Stamped Concrete in Amarillo, TX
Driveways, patios, walkways, and pool decks with the look of stone, brick, or plank — poured at a fraction of what real material costs, finished to survive West Texas weather.
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What Stamped Concrete Actually Is
Stamped concrete is a full-depth concrete pour with a texture pressed into the surface while it's still wet, then colored with integral pigment (mixed through) plus release powder or antique wash (worked into the texture). It reads at 5 feet like flagstone, ashlar cut stone, cobblestone, or wood-plank — but underneath it's a normal 4″ reinforced slab. No paver settlement, no grout to fail, no mortar joints to weed.
Amarillo has been a decent stamped-concrete market for a decade, mostly driven by three things: Palo Duro Canyon rim custom homes wanting European stone patios without the shipping cost, west-of-Loop-335 subdivisions with big lots and big outdoor budgets, and pool decks (integral color plus textured stamp is safer around water than smooth concrete).
Patterns We Install
- Ashlar cut stone — the most-installed stamped pattern in Amarillo. Reads like custom-cut limestone.
- Roman cobblestone — smaller units, tighter spacing. Old-world feel, popular around fire pits.
- Wood-plank / boardwalk — long parallel plank stamps in wood-grain texture. Popular on modern pool decks.
- Random flagstone — irregular polygonal shapes, no repeating grid. Best on freeform patios.
- Seamless slate texture — texture-only, stained to look like slate. Great on driveways.
- Brick running-bond — traditional brick coursing, integrally colored red or terra-cotta.
Where It Works Best
- Patios (barefoot-friendly texture)
- Pool decks (non-slip when done right, cooler than dark plain concrete)
- Walkways from driveway to front door (curb appeal)
- Driveways (adds real property value; +$6–$12/sqft over broom)
- Outdoor kitchen bases and fire-pit surrounds
Color, Depth, and Sealer
Stamped concrete color has three layers most of the time:
- Integral color — pigment mixed into the concrete during batching. Colors the concrete all the way through, so chips and wear don't reveal gray. Standard on stamped work.
- Color-hardener — dry-shake surface hardener with pigment, floated into the top layer. More vivid color, harder wearing surface.
- Antique release / powder release — applied to the surface right before stamping. Sits in the texture recesses when stamped, then washed off the high spots after cure. Gives depth and shadowing that looks like real stone weathering.
The Sealer Step (Critical)
Stamped concrete has to be sealed. The stamp pattern creates surface texture that captures moisture and dirt; without a sealer, the concrete stains, fades, and starts losing color inside 24 months. We apply a solvent-based acrylic sealer 14–28 days after pour, once the concrete has cured enough to accept it. Sealer needs re-application every 3–5 years — we leave a re-seal schedule with the invoice.
In Amarillo specifically: UV exposure is intense. West and south-facing stamped concrete fades faster than shaded areas. We recommend UV-resistant sealers for exposed surfaces, and a second seal coat in year 3 to keep the color reading.
Pricing Anchors
| Application | Cost |
|---|---|
| Stamped patio upgrade (vs broom) | +$6–$12/sqft |
| Full stamped 200 sqft patio | $2,800–$4,400 |
| Stamped driveway upgrade | +$6–$12/sqft over broom driveway |
| Stamped pool deck installed | $12–$20/sqft |
Complex patterns (multiple colors, hand-tinted grout lines, custom border) push the top of the range.
Common Problems We Prevent
- Pattern misalignment — we snap chalk lines on wet concrete before the first stamp goes down.
- Uneven color — pigment specced per cubic yard, not per truck.
- Sealer failure — we wait 14-day cure and check moisture before sealing.
- Efflorescence (white haze) — low-alkali cement plus proper sealing.
- De-icer damage — do NOT use rock salt or calcium chloride on stamped concrete. Sand or magnesium-based only.
Care Instructions
- Sweep or hose off monthly. Pressure washer OK at low PSI (<1500).
- Re-seal every 3–5 years.
- Plastic snow shovels only — no metal.
- No rock salt or calcium chloride ice melt.
- Trim landscaping so tannin-heavy debris (oak leaves) doesn't stain.
Stamped Concrete FAQs
How long does stamped concrete last in Amarillo?
Same 30+ year lifespan as plain concrete when installed and sealed correctly. Re-seal every 3–5 years.
Is stamped concrete slippery when wet?
Textured patterns (ashlar, cobblestone) have decent slip resistance. Smooth stamps (wood plank) need a non-slip additive in the sealer for pool decks.
Can you match a color I've seen?
Yes, within pigment availability. We batch a small test panel first.
Do you re-seal existing stamped concrete?
Yes, as a standalone service.
What patterns do you install most?
Ashlar cut stone and Roman cobblestone are the top two in Amarillo.