"Lifetime warranty" is one of the most-abused phrases in the floor coatings industry. Some companies write meaningful, transferable lifetime warranties; others write 12-month warranties dressed up in "lifetime" marketing language. Here's how to tell the difference before you sign.
Question 1: Whose Lifetime?
Three definitions you'll see:
- Owner's lifetime — covers as long as you (the original owner) own the property
- Property's lifetime — covers as long as the property exists (transferable to next owner)
- Product's lifetime — covers as long as the manufacturer makes the product (often 5-10 years in practice; manufacturers discontinue products)
The most valuable is property-lifetime / transferable. It boosts resale value and survives a sale. The least valuable is product-lifetime, which can vanish whenever the manufacturer changes the SKU.
Question 2: What Failures Are Covered?
Standard residential lifetime warranty covers:
- Peeling, lifting, delamination
- Hot-tire pickup
- UV yellowing
- Material defects in the coating itself
What to look for in fine print exclusions:
- "Cosmetic" issues — some warranties exclude scratches, gloss loss, color shift. These can be legitimate (you can't warranty against keys dropping on the floor) or weasely (excluding any visible failure).
- "Acts of nature" — flood, earthquake. Reasonable.
- "Improper use" — vague. Watch for clauses excluding any chemical exposure ("contact with petroleum products voids warranty" would invalidate any garage use).
- "Improper maintenance" — should be specific (e.g., "use of muriatic acid voids"). Vague clauses ("failure to properly maintain") are loopholes.
Question 3: What Does the Remedy Look Like?
Read the warranty for the actual remedy. Common levels:
- Re-coat at contractor's cost — best. We re-grind and re-coat the failed area at no charge to you.
- Material-only coverage — contractor provides replacement material; you pay labor. Industry-common but much weaker.
- Pro-rated refund — partial refund based on remaining warranty period. Usually a small payout against a much larger replacement cost.
Our warranty is re-coat at our cost — which is what "lifetime warranty" should mean. Anything less is a marketing claim.
Question 4: Is the Warranty in Writing?
Verbal warranties are worth nothing. Get the warranty as a signed document at install. The document should specify:
- Coverage period (lifetime, 10-year, etc.)
- Whose lifetime (owner / property / product)
- Covered failures (specific list)
- Exclusions (specific list)
- Remedy (re-coat / material-only / pro-rated)
- Transferability (yes / no)
- Process to file a claim (phone number, email, response time)
Question 5: Will the Contractor Be Around?
A lifetime warranty from a 6-month-old company is worth less than a 10-year warranty from a 20-year-old company. Look at:
- Years in business (we've been in OC since 2007)
- Reviews on Google, Yelp, BBB
- Insurance and bonding (a contractor that fails usually does so because they were under-insured and got sued out of business)
- Whether they own their materials chain (we use Penntek, Polyaspartic.com, Citadel — established US manufacturers with their own warranties backing ours)
The 10-Year Warranty Question
Some contractors offer "10-year warranty" instead of lifetime. This isn't necessarily worse — it can be a more honest framing if the contractor knows realistic service life. But it's worth comparing:
- A meaningful 10-year warranty (re-coat at contractor cost, transferable, broad coverage) = excellent
- A "lifetime" warranty with material-only remedy and 8 weasel exclusions = worthless
Red Flags
- Lifetime warranty is verbal-only or only on the website (not in the install paperwork)
- "Lifetime" but the remedy is "we'll come look at it" (no defined action)
- Exclusions list is longer than the coverage list
- Warranty is non-transferable — devalues the floor on resale
- Contractor changes the warranty terms between quote and signed paperwork
Our Standard Warranty
Just so you have a benchmark: our residential lifetime warranty is property-life (transferable to next owner), covers peeling / hot-tire pickup / UV yellowing / material defects, remedy is re-coat at our cost, document signed at install. We've honored claims as long as 12 years out. The cost of doing it right is built into the original quote — we'd rather spec correctly the first time than re-coat for free later.
Get a Free OC Epoxy Quote
Call (949) 744-6229 or use the form below for a free written quote with mandatory moisture testing and lifetime warranty.