Professional Concrete Caulking at Lake of the Ozarks

Joint Sealing, Crack Repair & Freeze-Thaw Protection

There is a feature of every concrete driveway, walkway, patio, and dock apron at Lake of the Ozarks that most property owners walk over every day without thinking about it — the joints. Those straight lines cut into or formed into concrete flatwork are not cosmetic details. They are engineered relief points that allow the concrete to expand, contract, and move with temperature changes without cracking unpredictably across the slab surface. They are also, eventually, one of the most important maintenance points on any concrete surface.

When those joints are open, damaged, or filled with deteriorated old caulk, they become direct pathways for water, debris, vegetation, insects, and freeze-thaw damage to enter the concrete system. At Lake of the Ozarks, where the moisture environment is intense, freeze-thaw cycling is severe, and concrete surfaces see the kind of use that comes with active lake living, failed concrete joints accelerate every form of concrete deterioration — and allow damage to compound season over season until a joint problem becomes a slab replacement problem.

Concrete caulking is the maintenance service that prevents that progression. Properly selected, correctly installed flexible joint sealant keeps water out, accommodates the natural movement concrete undergoes, and extends the functional life of driveways, walkways, dock aprons, and other concrete surfaces significantly. It is one of the least expensive and most effective maintenance investments available for any concrete surface — and at Lake of the Ozarks, it is one of the most necessary.

My Handyman LOZ has been maintaining and protecting Lake of the Ozarks properties since 1992. We caulk and seal concrete joints and cracks on driveways, walkways, patios, dock aprons, pool decks, and commercial surfaces throughout the LOZ area. We remove deteriorated sealant completely, prepare joints correctly, and apply the right product for the surface type and the conditions it faces. From a fresh driveway that needs its first joint seal to a dock apron with years of failed caulk that needs a full recaulking — we bring the honest assessment and the professional approach that produces results that last.

Call or Text 573-217-6060 for a Free Estimate

Why Concrete Caulking Matters at Lake of the Ozarks

Concrete is not a static material. It expands in summer heat, contracts in winter cold, and shifts with ground moisture and seasonal movement throughout the year. Control joints and expansion joints in concrete flatwork exist specifically to manage this movement — to give the concrete a designed place to flex rather than cracking randomly across the slab surface. When those joints are open or compromised, the designed protection fails, and the entire slab is exposed to water infiltration and the damage it causes.

At Lake of the Ozarks, the stakes around joint maintenance are higher than at most inland locations for specific, compounding reasons. Missouri’s freeze-thaw cycle hits the LOZ area hard — temperatures swing repeatedly through the freezing point each winter and early spring, and concrete surfaces near the lake stay wetter longer than their inland counterparts because of the persistent humidity and proximity to the water. Every open joint on a wet concrete surface in a freeze-thaw climate is a damage-in-progress situation: water enters, freezes, expands, pries the joint edges apart, and the next cycle attacks a wider, more compromised opening.

Beyond freeze-thaw damage, open joints collect organic debris — leaves, seeds, dirt — that supports plant root growth. Grass and weeds rooting in concrete joints pry the edges apart from below and above simultaneously, accelerating cracking and making the joint progressively harder to seal effectively. Ant colonies establish in open joints. Oil and petroleum contaminants from boat trailers and vehicles penetrate through open joints to the base material beneath the slab. Every one of these pathways closes when joints are properly caulked.

The investment in keeping concrete joints properly sealed is a fraction of the cost of the slab damage that accumulates when they are not. Caulking a driveway costs a small fraction of what driveway repair or replacement costs. The math is not complicated — and at Lake of the Ozarks, where every environmental factor accelerates the damage that open joints allow, the argument for staying current on concrete caulking is even stronger than it is elsewhere.

Concrete Caulking for Homeowners, Vacation Rentals, and Commercial Properties

The reasons to prioritize concrete caulking vary by property type, and My Handyman LOZ serves the full range of Lake of the Ozarks property owners with experience matched to each situation.

Full-time lake residents and seasonal homeowners benefit most from concrete caulking as part of a proactive concrete maintenance program. Most lake property owners who pay attention to their concrete already understand that the driveway, dock apron, and walkways are significant investments worth protecting. What many do not fully appreciate is how much of that protection depends on the condition of the joints — the places concrete cleaning and sealing cannot fix if the joints themselves are open or failed. A complete concrete maintenance cycle — clean, caulk, seal — protects the entire surface system, not just the surface layer.

