That stretch of gray, cracked concrete out back doesn't have to stay that way. With the right materials and a free weekend, you can turn it into a surface that looks like it belongs at a resort.
Epoxy pebble flooring is one of the most forgiving upgrades a homeowner can take on. You're not pouring a new slab or hiring a crew. You're spreading natural stone and locking it down with a resin you mix in a bucket.
We make the resin that holds it all together, so we'll walk you through exactly how it works, where it shines, what it costs, and how to get a result that lasts.
Epoxy pebble flooring is a decorative surface made by blending small natural stones with a clear epoxy resin and troweling the mix over an existing surface like concrete. The resin coats every pebble and binds the stones into one solid, seamless layer that cures into a durable, attractive finish.
The look is natural and high-end. The build is simple: stone goes in, resin binds it, and the surface hardens in place.
Because the stone sits right on top of your existing slab, there's no demolition and no new foundation. That's a big part of why it has become such a popular weekend project for homeowners who want a real upgrade without a contractor's price tag.
An epoxy pebble floor comes down to two ingredients: decorative stone and a bonding resin. Getting both right is what separates a surface that lasts from one that lifts.
The stone is the part you see. Our Decorative Stone Aggregates come in blends like Gray Blend, Dark Brown, Caramel, Coral, and Multicolored Flint, so you can match the look to your home instead of settling for whatever the local yard has in stock.
The resin is the part that does the work. Stone Bond Epoxy is engineered specifically for river rock and decorative stone, with what we call Superior Stone Lock — it coats each pebble and holds the aggregate in place so the surface doesn't shed stones underfoot.

Here's what most people don't realize: the resin matters more than the rock. A pretty stone blend set in a weak binder will loosen and pop within a season. A quality epoxy keeps the whole floor tight for years, through sun, rain, and foot traffic.
Your stone choice sets the whole mood of the space. Lighter blends like Gray Blend and Caramel stay cooler underfoot and brighten a shaded patio. Richer tones like Dark Brown and Multicolored Flint hide dust and read as more formal.
We recommend ordering a little extra of your chosen blend so every batch you mix comes from the same color lot. It keeps the finished surface consistent from one troweled section to the next.
If you're not sure which way to go, pick the blend that echoes a material already on your home — your brick, your stone veneer, your roof. That's the fastest route to a surface that looks like it was always meant to be there.
Epoxy pebble flooring works almost anywhere you have a stable concrete surface, indoors or out. The four most common projects are driveways, patios, pool decks, and walkways, and each one plays to the surface's strengths.
On a driveway, the seamless finish handles vehicle traffic and looks far richer than plain concrete. The permeable surface also helps rain drain instead of sheeting toward your garage. (We cover driveway-specific prep in our guide to epoxy pebble driveways.)
On a patio, the natural stone turns a flat slab into an outdoor room. It's the project most homeowners start with, and the one that delivers the biggest visual payoff for a weekend's work.
Around a pool deck, the textured stone gives bare feet something to grip, which matters most right where water and tile meet. Lighter blends stay more comfortable in the sun. See our epoxy pebble pool deck guide for the details that keep it safe and cool underfoot.
Along a walkway, it ties your landscaping together with a path that won't crack and heave like poured concrete. Our epoxy pebble walkway guide breaks down the narrow-space troweling technique.

Installing epoxy pebble flooring takes five core steps, and none of them require a contractor's skill set. You'll need a drill mixer, a trowel, a squeegee, and a clean, dry surface to start.
Work in small sections — about four feet at a time — so the resin stays workable while you spread.
Take your time on prep and mixing. Those two steps decide whether your floor lasts five years or fifteen.
Keep a second person on mixing while you trowel, so the flow of fresh material never stops mid-section. Stage all your stone and resin before you open the first kit. And test your trowel angle on a small corner first — you want firm, even pressure, not a scrape.
Yes — installed as a bound system, an epoxy pebble floor is permeable, so water passes through the surface and returns to the ground instead of pooling or sheeting off. The resin coats and locks each stone while leaving tiny voids between the pebbles for water to move through.
That drainage does real work. On a patio it means no standing puddles after a storm. On a driveway it means rain soaks into the ground rather than running toward your foundation or the street.
