly every Cocoa Beach home has a pool, and most pool decks here were poured in the 1970s or 1980s - which means they are cracked, spalled, and overdue for replacement. We install non-slip concrete pool decks with finishes rated for barrier island UV and salt exposure, so the surface stays safe and looks right for years rather than seasons. See the full details on our concrete pool decks service page.
Lots on Cocoa Beach are small and driveways are tight, which means improper grading sends runoff directly onto neighboring properties or into the street. We pour driveways with precise cross-slopes that carry water to the curb, and we use sealers formulated for salt-air environments so the surface holds up on a barrier island.
Outdoor entertaining is a year-round activity in Cocoa Beach, and many homeowners use their patio space as a second living room. We build patios that handle heavy foot traffic from vacation renters and short-term guests - properly sloped so rain drains away quickly and finished with textures that grip wet feet safely.
Short-term rental properties in Cocoa Beach need surfaces that impress guests and survive heavy use. Stamped concrete delivers a high-end look without the ongoing replacement cost of pavers that shift in sandy soil. We apply stamped finishes over a properly reinforced base so the decorative layer does not crack independently from the structural slab beneath it.
Entry steps on Cocoa Beach properties take constant wet-foot traffic from swimmers, renters, and guests walking in from the pool or the beach. We construct steps with cast-in-place concrete - no hollow precast units that fill with water and crack - and apply non-slip broom finishes so entry points stay safe year-round.
Barrier island soils shift with tide-influenced groundwater levels more than inland soils do, and that movement cracks sidewalks faster here than almost anywhere in Brevard County. We replace damaged sections and pour new walks with the joint spacing and thickness needed to handle the ground movement common in Cocoa Beach.
Cocoa Beach sits on a narrow barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and the Banana River, which means every home on the island is exposed to salt air every single day - not just when storms come in. That constant salt exposure corrodes rebar inside concrete slabs faster than in inland markets, breaks down sealers within a season if the wrong product is used, and causes surface pitting on pool decks and driveways within a few years if they are not properly finished. Most of the housing stock here was built during the Space Race era of the 1960s and 1970s, and many concrete surfaces on those properties are original, meaning they are well past any reasonable maintenance window.
The mix of full-time residents, short-term vacation rentals, and second homes also changes what concrete work needs to accomplish here. A pool deck or driveway on a vacation rental property gets far more foot traffic than a typical owner-occupied home, which means the finish has to be more durable and the surface has to drain correctly to stay safe for guests who are unfamiliar with the property. City of Cocoa Beach building requirements apply to this work, and a contractor who skips permits puts the property owner at risk when it comes time to sell or refinance.
Our crew works throughout Cocoa Beach regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits through the City of Cocoa Beach Building Division for every project that requires one - this is not a step we skip to save time, because an unpermitted pool deck or driveway on a barrier island city becomes a problem when the property changes hands. The homes and condos we work on most often here are concrete block structures from the 1960s through the 1980s, and we know how to work around the tight lot access, low overhead utility lines, and narrow side yards that are standard on the island.
The area around North Atlantic Avenue near Ron Jon Surf Shop and south to the residential streets closer to the Cocoa Beach Pier sees some of the most worn concrete we encounter - decades of tourist foot traffic, hurricane winds, and salt air add up. We also serve homeowners in nearby Cape Canaveral, just north of the island, where many of the same barrier island soil and salt-air conditions apply. If you are on Cocoa Beach and need a realistic quote and timeline, call us directly.
We respond within one business day. We ask about the project type, the size of the area, and whether there is existing concrete to remove. No cost for the call and no pressure to commit.
We visit the property to look at the concrete surface, the drainage situation, and access conditions before quoting. We also explain what the permit process looks like for your specific project type and give you a written estimate with all costs broken out.
We submit the permit application to the City of Cocoa Beach Building Division and schedule your job once it is approved - typically one to two weeks. We notify you of any access or staging needs before the crew arrives.
We complete the work, clean the site, and walk through the finished surface with you before we leave. We give you written care instructions for the curing period and follow up if any questions come up afterward.
We serve Cocoa Beach and the surrounding barrier island - same-week responses, written estimates, and permits pulled on every job.
(321) 386-0373Cocoa Beach is a small city of about 11,000 people on a barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and the Banana River, roughly 60 miles east of Orlando. The city is closely tied to Kennedy Space Center, which sits just north on Merritt Island and has been the dominant employer in Brevard County since the 1960s. The Space Race era brought a wave of construction to the island, and most of the single-family homes and low-rise condo buildings here date from that period. North Atlantic Avenue is the main commercial corridor, anchored by landmarks like Ron Jon Surf Shop and running the length of the island from the SR-528 causeway to the quieter residential blocks at the south end of the city.
The residential character of Cocoa Beach is a mix of full-time residents, long-term renters, and vacation property owners who rent to visitors year-round. The oceanfront and Banana River sides of the island have condominiums and multi-unit buildings from the 1970s and 1980s, while the interior streets are lined with single-family concrete block homes on small lots. Neighboring Merritt Island sits just across the Banana River to the west, and the two communities share similar soil conditions, housing stock ages, and the same exposure to coastal weather. Both areas present the same concrete maintenance challenges, and we serve homeowners across both regularly.
Get a durable, professionally poured concrete driveway built to last.
Learn MoreStructural retaining walls built to hold soil and prevent erosion.
Learn MoreLevel, sealed interior floors for residential and commercial spaces.
Learn MoreSafe, properly graded concrete steps for entrances and landscapes.
Learn MoreHeavy-duty concrete parking lots designed for long-term performance.
Learn MoreSalt air and sun work on your concrete every day - the sooner you replace or repair a damaged surface, the less the underlying base costs to fix.