Vacation rental owners have a specific safety and liability dimension to the caulking discussion. Raised joint edges, cracked and heaved slab sections, and weed-filled joints on walkways and entry areas create trip hazards that directly expose rental owners to liability when guests are injured. Beyond liability, cracked and deteriorating concrete surfaces are noticed immediately by arriving guests and affect the impression the property makes — which flows directly into reviews. Maintained, well-caulked concrete surfaces signal a property that is actively managed to a professional standard.

Commercial properties at Lake of the Ozarks — marinas, resorts, restaurants, and retail operations — have large concrete areas that are subject to heavy foot and vehicle traffic, constant public observation, and the expectations of customers who form immediate impressions from what they see at ground level. Commercial property concrete maintenance programs that include regular joint inspection and recaulking protect the structural investment in those surfaces, maintain safe conditions for customers and employees, and avoid the reputation damage that comes with visibly deteriorating exterior surfaces.

Common Concrete Joint and Crack Problems We Solve

Lake of the Ozarks property owners call us for concrete caulking when they are seeing the predictable results of failed or absent joint sealant. If any of these match what you are looking at, it is time to schedule a caulking service:

Open, empty control joints

Joints that were never caulked or whose original sealant has fully deteriorated and fallen out. Empty joints are direct water infiltration channels and accumulate debris, vegetation, and biological growth. They are the baseline condition that concrete caulking addresses.

Cracked, dried, and separated caulk

Existing caulk that has dried out, cracked longitudinally, or pulled away from one or both sides of the joint. This is the most common caulk failure mode — the material loses flexibility over time, can no longer accommodate joint movement, and tears or separates. Failed caulk that is still partially in place must be fully removed before new sealant can be applied.

Weeds and vegetation growing in joints

Plant growth in open or failed joints is both a symptom and an accelerant of joint damage. Plant roots physically pry joint edges apart over time, widening the crack and making it harder to seal effectively. Vegetation removal and thorough joint cleaning are part of the prep process before caulking.

Raised or displaced joint edges

Joints where one side of the concrete has heaved slightly relative to the other due to root growth, soil movement, or freeze-thaw heaving. Minor differential movement can be addressed with flexible caulk; significant heaving may warrant evaluation for the underlying cause before caulking.

Surface cracks extending across the slab

Random or structured surface cracks that have developed in the slab body rather than at designed joints. Stable surface cracks can be cleaned, prepped, and caulked with flexible sealant to prevent water infiltration and control further widening. Active cracks with ongoing differential movement need evaluation before caulking.

Failed caulk at dock apron seams and water-adjacent concrete

The concrete adjacent to dock structures, boat ramp approaches, and shoreline hardscape takes the heaviest moisture exposure of any concrete on the property. Joint sealant in these areas deteriorates faster than anywhere else and needs more frequent inspection and replacement.

Caulk failure at perimeter joints

The joint where a concrete slab meets a foundation wall, curb, or adjacent structure typically an expansion joint is a common failure point. When this joint opens, water runs down the foundation face and into the base material, contributing to soil erosion, settling, and basement moisture issues.

Pre-sealing joint preparation

Property owners preparing for concrete sealing need joints caulked before the sealer goes on. Applying sealer over open joints leaves water infiltration pathways that work under the sealed surface, defeating the sealer’s protective purpose. We provide caulking as the companion service to sealing in the correct sequence.

Understanding Concrete Joints Why They Exist and Why They Fail

Not all lines in concrete are the same, and the right approach to caulking them depends on understanding what each joint type is doing. My Handyman LOZ identifies and addresses each joint type appropriately — not with a one-product-fits-all approach that produces inconsistent results.
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Control Joints

Control joints are the most common joints in residential concrete flatwork. They are intentional weaknesses cut or formed into the slab that allow the concrete to crack at a designed location rather than randomly across the surface as the slab contracts during curing and seasonal temperature cycling. A driveway typically has control joints every eight to twelve feet. These joints experience moderate movement with temperature changes and need a flexible self-leveling sealant that can accommodate that movement while keeping water out. Rigid fillers applied to control joints fail because they cannot move with the concrete.
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Expansion Joints

