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Everything contractors, engineers, building owners, and facility managers need to know about elastomeric coatings — what they are, how they work, which surfaces benefit most, how they compare to alternatives, and how ArmorThane polyurea & polyurethane elastomeric systems perform over decades.
An elastomeric coating is a flexible, rubber-like protective membrane applied to surfaces that need to stretch, seal, waterproof, and protect — returning to its original form after deformation. Unlike rigid paints or brittle epoxies, elastomeric coatings can elongate 100% to 600% of their original length and fully recover. That elasticity is the defining property: it allows the coating to bridge cracks, absorb thermal expansion and contraction, and remain bonded to the substrate through freeze-thaw cycles, vibration, and structural movement.
Elastomeric coatings are used across roofing, walls, floors, tanks, infrastructure, waterproofing, and industrial protection. The best-performing elastomeric systems — polyurea and polyurethane — are manufactured and applied by companies like ArmorThane, which has been formulating these chemistries in Springfield, Missouri since 1989.
An elastomeric coating is any coating with rubber-like flexibility — it stretches with the surface, seals cracks, resists water and chemicals, and snaps back when the stress is removed. The chemistry varies (polyurea, polyurethane, acrylic, silicone, rubberized asphalt), but the elastic behavior is what puts them all in the same category.
A coating is technically classified as elastomeric when it achieves a minimum elongation of 100% at break per ASTM D412 testing. Premium polyurea and polyurethane formulations routinely test at 300–600% elongation, making them among the most capable elastomeric coatings on the market. That elongation, combined with tensile strength of 2,500–4,500 psi, means these membranes can absorb enormous mechanical stress without cracking, delaminating, or failing.
Not all "elastomeric paints" meet this definition rigorously. Many latex-based products labeled as elastomeric may achieve only marginal elongation and thin build. When the application demands real performance — waterproofing, secondary containment, structural bridging, or long-term industrial protection — polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric systems are the professional-grade standard.
Elastomeric coatings work through three interconnected mechanisms: chemical bonding to the substrate, a flexible polymer network within the coating, and a film-building process that creates a continuous, seamless membrane. Understanding each helps explain why the application method matters as much as the chemistry.
A high-performance elastomeric coating bonds chemically and mechanically to its substrate. Mechanical adhesion occurs when the coating penetrates surface porosity and "anchors" to the texture. Chemical adhesion occurs when reactive groups in the primer or coating form covalent or hydrogen bonds with the substrate surface. For polyurea systems, a matched primer bridges the gap between the substrate chemistry and the coating chemistry, ensuring a bond that outlasts the coating's rated service life when properly maintained.
Surface preparation is therefore not optional — it is the foundation of performance. A properly profiled concrete or steel substrate delivers the bond strength the coating is designed to achieve. An improperly prepared surface delivers adhesion failure, regardless of how good the coating chemistry is.
Inside the cured elastomeric film, polymer chains are cross-linked but not rigidly so. The degree of cross-linking controls the hardness-to-flexibility ratio. Harder systems (higher Shore D values) resist abrasion and puncture; softer systems (lower Shore A values) offer maximum elongation and crack-bridging. High-performance polyurea formulations are engineered to hit specific targets on both axes — for example, a secondary containment liner might need Shore D 50 hardness for chemical resistance plus 400% elongation to bridge active cracks in the concrete substrate.
Spray-applied elastomeric coatings — especially plural-component polyurea systems — are applied wet-on-wet in overlapping passes. Each pass fuses with the previous pass before gellation, creating a monolithic, seamless membrane with no seams, laps, or weld lines that could become failure points. This is a critical advantage over sheet-applied waterproofing membranes, where seams are the statistically most likely failure location. For roofing, tank linings, and containment applications where a single pinhole can create a costly failure, the seamless nature of spray elastomeric coatings is a fundamental performance advantage.
