
A pool deck that burns your feet or cracks every few years is not working. We build and resurface concrete pool decks in Beaumont that stay cooler, drain properly, and hold up through local soil movement and intense summers.

Concrete pool decks in Beaumont, CA are installed by removing the old surface, grading the ground for proper drainage, pouring a reinforced slab with control joints, and finishing with a texture chosen for heat and slip resistance - most residential jobs take two to four days of active work, plus about a week before the area is usable again. Beaumont Concrete Company handles pool deck work throughout Beaumont and the surrounding Inland Empire, with every project permitted through the City of Beaumont before work starts.
The surface finish you choose matters more here than it does in coastal cities. Beaumont summers regularly push past 100 degrees, and a dark concrete deck can become painful to walk on barefoot by midday. We help homeowners choose finishes that balance looks, heat reflection, and the slip-resistance requirements in California building code.
If you want to connect your pool area to a covered outdoor living space, our concrete patio construction service pairs naturally with pool deck work - many homeowners build both at the same time for a finished, consistent backyard.
Thin cracks are common, but cracks wide enough to catch your finger - or cracks that keep reappearing after patching - signal that the concrete is under stress from below. In Beaumont, the cycle of wet winters and dry summers causes soil to expand and contract, which puts steady pressure on the slab. Waiting lets small cracks grow into larger structural problems.
If walking barefoot on your pool deck in July or August is genuinely painful, your current surface is absorbing and holding too much heat. This is a common complaint in Beaumont, where temperatures regularly push past 100 degrees. A new deck with a lighter finish or a heat-reflective coating can make the whole pool area usable again on the hottest days.
Standing water on the deck after rain or splashing is a sign the surface is not sloped correctly. A properly built pool deck drains away from the pool. Puddles that sit for hours create a slip hazard and, over time, erode the soil underneath the slab - which leads to settling and cracking.
When the top layer of concrete starts to pit or flake, water gets into the slab more easily. In Beaumont's climate, UV exposure and temperature swings accelerate this breakdown. Once the surface layer starts to go, it tends to worsen quickly - and a rough surface is harder to clean and more likely to scratch bare feet.
Most homeowners start with a brushed or broom-finish deck - it is textured for grip, meets California slip-resistance requirements, and holds up well in Beaumont heat. If you want more visual interest, we can stamp patterns into the wet concrete to mimic stone or tile, add color pigments to the mix, or apply a tinted stain after curing. These finishes cost more, but they significantly improve how your backyard looks and can be designed to stay cooler underfoot than a plain gray slab.
When the existing concrete is structurally solid but looks worn, resurfacing - applying a new coating over the current slab - can refresh the appearance at a lower cost than full replacement. It only works when the base concrete is not cracked, heaving, or crumbling. We always inspect the existing surface carefully before recommending either approach. For homeowners who also want updated steps leading from the deck to the back door, our concrete steps construction service handles that cleanly and can be built at the same time as the deck.
A textured, slip-resistant surface that meets California safety requirements and works with most HOA guidelines.
Patterns pressed into the wet surface to mimic stone or tile - a higher-end look at a fraction of the paver cost.
Pigments mixed into the concrete or applied as a stain for a finished appearance that coordinates with your home.
A new coating applied over a structurally sound existing slab - lower cost and faster than full replacement when the base is in good condition.
Beaumont sits in the San Gorgonio Pass at about 2,500 feet, where summer heat regularly tops 100 degrees and the soil is a mix of clay and sandy layers that shift with moisture changes. That combination - extreme heat and unstable ground - is the main reason pool decks in this area fail earlier than they should. When a slab is poured over a poorly prepared base and the soil contracts through the dry summer, cracks form. When the same slab absorbs heat all afternoon, it becomes uncomfortably hot to walk on. Both problems are solvable with the right materials and prep - but they require a contractor who knows what local conditions actually look like. Homeowners in Banning face similar soil and heat conditions, and the same approach applies across the pass.
There is also the permit and HOA layer to navigate. The City of Beaumont requires permits for pool deck work, and many of the city's planned communities - particularly in the Tournament Hills and Sundance areas - have HOA design guidelines that cover deck materials and colors. Getting HOA approval can add two to four weeks to your timeline, so it needs to start early. We handle this process regularly for Beaumont homeowners and know how to submit documentation that gets approved the first time. Homeowners in Menifee often face similar HOA requirements, and the same process applies there.
Reach out by phone or through the contact form. We respond within 1 business day to schedule a free on-site estimate. Most visits take about 30 minutes and include a look at drainage and the existing surface.
We check your existing deck, the drainage slope, and the ground condition, then walk you through finish options. You get a written quote that separates labor, materials, and permit fees - no guesswork.
We file the permit with the City of Beaumont before any work is scheduled. If your neighborhood has an HOA, we help you submit the required documentation - the approval process can take two to four weeks, so we start it early.
Demo, grading, pour, and finish typically take two to four days. We rope off the fresh slab and walk you through the care instructions - including when you can use the pool again - before we close out the job.
Free on-site estimate. We handle permits and HOA submissions. No obligation.
(951) 518-9063Every pool deck project is covered by a valid CSLB license and full liability insurance. You can look up our license number on the California Contractors State License Board website at cslb.ca.gov before you sign anything - we encourage it.
We have built pool decks in Beaumont neighborhoods - including homes in Tournament Hills and Sundance - long enough to know how the local clay soil and triple-digit summers affect a slab. That knowledge goes into every base we prepare and every finish we recommend.
Many Beaumont communities require architectural review before exterior concrete work. We have navigated this process for homeowners in Beaumont's planned communities and can prepare your submission to reduce back-and-forth with the board.
The City of Beaumont requires permits for pool deck work. We handle every permit and inspection on your behalf - you never need to call the city or visit any office. The job is fully documented when we leave.
Pool decks in Beaumont need more than a good finish - they need proper base prep, the right curing approach for summer heat, and a contractor who knows how to work within the city permit process and HOA requirements. American Concrete Institute standards guide how we mix, place, and cure every slab. That foundation is what separates a deck that holds up for decades from one that starts cracking within a few years.
Add safe, properly proportioned steps from the pool deck to your back door or a raised yard area.
Learn moreExtend your outdoor living area beyond the pool with a durable patio surface that connects to the deck.
Learn moreSummer books up fast in the Inland Empire. Get your free estimate now and lock in your start date before the season fills.