Expansion joints are wider separation gaps placed at locations where two independent concrete masses meet — where a driveway meets a sidewalk, where a slab meets a foundation wall, or where a dock apron meets the dock structure. These joints exist to allow the two slabs to expand and contract independently without pushing against each other. They require flexible sealant with higher elongation capacity than a standard control joint, and often require a backer rod to establish the correct sealant depth before caulk is applied. Failed expansion joints at foundation perimeters are a significant contributor to basement moisture intrusion at lake properties.
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Construction Joints

Construction joints occur where fresh concrete was poured against previously hardened concrete — at the boundary between a driveway and an apron poured at a different time, for example, or between a patio and the adjacent steps. These joints can behave like expansion joints and are treated accordingly when sealant is needed.
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Surface Cracks

Surface cracks are unplanned fractures in the concrete body caused by shrinkage during curing, thermal cycling, subgrade movement, or loading beyond the slab’s design capacity. Stable surface cracks — those that are not actively widening or showing differential vertical movement between the two sides — can be cleaned and caulked with flexible sealant to stop water infiltration and manage the crack going forward. Active cracks or cracks with significant differential heaving warrant assessment for underlying causes before caulking is the appropriate response.

Our Concrete Caulking Process — Remove, Prep, and Seal Done Right

Concrete caulking done correctly is not a matter of squeezing new sealant over old failed caulk or into a dirty joint. The performance of any joint sealant is determined almost entirely by the quality of the surface preparation and the correct product selection for the joint type. Here is how we approach every concrete caulking project at Lake of the Ozarks.

Step 1 — Joint and Crack Assessment

We begin with a thorough walk of all concrete surfaces being addressed. We identify every joint and crack that needs attention, classify each by type — control joint, expansion joint, surface crack — and assess the condition of any existing sealant. We note joints with significant vegetation, differential movement, or underlying issues that need to be understood before caulking proceeds. This assessment shapes the product selection, the prep work required, and the realistic scope of what caulking will accomplish for each surface.

Step 2 — Old Caulk and Debris Removal

Every trace of old, failed caulk must be removed before new sealant is applied. This is the step that separates professional caulking from the kind of quick-fix application that fails prematurely. We use appropriate tools — oscillating cutters, utility knives, wire brushes, and compressed air — to remove old sealant, packed debris, vegetation, dirt, and biological material from the full depth of the joint. The goal is clean, bare concrete on both sides of the joint from the surface to the intended sealant depth. New caulk applied over residual old material or contaminated joint surfaces will not bond properly and will fail at those points.

Step 3 — Joint Cleaning and Preparation

After old material is removed, we clean the joint thoroughly to remove any remaining fine debris, dust, and biological contamination. Clean joint faces are essential for sealant adhesion. For joints with oil or petroleum contamination — common on driveway joints near boat trailer parking areas — we apply targeted degreaser treatment before cleaning to ensure the joint faces are free of contamination that would prevent proper caulk bonding.

Step 4 — Backer Rod Installation Where Required

For expansion joints and wide cracks where the joint depth is greater than the intended sealant depth, we install closed-cell foam backer rod before applying caulk. Backer rod serves two purposes: it establishes the correct sealant depth — typically half the joint width — and prevents the caulk from bonding to the bottom of the joint, which would restrict the sealant’s ability to flex with joint movement and cause premature tearing. Installing backer rod correctly is a detail many DIY caulking attempts skip, and it is one of the reasons those applications fail faster.

Step 5 — Caulk Application and Tooling

With properly prepared joints, we apply the selected sealant — self-leveling polyurethane for horizontal surfaces, appropriate non-sag formulations for vertical applications — at the correct fill level and coverage. Self-leveling sealants are poured or applied and allowed to level within the joint; they do not require tooling for a smooth finish. For vertical or overhead applications, we tool the sealant to ensure full contact with both joint faces and a clean, professional finish. We apply to the manufacturer’s specified depth and allow no bridging across wide joints that would prevent proper flexibility.

Step 6 — Cure and Final Inspection

After application, we advise on the required cure time before the surface should receive foot or vehicle traffic. Most polyurethane joint sealants reach initial surface cure within 24 hours and full cure within several days, though conditions at Lake of the Ozarks — particularly humidity — affect cure rates. We do a final walk of all caulked joints to confirm full coverage, proper tooling, and no missed sections before the job is complete. We document the finished work with photos for out-of-town property owners and property managers.

In addition to dock painting, My Handyman LOZ handles dock cleaning, dock repair, deck staining, exterior painting, and a full range of related property maintenance services. We can assess and address the entire dock structure and surrounding property in a coordinated project.

