Garage floors, basement slabs, pole barns and shed pads, the flattest, least forgiving work in concrete, which is exactly why it is worth hiring for.
Replacing a scaled, oil-stained original garage floor transforms the most-used room nobody counts. Done right: old slab out, base recompacted, vapor barrier down, 4 inches minimum of air-entrained mix pitched gently to the door, cut joints, and a finish flat enough for the epoxy coating half of Fishers wants next. Tell us if a lift or heavy toolboxes are in the plan, thickness and reinforcement follow the load.
Half this town is finishing the basement, and some of those basements need slab work first: trenching for a new bathroom's plumbing then patching flush, leveling old low spots before flooring, or full replacement where a builder's thin pour cracked into a map. Moisture is the boss down there, vapor barrier, correct patch mix and flatness make the difference between LVP that lies flat for a decade and a callback.
Fortville-to-Fishers acreage means pole barns, and a barn slab is its own trade: thickened edges, wire or fiber reinforcement, joints planned around post lines, and a float finish that sweeps clean. AC condenser pads, hot-tub pads and generator pads round out the small-pour list, scheduled efficiently alongside bigger work.
Interior slabs live under floors and coatings, so we finish to the tolerance the next trade needs and say plainly when a slab should cure longer before epoxy or flooring goes down (a rushed coating over a young slab is how peeling happens). The schedule guidance is in writing with the quote.