Every seam in a waterproofing or containment system is a potential failure point. Sheet membranes, torch-applied systems, and rolled goods all have seams. Spray-applied polyurea elastomeric coatings have none. A spray gun traveling at 3–5 feet per second applies a fused, continuous film across every corner, penetration, and transition without interruption.
Not every elastomeric coating uses the same chemistry. Six major families cover the vast majority of real-world applications. Each has a performance envelope, and the right system often depends on the substrate, the service environment, and the performance targets required.
The highest-performing elastomeric coating chemistry. Pure polyurea is formed by the reaction of an isocyanate with an amine resin. Gel time is measured in seconds; tack-free in minutes. Tensile strength 2,500–4,500 psi, elongation 300–600%, 100% solids, zero VOC. The professional standard for demanding applications: secondary containment, tank linings, roofing, infrastructure, and industrial protection.
Polyurethane reacts an isocyanate with a polyol. Slightly slower cure than pure polyurea, with a broader range of hardness options. Excellent UV stability in aliphatic grades. Used for roofing waterproofing, floor coatings, and applications where longer open time during application is beneficial. ArmorThane manufactures both aromatic and aliphatic polyurethane systems.
A formulation combining amine and polyol B-side resins. Offers a balance between the fast cure and chemical resistance of polyurea and the longer open time and UV stability of polyurethane. Widely used in roofing, waterproofing, and coating applications where the applicator benefits from a more workable reaction time.
Water-based, brush- or roller-applied systems used primarily for residential and light commercial exterior walls and roofs. Lower performance than polyurea/polyurethane on elongation, chemical resistance, and film thickness. Suitable for above-grade wall waterproofing and light-duty roof coatings where professional spray equipment is not available. Not suitable for immersion or chemical containment service.
High UV and heat resistance. Used in roof coating applications where heat reflection and long-term UV stability are the primary drivers. Silicone is difficult to recoat over and has limited chemical resistance. Not suitable for mechanical floors or containment applications. Best for low-slope roofing where heat reduction is the primary objective.
Traditional rubberized asphalt or ethylene propylene diene monomer systems. Lower cost, widely available, but inferior elongation, poor UV resistance without surfacing, and limited chemical resistance. Used in foundation waterproofing and some roofing applications. Being displaced by polyurea in demanding installations due to the performance gap.
For any application requiring chemical resistance, fast return to service, immersion service, or demanding physical performance, specify polyurea or polyurethane. For residential exterior walls and light commercial roof coatings where performance targets are modest and spray equipment is unavailable, acrylic elastomeric coatings are acceptable. The chemistry decision should follow the performance requirement — not the other way around.
Elastomeric coatings perform across a wider range of surfaces and environments than any other single coating category. The combination of flexible film build, seamless application, and broad chemical resistance makes them the go-to solution for applications where rigid coatings crack, brittle liners delaminate, and standard paints fail within two to five years.
Elastomeric roof coatings are the dominant technology for low-slope roof restoration and waterproofing. Applied over metal, single-ply membrane, built-up roofing, concrete, and spray foam substrates, a properly applied elastomeric roof coating extends roof service life by 10–20 years, eliminates leaks at penetrations and flashings, and provides energy-saving solar reflectance. Polyurea and polyurethane systems are specified for the most demanding installations — high foot-traffic roofs, roofs with complex geometry, and roofs over occupied space where watertight performance is non-negotiable.
Elastomeric wall coatings bridge hairline and working cracks in concrete, masonry, stucco, and EIFS. They waterproof the facade while allowing moisture vapor to escape from the substrate. High-quality polyurea and polyurethane wall coatings outperform acrylic systems in elongation, adhesion, and service life by a significant margin.
Manufacturing facilities, chemical plants, tank farms, and food processing facilities rely on elastomeric floor coatings for chemical resistance, seamless containment, and durability under heavy traffic. Polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric floor systems resist the combination of chemical exposure, thermal cycling, abrasion, and impact that destroys thinner coatings in months.