Where We Caulk — Every Concrete Surface at Your Lake Property

My Handyman LOZ provides professional concrete caulking for all joint types on all concrete surfaces at Lake of the Ozarks properties:

Driveways

Residential and commercial driveways with control joints, expansion joints at the garage threshold and street connection, and any surface cracks that have developed with time and use. Driveway joints take significant thermal cycling and vehicle loading the most demanding conditions for joint sealant performance.

Walkways and sidewalks

Concrete paths connecting the home to the dock, parking area, and other property features. Walkway joints are often neglected because they are lower-profile than driveway joints, but they experience the same freeze-thaw exposure and are just as important for long-term surface integrity.

Dock aprons and boat ramp approaches

The concrete immediately adjacent to dock structures and boat ramp surfaces faces the most severe moisture exposure on the property. Joint sealant in these areas deteriorates faster than anywhere else on the property and is among the highest-priority caulking locations at any lake home or commercial marina.

Patios and outdoor living areas

Concrete patios and outdoor slab areas with control joints, perimeter expansion joints, and any structural transitions where two concrete masses meet. Patio joints near the house foundation are particularly important — failed perimeter joints allow water to run along the foundation face.

Pool deck perimeters and coping joints

The joint between the pool coping and the surrounding deck surface, and all control joints in the pool deck area, require flexible sealant that accommodates the differential movement between the pool structure and the surrounding slab. Pool deck joint failure is one of the most common sources of pool area moisture intrusion.

Carport slabs and parking pads

Covered and uncovered parking areas with control and expansion joints. The vehicle loading and oil contamination these surfaces experience make joint maintenance particularly important.

Foundation perimeter joints

The expansion joint where a concrete slab meets a foundation wall or masonry structure. This joint is a critical moisture barrier — when it fails, water runs down the foundation face and contributes to basement moisture, efflorescence, and foundation deterioration.

Commercial concrete surfaces

High-traffic commercial concrete at marinas, resorts, retail facilities, and other LOZ commercial properties with large flatwork areas requiring professional joint maintenance programs.
Ask about bundling services when you call for your estimate. Coordinating dock painting with related cleaning, repair, and maintenance work in a single project visit is more efficient, more economical, and produces a result that looks and performs at a consistently high standard across the entire property.

Complete Concrete and Exterior Services Available With Your Caulking Project

Concrete caulking is most valuable as part of a complete concrete maintenance system. My Handyman LOZ handles all of the connected services that make caulking deliver its full protective value — and we bring everything together in a single coordinated project visit.

  • Concrete Cleaning — Professional cleaning of the full concrete surface before caulking and sealing. Clean concrete is essential for proper sealant adhesion and for the sealer that follows. We clean, treat biological growth, and address oil staining before any caulk or sealer goes on.
  • Concrete Sealing — The natural companion to caulking. After joints are caulked and cured, sealing the full concrete surface creates a complete surface protection system — sealed joints stop water from below, sealed surface stops water from above. My Handyman LOZ handles both in the correct sequence.
  • Oil Cleanup — Driveways and dock aprons with oil-contaminated joints need targeted degreaser treatment before caulk can bond properly to the joint faces. We provide oil cleanup as part of the joint preparation process.
  • Power Washing — Broader surface cleaning and preparation using professional pressure washing equipment as part of the cleaning step before caulking and sealing.
  • Dock Cleaning — Dock apron caulking is frequently combined with full dock cleaning in a single visit — addressing joint condition and surface cleanliness across the entire dock area at once.
  • Dock Repair — Dock structural repairs are often identified when we assess dock apron and dock structure joint conditions. My Handyman LOZ handles dock repair as part of a comprehensive dock maintenance project.
  • House Washing — Many of our concrete caulking and sealing customers schedule house washing in the same project visit to bring the full property exterior to a consistent clean and maintained standard.
  • Vacation Rental Maintenance — Property managers and vacation rental owners can schedule comprehensive seasonal maintenance visits that bundle concrete caulking, sealing, cleaning, and all related exterior services in a single coordinated project.

