
Your pool deck should be comfortable underfoot and safe all year. We pour and resurface concrete pool decks built for Cocoa's heat, daily rain, and shifting sandy soil.

Concrete pool decks in Cocoa mean a poured, slip-resistant surface around your pool that handles Florida heat, heavy rain, and sandy soil - most residential projects run two to five days from start to finish, including forming, pouring, finishing, and an initial cure before you can walk on it.
If your current deck is cracked, faded, or too hot to walk on barefoot, you are not alone. Most Cocoa homeowners reach out after a few seasons of watching the surface degrade faster than expected. Concrete pool deck work here is different from a northern state - the UV intensity, humidity, and sandy base beneath the slab all shape how the job is done and how long it lasts. If you are also considering a covered area beside the pool, our concrete patio construction work pairs well with a new deck.
We work throughout Cocoa and the surrounding Brevard County communities, and we handle Brevard County permits so the job is inspected and your property records stay clean.
Cracks that are widening or have a lip where one side sits higher than the other mean the deck has shifted or settled beneath. In Cocoa's sandy soil, that movement gets worse over time if left alone. Small hairline cracks can sometimes be patched, but spreading or uneven cracks usually call for a full assessment.
A green or dark gray film is almost always algae or mold, and in Cocoa's humid climate it takes hold quickly on an unsealed or aging surface. If a good scrub with a hose doesn't clear it, growth is happening below the top layer. This is both a slip hazard and a sign the deck's protective coating has worn out.
If you can't cross the deck between noon and 4 p.m. in summer, the finish is absorbing too much heat - often because the sealer has worn away or the original color was too dark. This is also a safety concern for children and older adults who use the pool regularly.
Standing water near the house after a Cocoa afternoon storm means the deck isn't draining properly. That water pushes toward your foundation and creates a slip hazard every time it rains. Either the slope has shifted or the original installation didn't account for drainage correctly.
Every pool deck project starts with the base. Before a single yard of concrete goes down, we compact and prepare the ground to account for Cocoa's sandy coastal soil - because that is where most pool deck failures begin. From there, we offer new pours, full replacements, and resurfacing for decks that are structurally sound but showing their age. Whether you want a simple brushed finish or a decorative stamped pattern, the surface texture we recommend will be slip-resistant when wet and designed to stay as cool as possible underfoot in the Florida sun.
For homeowners who want to expand the outdoor living area beyond the pool edge, we also pour concrete steps connecting the pool area to the home or yard, and we can extend the project to include a full concrete patio beside the deck. All pool deck work includes permit handling and a final walkthrough covering sealing and maintenance expectations.
Best for homeowners who have no existing deck or whose current slab has shifted beyond repair.
Best for homeowners with a structurally sound slab that has cracked, faded, or lost its texture.
Best for homeowners who want a clean, grip-safe surface at a straightforward price.
Best for homeowners who want a stone or tile look around their pool without the higher cost of real stone.
Best for homeowners who want a heat-reflective lighter tone sealed for long-term UV and moisture resistance.
Cocoa sits on the Space Coast where summer temperatures regularly exceed 90 degrees and the sun is intense enough to fade and dry out an unsealed concrete deck within a single season. A heat-reflective finish and a UV-resistant sealer are not upgrades here - they are the standard. Homeowners who skip the sealer in this climate often find themselves resurfacing in three to five years instead of ten. The humidity also creates near-constant conditions for algae and mold on pool decks, making a textured, sealed surface critical for both safety and appearance. Residents in Cocoa Beach and Merritt Island face the same conditions, and we bring that same local knowledge to every project across the area.
Brevard County's hurricane season - June through November - also shapes how we build. Heavy, fast-moving rain requires the deck to slope away from the house and toward proper drains. A pool deck that doesn't drain correctly will push water against your foundation after every major storm. We build that slope in from the start, because fixing it after the fact means tearing the deck out and starting over. That attention to drainage is part of what separates a properly done Cocoa pool deck from one that looks fine on day one but causes problems after the first rainy season. For further reading on concrete standards and hot-weather placement, the American Concrete Institute publishes guidelines that inform how we approach every Florida pour.
We reply within one business day. We'll ask about the size of your pool area, whether there's existing concrete, and what finish you have in mind - then we'll schedule a free on-site visit, because backyard layouts vary too much to quote accurately over the phone.
We measure the space, check drainage slope, note how equipment will access the yard, and walk you through the permit process. Brevard County pool deck work often requires a building permit, and we handle that paperwork for you before any work begins.
Old concrete comes out first if needed, then we prepare and compact the base. The pour and finish - including any stamped pattern or color - typically takes one to two days. We work early in the morning to avoid pouring in peak heat.
Stay off the deck for three to five days for light foot traffic, and wait the full week before moving furniture back. After the concrete has cured, we apply a sealer and walk you through the maintenance schedule - including when to reseal and how to clean the surface.
No pressure, no obligation. We will come out, measure the space, and give you a straight written estimate.
(321) 386-0373Most pool deck failures in Cocoa start below the surface - sandy soil that wasn't properly compacted before the pour. We address that before a yard of concrete goes down, because fixing a sinking deck after the fact means demolition and a complete redo.
Pool deck work in Brevard County often requires a building permit and inspection. We pull the paperwork, schedule the inspection, and ensure everything meets local code. You get a clean property record and no headaches when you sell.
Cocoa gets heavy rain every summer. We engineer the slope of every deck so water moves away from your foundation - not toward it. That drainage detail is something inspectors check, and it's something cheap jobs skip.
We recommend heat-reflective lighter finishes and UV-resistant sealers suited to Brevard County's climate. A sealer that holds up in Cocoa's sun and humidity means you reseal every two to three years, not every one. The National Ready Mixed Concrete Association at nrmca.org sets the material standards our suppliers follow.
Every pool deck we build reflects what we have learned working in Cocoa's specific conditions - sandy soil, intense UV, hurricane-season rain, and Brevard County's permit process. Those details add up to a deck that lasts and stays safe. You can verify any Florida contractor's license through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation before signing anything.
Add safe, code-compliant concrete steps connecting your pool area or entry to the rest of your property.
Learn MoreExtend your outdoor space with a poured concrete patio alongside your pool deck for a complete backyard hardscape.
Learn MorePool season fills our calendar fast - reach out now and we will get your project scheduled before the rush.