Interior tank linings for water storage, fuel, chemicals, and industrial liquids demand a coating that adheres reliably to steel and concrete, resists immersion continuously, and remains flexible enough to move with the vessel. Spray polyurea systems from ArmorThane are used for potable water tanks (NSF 61 compliant grades available), fuel tanks, chemical storage, and agricultural water storage.
Bridge decks, culverts, tunnels, parking structures, and marine infrastructure require coatings that handle continuous mechanical abuse, traffic loads, freeze-thaw cycling, salt exposure, and chemical contamination. Elastomeric polyurea systems are the preferred specification for long-service-life infrastructure protection.
The properties that make elastomeric coatings the professional standard for demanding applications are not marketing claims — they are measurable, tested, and documented in ASTM standard test methods. Here is what the best elastomeric systems actually deliver.
With 300–600% elongation, a properly applied elastomeric coating bridges existing cracks and accommodates new ones — without fracturing. This is the single most important property for roofing, masonry, and concrete applications where substrate movement is a given.
A seamless, fully-adhered elastomeric membrane is one of the most reliable waterproofing solutions available. No seams means no seam failures. Spray application ensures 100% coverage of corners, penetrations, and details that sheet goods miss.
Pure polyurea elastomeric coatings resist hydrocarbons, many acids, caustics, solvents, and industrial chemicals. Chemical resistance should always be verified against the specific product's chemical resistance chart for the service environment.
Where epoxy coatings crack under thermal cycling, elastomeric coatings flex with expansion and contraction. This makes them the correct specification for outdoor applications, roofing, and infrastructure in climates with significant temperature swings.
Spray polyurea systems are walk-on in under an hour and return to full service within 24 hours. For facilities where downtime is expensive, this cure profile changes the economics of coating projects versus slower-cure alternatives.
Elastomeric polyurea systems absorb impact energy through their flexible network rather than transmitting it as fracture. Abrasion resistance is excellent across the service temperature range. This combination makes them the specification for truck beds, industrial floors, and blast-mitigation applications.
Performance targets for any individual project should be pulled from the ArmorThane Technical Data Sheet that matches the system selected. Call ArmorThane technical support at (417) 831-5090 for the TDS and SDS set.
Most projects evaluating elastomeric coatings compare them against five alternatives: epoxy coatings, standard paint, HDPE sheet liners, rubberized asphalt, and thermoplastic single-ply membranes. Here is where each chemistry fits and where each falls short.
Polyurea elastomeric coatings win when you need seamless, flexible, chemical-resistant protection installed fast on any geometry — roofing, containment, tanks, infrastructure, or floors. Epoxy is a lower-cost option for interior floors that don't see thermal cycling. HDPE sheet works on very large flat areas where a specialist crew can weld reliable seams. Standard paint is not a protective coating for demanding service. Any specification that calls for "paint" as the protective coating on tanks, containment areas, or waterproofing is a specification that needs to be revisited.
ArmorThane has been manufacturing polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric coatings, spray foam systems, and plural-component application equipment in Springfield, Missouri since 1989. We manufacture the coating, manufacture the proportioning equipment, and train the applicator network. We are not a franchise. Coating chemistry, spray rigs, training, and 24/7 technical support are developed and supported under one roof.
Our workhorse elastomeric coating for chemical containment, tank linings, secondary containment pads, roofing, and industrial protection. Two-component, 100% solids pure polyurea elastomer. Gel time measured in seconds; tack-free in minutes. Typical build is 60–125 mils in a single pass. Excellent chemical resistance, 400%+ elongation, and decades-long track record in the field.
Purpose-engineered polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric roof coating systems for metal, SPF, single-ply, BUR, and concrete substrates. Available in white (high SRI for energy savings) and custom colors. Aliphatic topcoat for UV stability. Backed by manufacturer warranty support through our trained applicator network.