Safety, Protection, and Property Value Benefits of Concrete Caulking

Concrete joint maintenance is one of the least visible but most consequential maintenance services a lake property owner can invest in. Here is what properly maintained concrete joints actually deliver:

  • Freeze-thaw damage prevention — The single most important protective function of concrete joint sealant at Lake of the Ozarks. Properly caulked joints stop the water infiltration that starts the freeze-thaw damage cycle — the cycle that spalls surfaces, widens cracks, and progressively destroys concrete slabs from within. Every season a joint stays properly sealed is a season without that damage accumulating.
  • Trip hazard elimination — Raised, cracked, and vegetation-filled joint areas create genuine trip hazards on walkways, patios, and entry areas. Maintained, caulked joints stay flush and stable, keeping walking surfaces safe for residents, guests, and rental property visitors. This is a direct safety benefit and a meaningful liability consideration for vacation rental owners.
  • Prevention of subgrade erosion — Water that enters through open joints travels to the subgrade beneath the slab and erodes the compacted base material over time. As the base erodes, the slab loses support, settles unevenly, and develops cracks and heaving that require expensive structural repair or replacement. Sealing joints stops this process at its source.
  • Foundation moisture protection — Properly sealed perimeter expansion joints where slabs meet foundation walls prevent water from running down the foundation face and entering the soil immediately adjacent to the foundation. At lake properties where the water table is often elevated and rain events are frequent, this protection matters for long-term foundation and basement moisture management.
  • Extended concrete service life — Concrete with properly maintained joints lasts significantly longer than concrete with failed or absent joint sealant in the same conditions. The cost of staying current on caulking is a small fraction of the cost of concrete repair or replacement — and at LOZ property prices, protecting that investment makes simple financial sense.
  • Improved sealing effectiveness — Sealer applied over properly caulked joints creates a complete surface protection system. Sealer applied over open joints protects the slab surface but leaves water infiltration pathways at every open joint — the most vulnerable points on any concrete surface. Caulking and sealing together produce results that neither alone can achieve.
  • Property appearance and value — Concrete surfaces with clean, flush joints present significantly better than concrete with open, weed-filled, or cracked joints — whether viewed by guests arriving at a vacation rental, buyers evaluating a property, or visitors forming impressions about how a property is maintained.

Why Concrete Joints Fail Faster at Lake of the Ozarks

Lake of the Ozarks property owners who also own or have owned property elsewhere are sometimes surprised at how quickly concrete joints deteriorate compared to what they experienced at their inland properties. The difference is real and driven by the specific environmental conditions that characterize the LOZ area.

The freeze-thaw cycle at Lake of the Ozarks is both frequent and moisture-amplified compared to many inland Missouri locations. Lake humidity keeps concrete surfaces wetter between freeze events, which means joints that would partially dry out at an inland property stay saturated through the entire winter season. Every freeze event attacks a fully water-saturated joint rather than a partially dry one — which means more ice formation, more expansion pressure, and more damage per cycle.

The thermal range that LOZ concrete experiences across a full year is significant. Missouri summers push concrete surface temperatures well above 100 degrees, and winter temperatures drop well below freezing. That full seasonal temperature range drives substantial expansion and contraction in every concrete slab — expansion and contraction that joint sealant must accommodate repeatedly over its service life. Sealants that perform well in moderate climates reach their flexibility limits faster in the more extreme thermal cycling of the LOZ environment.

UV exposure at the lake is intense. South and west facing concrete surfaces in the LOZ area receive summer UV loads that degrade the polymer chemistry of joint sealants over time. UV degradation causes sealant to dry out, lose flexibility, and crack — accelerating the failure timeline compared to sealant in shaded or more temperate environments.

Boat trailer traffic on driveways and dock aprons creates concentrated loading and lateral stress on concrete joints that standard residential traffic does not. Heavy boat trailers moving across joint lines, repeated in the same paths season after season, stress the joint sealant and the concrete edges in ways that accelerate both joint failure and edge chipping. Properties with active boat trailer traffic need more frequent joint inspection and recaulking than properties without it.

Why Choose My Handyman LOZ Since 1992

Concrete caulking is one of those services where the difference between doing it right and doing it fast is entirely in the preparation — and the preparation is entirely in the details that determine whether the new sealant lasts three years or ten. My Handyman LOZ brings the right approach to every joint and crack we address.

