
Supreme Cocoa Concrete is Cocoa's locally owned concrete contractor, handling driveways, patios, stamped concrete, pool decks, and foundations for homeowners throughout the Space Coast - with same-week response and permits pulled on every job.

Cocoa homes built during the Space Coast boom years often have original driveways that are 40 to 60 years old. We build new concrete driveways designed to handle Florida's heat and heavy summer rain, with proper grading so water moves away from your garage rather than toward it. Learn more about our concrete driveway building service.
Cocoa's warm winters make outdoor living possible year-round, and a well-built concrete patio is one of the most used additions you can make to a home here. We pour patios sized and sloped for Brevard County's sandy soil and heavy seasonal rainfall, so you get a flat surface that doesn't puddle or crack within a season.
Stamped concrete is popular in Cocoa neighborhoods where HOA guidelines limit material choices - it gives you the look of brick or stone while staying within the concrete specifications most associations allow. We handle both the decorative finish and the structural pour, so the result holds up through Florida's UV exposure and humidity.
Pool decks in Cocoa take a beating from daily UV exposure, salt air from the nearby Indian River Lagoon, and constant foot traffic in and out of the water. We pour non-slip surfaces using finishes that stay cooler underfoot and resist the surface pitting that Florida's wet-dry cycles cause over time.
Cocoa's flat terrain and sandy soil make proper slab preparation especially important - a poorly compacted base leads to settling and cracking within a few years. We build slab foundations for new construction and additions, handling all Brevard County permit requirements and inspections from start to finish.
Mature trees are common on Cocoa lots built in the 1950s through 1970s, and their roots frequently lift and crack sidewalks over decades. We replace lifted sections and pour new sidewalks that meet Brevard County code, including proper control joint spacing to give the slab room to move without cracking across the middle.
Most homes in Cocoa were built between the 1950s and 1980s, which means many driveways, patios, and sidewalks are well past their expected lifespan. Concrete that old was often poured thinner and with less attention to base preparation than current standards require. Add in Brevard County's sandy soil - which shifts more than denser soils found elsewhere in Florida - and you get a common pattern of cracking, sinking, and surface deterioration that catches up with homeowners all at once.
The coastal environment makes things harder. Cocoa sits a few miles from the Atlantic and borders the Indian River Lagoon, so salt air and high humidity are a year-round reality. These conditions accelerate deterioration in concrete surfaces that are not finished and sealed correctly. Then add Florida's rainy season - roughly 50 inches of rain per year, concentrated between June and September - and you have regular heavy rain washing against driveways, patios, and foundations. A concrete contractor who does not understand how to grade surfaces for drainage in this specific climate will leave you with pooling water near your foundation every time a summer storm rolls through.
Our crew works throughout Cocoa regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete work here. We pull permits through Brevard County Building Services for every project and are familiar with the inspection process, so projects do not get held up by paperwork on our end. The homes we work on most often in Cocoa are the concrete block ranch-style houses built during the Space Coast boom years - they have specific characteristics, including low-pitched roofs and modest lot sizes with mature trees, that affect how we approach driveways, sidewalks, and foundation work near them.
Cocoa Village and the neighborhoods surrounding it tend to have the oldest homes and some of the most root-damaged concrete we see anywhere in Brevard County. Further out toward the edges of the city, newer subdivisions have their own common issues - primarily surface deterioration from Florida's UV exposure and drainage problems from lots that weren't graded perfectly during original construction. We also serve homeowners in nearby Rockledge and regularly cross through that area on our way to and from jobs in this part of Brevard County. If you're in Cocoa and considering concrete work, call us - we know the area and the permit process, and we can give you a realistic timeline before you commit.
We reply within one business day and ask a few basic questions about your project - size, existing surface, and what you want the finished result to look like. There is no pressure and no cost for the conversation.
We come to your property to look at the site conditions, drainage, and access before quoting a price. This visit is also where we explain what the permit process will look like for your specific project and give you a written estimate breaking out all costs.
We handle the Brevard County permit application on your behalf. Once approved - typically one to two weeks - we schedule the crew and let you know exactly what to move or prepare before they arrive.
We do the demolition, base preparation, pour, and finishing. If a county inspection is required, we coordinate it directly and give you the pass documentation when it is done. Your only job is to stay off the surface for the curing period we specify.
We serve Cocoa and all of Brevard County. Free estimates, permits handled, no surprises on the final invoice.
(321) 386-0373Cocoa is a city of about 19,000 residents in Brevard County, sitting on the west bank of the Indian River Lagoon on Florida's central east coast. The city is anchored by Cocoa Village, its historic downtown district with brick streets and buildings dating back to the early 1900s, and by its proximity to Kennedy Space Center about 12 miles east on Merritt Island. The city grew rapidly during the 1950s and 1960s as NASA's space program brought engineers and workers to the area, and much of the housing stock reflects that era - single-story concrete block ranch homes on modest lots with mature trees.
The residential mix in Cocoa is varied. Older neighborhoods near Cocoa Village and the river tend to have owner-occupied homes with the most deferred maintenance needs. Subdivisions built later on the outskirts of the city are generally newer and better maintained but face the same climate challenges - salt air, heavy summer rainfall, and UV exposure that no surface finish fully escapes. We also work regularly in neighboring Merritt Island, just across the Indian River, where similar conditions and building stock create comparable concrete needs.
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 MoreCall today for a free estimate - we respond within one business day and handle every permit so you do not have to.