For applications requiring blast mitigation — ammunition storage, military fuel depots, critical infrastructure — ArmorThane's UltraBlast elastomeric system is purpose-engineered to absorb and dissipate blast energy. The highest-elongation, highest-tenacity formulation in the ArmorThane line.
Most coating manufacturers don't make their own spray equipment. ArmorThane does. That means our technical team understands exactly how our coatings behave at every equipment setting — temperature, pressure, ratio, gun type — and can troubleshoot in the field with knowledge no equipment reseller possesses. Our applicators learn on ArmorThane rigs using ArmorThane coatings, producing results that generic equipment-plus-third-party-coating programs cannot match.
ArmorThane is the coating manufacturer, the equipment manufacturer, and the training organization. Customers and applicators work directly with the people who formulate and build everything. No middlemen. No franchise fees. No conflicting agendas. If you have a specification question, a chemistry question, or a troubleshooting question, you are talking to the manufacturer.
A polyurea or polyurethane elastomeric coating only performs to specification if the substrate preparation and application are correct. This is what a compliant professional installation looks like.
Before a coating is selected, the applicator reviews the service environment, substrate condition, existing coating (if any), penetrations, joints, and the performance targets for the project. Roofing projects require a moisture survey of the existing roof assembly. Containment projects require a review of the chemical inventory and any applicable regulatory requirements.
Concrete substrates are mechanically prepared to ICRI CSP 3–5 or SSPC-SP 13 / NACE 6 profile. Steel substrates are abrasive blast-cleaned to SSPC-SP 10 near-white metal for immersion service. Existing coatings are evaluated for adhesion and compatibility. Oils, laitance, curing compounds, and contaminants are removed. Surface preparation is not optional — it is the foundation of long-term adhesion.
Cracks are routed and filled with compatible filler or sealant. Expansion joints are detailed with backer rod and joint sealant. Pipe penetrations, drains, curbs, and flashings are dressed with a fillet bead or reinforcing strip so the elastomeric membrane ties in without a stress concentration or weak point.
A substrate-matched primer is rolled or sprayed at the specified coverage rate. Primer is not interchangeable between substrates — concrete primers, steel primers, and SPF primers are different products. Primer ensures that the elastomeric topcoat achieves full adhesion to the substrate chemistry and profile.
On large containment areas, a geotextile fabric is anchored and tensioned before spray. On roof flashings, pipe penetrations, and inside corners, a reinforcing mat or scrim may be embedded in the first coating pass. Reinforcement increases tensile strength at details and reduces stress concentration at transitions.
The plural-component proportioner heats and pressurizes the A-side and B-side materials, meters them at the correct ratio, and delivers them to an impingement-mixing spray gun. The applicator lays down overlapping passes to build the specified film thickness. For pure polyurea, typical builds are 60–125 mils. The coating is applied in a single continuous session on roofing and containment work to eliminate cold laps.
Wet-film thickness is checked during application using a wet-film gauge. Dry-film thickness is verified after cure using magnetic or ultrasonic gauges on steel, or coring on concrete. If thickness is below spec, additional passes are applied before the coating is considered complete.
For containment linings and tank linings, a low-voltage wet-sponge or high-voltage spark tester is passed over the cured coating to find pinholes, holidays, and thin spots. Flaws are marked, abraded, and recoated. For roofing applications, a flood test or infrared scan may be used to verify waterproofness.
For outdoor roofing and wall applications where UV exposure is a factor, an aliphatic polyurea or polyurethane topcoat is applied over the aromatic base to preserve color, maintain surface appearance, and reduce chalking over the life of the system.
The applicator documents surface preparation records, ambient conditions at time of application, batch numbers, wet- and dry-film thickness readings, holiday test results, and any repairs. This package becomes the project's quality record and the basis for any warranty claims.
Elastomeric coatings are used in virtually every industry where surfaces must be protected from water, chemicals, mechanical abuse, or environmental exposure. ArmorThane systems have been installed in each of the following markets for decades.