  • Over 30 years at Lake of the Ozarks — Since 1992, we have maintained concrete surfaces throughout the LOZ area and understand exactly what the local environment demands from joint sealant products and application. That experience shapes every product selection and preparation decision we make on a concrete caulking project.
  • Honest assessments, not upsells — When we look at your concrete joints, we tell you what they actually need. If some joints are in good condition and others need recaulking, we tell you that honestly rather than proposing a full recaulk of every joint regardless of condition. You get an honest scope and a fair proposal.
  • Complete concrete service capability — Caulking, cleaning, oil cleanup, and sealing — all from the same contractor who understands the complete concrete maintenance sequence and performs each step in the correct order. No coordinating separate contractors for what should be a single coordinated project.
  • Multi-service exterior contractor — Concrete caulking is often part of a broader exterior maintenance project. My Handyman LOZ handles dock cleaning, house washing, deck staining, exterior painting, and the full range of lake property exterior services — all from the same contractor who is already working on your property.
  • Residential, commercial, and vacation rental experience — Whether you are a full-time resident, an out-of-town owner, a vacation rental property manager, or a commercial property operator, we have the experience and communication approach to serve your specific situation well.
  • Local Lake of the Ozarks knowledge — We are not a franchise or an outside crew. We live and work at Lake of the Ozarks. We know the communities, the conditions, and what lake property concrete actually faces over the course of a full year — and we bring that knowledge to every job.

Concrete caulking Service Areas at Lake of the Ozarks

My Handyman LOZ provides professional dock painting throughout the Lake of the Ozarks region, including:

Lake Ozark

Eldon

Porto Cima

Kaiser

Osage Beach

Laurie

Linn Creek

Greenview

Camdenton

Rocky Mount
Gravois Mills
Barnett

Sunrise Beach

Four Seasons

Climax Springs

Roach

If you’re near the lake, we can help.

Frequently Asked Questions About Concrete Caulking at Lake of the Ozarks

How long does concrete caulk last at Lake of the Ozarks?

Quality polyurethane or self-leveling caulk applied to properly prepared concrete joints typically lasts five to ten years at Lake of the Ozarks. The LOZ environment — with its significant freeze-thaw cycling, high humidity, UV exposure, and boat trailer traffic — is harder on joint sealants than most inland climates, so the lower end of that range is realistic for heavily trafficked surfaces like driveways and dock aprons. Joints in lower-traffic areas like walkways and patios tend to hold longer. We inspect joint condition as part of every concrete cleaning and sealing visit and advise when recaulking is warranted.

What is the difference between concrete caulk and concrete filler?

Concrete caulk is a flexible sealant designed to accommodate the natural movement that concrete undergoes with temperature changes and seasonal cycling. It bonds to the concrete on both sides of a joint or crack and stretches and compresses as the concrete moves without losing its bond or tearing. Rigid concrete filler or patching compound does not flex — it is appropriate for filling surface spalls and structural voids in stable concrete but will crack and fail if used in an active movement joint. Using the wrong product in a joint is one of the most common causes of early caulk failure.

Can you caulk over old concrete caulk?

In most cases, no. Old caulk that has dried out, cracked, or pulled away from the concrete sides must be fully removed before new caulk is applied. Applying new caulk over failed old caulk produces poor bonding on the sides where the old material is still present, and the new sealant fails prematurely at those points. We remove deteriorated caulk completely, clean and prepare the joint surfaces, and apply fresh sealant to bare concrete for a bond that performs as intended.

What types of concrete cracks can you caulk?

We caulk control joints, expansion joints, construction joints, and stable non-structural surface cracks in driveways, walkways, patios, dock aprons, and other concrete flatwork. Wide cracks or cracks that show significant differential movement — where one side has heaved or settled relative to the other — may need evaluation for underlying causes before caulking is the right solution. We assess crack type and condition before recommending a treatment approach.

Should concrete be caulked before or after sealing?

Caulking should be completed before sealing. The correct sequence is: clean the concrete, caulk all open cracks and joints, allow the caulk to cure fully, then apply the sealer over the entire surface including the freshly caulked joints. Sealing before caulking leaves open joints that allow water infiltration underneath the sealed surface — which defeats the protective purpose of the sealer entirely. My Handyman LOZ handles both concrete caulking and concrete sealing and always performs them in the correct sequence.

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Schedule Your Concrete Caulking Estimate Today

If the concrete joints on your Lake of the Ozarks driveway, dock apron, walkways, or patio are open, cracked, or overdue for recaulking — or if you are preparing for a concrete sealing project and need the joints addressed first — My Handyman LOZ is ready to help. We will assess the joint conditions honestly, prepare every surface correctly, and apply the right sealant for results that last. We have been protecting lake properties since 1992, and we bring that same standard to every joint we seal.