How much epoxy for a 2-car garage?
A typical 2-car garage is about 400 sq ft (20 × 20 ft). For a durable two-coat finish — a colored base coat plus a clear topcoat — you need roughly two 2-car kits (or four 1-car kits). Here's the math, the cost, and the amounts for other garage sizes.
The math
Epoxy is sold in kits rated by coverage per coat. Multiply your floor area by the number of coats, then divide by a kit's coverage:
- Floor area = 20 × 20 = 400 sq ft
- Coverage needed = 400 × 2 coats = 800 sq ft
- 2-car kits (~500 sq ft/coat) = 800 ÷ 500 = 1.6 → 2 kits
- 1-car kits (~250 sq ft/coat) = 800 ÷ 250 = 3.2 → 4 kits
Round up — you can't buy part of a kit, and running out mid-coat leaves a visible lap line. Bare, porous, or freshly ground concrete soaks up the first coat, so it covers a little less; buy a spare if your floor is thirsty.
Epoxy needed by garage size (two coats)
| Garage | Floor area | 1-car kits | 2-car kits |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-car (12 × 20) | ~240 sq ft | 2 | 1 |
| 2-car (20 × 20) | ~400 sq ft | 4 | 2 |
| 2-car large (24 × 24) | ~576 sq ft | 5 | 3 |
| 3-car (30 × 22) | ~660 sq ft | 6 | 3 |
Always measure your own floor — garage dimensions vary, and an extra few feet can tip you into another kit.
Different size or coats?
Enter your garage size, coats, and product coverage and the calculator gives the exact kit count plus the cost.
Open the Garage Floor Epoxy CalculatorWhat it costs for a 2-car garage
At 400 sq ft:
- DIY materials — about $1.50–$3.00 per sq ft, or roughly $600–$1,200 for a quality two-coat, flake system (kits, etcher/degreaser, flakes, rollers).
- Professional install — about $3–$12 per sq ft, or roughly $1,200–$4,800. Water-based epoxy is cheapest; polyaspartic and metallic finishes cost more.
Because most of a pro bill is labor and prep, epoxying a garage floor is a strong DIY project — see our methodology for how we build these ranges.
Don't skip the prep
The right amount of epoxy only matters if it sticks. Degrease the slab, repair cracks, then acid-etch or diamond-grind so the coating can grip — skipped prep is the number-one reason garage epoxy peels. The concrete must be fully cured (about 28 days for a new slab) and dry, with no moisture rising through it. The full walkthrough is in our how to epoxy a garage floor guide.