It's also a friendlier choice for your yard than sealed concrete. By letting rainwater drain naturally, a permeable surface helps reduce stormwater runoff — one of the practical reasons homeowners choose resin-bound stone over a solid slab.
A DIY epoxy pebble floor costs a fraction of a professional install, and the math is easy to plan around. Your two material costs are the epoxy kit and the decorative stone.
We sell Stone Bond Epoxy direct, at published prices, with no dealer markup or territory fees:
| Stone Bond Epoxy Kit | Price |
|---|---|
| 1 Gallon Kit | $129.99 |
| 4 Gallon Kit | $324.99 |
| 20 Gallon Kit | $1,599.99 |
Decorative Stone Aggregates run $23.99–$33.99 per 50-lb bag depending on the blend. Use our online Resin Calculator to dial in exactly how much epoxy and stone your square footage needs before you order, so you're not guessing or over-buying.
Compare that to professional pebble surfacing, which commonly runs several dollars per square foot installed. Doing it yourself, your cost is mostly materials — and you keep full control of the finish. For a deeper breakdown by project, see our guide to epoxy pebble patio cost.
A properly installed epoxy pebble floor lasts for many years, even in full sun and heavy use. The two things that determine its lifespan are the quality of the resin and the care taken during installation.
Stone Bond is built with high UV resistance, so the surface holds its color and clarity outdoors instead of yellowing or chalking the way weaker resins can. Its bond strength is rated for high-traffic residential and commercial use.
Reseal the surface when it starts to lose its sheen, and it will keep looking new far longer. A protective sealer like our Crystal Coat refreshes the finish and adds another layer of moisture resistance.
Epoxy pebble flooring outperforms bare concrete on looks, comfort, drainage, and resurfacing cost. The clearest way to see the difference is side by side.
| Epoxy Pebble Flooring | Plain Concrete | |
|---|---|---|
| Appearance | Natural stone, custom color blends | Flat gray |
| Surface texture | Subtle grip underfoot | Smooth or broom finish |
| Drainage | Permeable — water drains through | Impermeable — water runs off |
| Installs over existing slab | Yes — no demolition | N/A |
| DIY-friendly | Yes | Pouring is not |
| Refresh / repair | Reseal or patch in place | Resurface or replace |
You're not replacing your concrete. You're giving it a second life with a surface that's nicer to look at, more comfortable to stand on, and better at handling rain.
Yes — epoxy pebble flooring is a popular DIY project. With a drill mixer, a trowel, a squeegee, and a clean surface, most homeowners can complete a patio over a weekend. The keys are thorough surface prep and mixing the resin and stone fully before you spread.
Epoxy pebble flooring installs over stable, clean concrete — driveways, patios, pool decks, walkways, and interior slabs. The existing surface needs to be sound, dry, and free of oil or loose material. Large cracks should be patched before you start.
Yes. Installed as a bound system, the surface is permeable, so water passes through and returns to the ground instead of pooling on top. That helps prevent puddles and reduces stormwater runoff compared with a solid concrete slab.
An epoxy pebble floor is typically troweled to roughly the depth of the stone you're using, creating a thin, seamless overlay rather than a thick new slab. Because it bonds to your existing surface, it adds minimal height. Use the McKinnon Resin Calculator to match material quantity to your depth and square footage.
Like most outdoor surfaces, an epoxy pebble floor warms in direct sun, though natural stone and lighter blends stay more comfortable underfoot than dark solid surfaces. For pool decks, choosing a lighter aggregate helps. Stone Bond's high UV resistance keeps the finish from degrading in constant sunlight.
This guide covers epoxy pebble flooring broadly — for the specifics of your project, dig into the deep dives: installing an epoxy pebble driveway, what an epoxy pebble patio really costs, building a safe epoxy pebble pool deck, and surfacing an epoxy pebble walkway. Each one builds on what you've learned here.
Ready to transform that concrete? Stone Bond Epoxy and our decorative stone blends ship direct, and our team can help you plan your project from the first bag to the final cure.
Shop the Stone Bond Epoxy Kit, size your order with the Resin Calculator, or call us at 1-866-622-7031 with questions. We're here to help you get it right.
!