Tank farms, secondary containment, pipe coatings, berm liners, frac water pits, and offshore structure protection. Polyurea elastomeric coatings resist crude oil, refined fuels, produced water, drilling mud, and frac chemistries across the full upstream-to-downstream chain.
Bridge decks, culverts, tunnels, parking structures, seawalls, dams, and water treatment structures. Elastomeric coatings extend infrastructure service life by decades, reducing replacement costs and maintenance intervals for asset owners and transportation agencies.
Low-slope commercial and industrial roof restoration, waterproofing, and new construction. Elastomeric roof coatings over spray foam and existing membranes are among the most cost-effective roof lifecycle management tools available to building owners.
Heap leach pads, solution ponds, concentrate sumps, reagent storage, and haul road water management. Polyurea elastomeric coatings handle acidic and caustic mine chemistries better than HDPE sheet in areas with irregular geometry or active ground movement.
Clarifiers, digesters, aeration basins, chemical feed areas, and secondary containment around chlorine and sodium hypochlorite storage. Elastomeric coatings protect concrete and steel structures from the combined attack of aggressive liquid and atmospheric exposure inside treatment plants.
Fertilizer storage, chemical containment pads, irrigation ponds, grain storage protection, and equipment. Elastomeric coatings handle the wide range of chemistries found on agricultural operations while delivering the fast application and return-to-service that keeps operations running.
Fuel farms, munitions storage, vehicle maintenance facilities, airfield infrastructure, and blast-mitigation structures on U.S. and allied military installations. ArmorThane systems meet DoD UFC standards and have been in military service for decades.
Production floor coatings, chemical containment for sanitizers and cleaners, cold storage, and drain trench linings. FDA-contact and NSF-compliant elastomeric formulations are available for applications where food safety regulations apply.
Industrial floor coatings, chemical containment, secondary containment for hydraulic fluids and solvents, equipment coatings, and truck beds. Fast return to service means coating projects can be completed over weekends without impacting production schedules.
An elastomeric coating is only as durable as its inspection and maintenance program. Properly specified, installed, and maintained polyurea systems deliver decades of service. Here is what a responsible maintenance program looks like.
Elastomeric coatings should be visually inspected on a regular schedule — annually for most applications, semi-annually or quarterly for high-abuse or high-stakes installations. Inspectors look for:
Polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric coatings are spot-repairable. Damaged areas are abraded to remove loose or failed material, cleaned, reprimed, and recoated with the matching system. The repair bonds to the surrounding coating and restores the original film properties when done according to the manufacturer's procedure. A coating that can be spot-repaired is a coating that stays in service — unlike sheet liners that require specialist welders for every repair.
Published service life projections for elastomeric coatings vary significantly by chemistry, application environment, and maintenance program. High-performance polyurea systems properly installed and maintained routinely achieve 20–30 years of service before requiring full recoat. Roofing systems over spray foam substrates with annual inspection and periodic recoat of the topcoat can last indefinitely — the foam insulation under the elastomeric coating remains protected for the life of the building.
Factors that reduce service life include: UV exposure on aromatic systems without aliphatic topcoat, continuous chemical immersion in aggressive chemistries, inadequate film thickness, improper surface preparation, and deferred maintenance of identified damage.
When an elastomeric coating system reaches the end of its service life, recoating is significantly less expensive than replacement. The existing coating provides a prepared substrate; the recoat adds new film thickness and restores protective performance. On roofing systems especially, a properly managed recoat cycle is vastly more economical than tear-off and replacement of the roof assembly.
An elastomeric coating is a flexible, rubber-like protective membrane that stretches and returns to its original shape. Elastomeric coatings elongate 100–600% of their original length, bridge cracks in the substrate, resist water and chemicals, and bond to concrete, metal, masonry, foam, and other surfaces. They are used for roofing, waterproofing, secondary containment, tank linings, floors, and infrastructure protection. The best-performing elastomeric coatings use polyurea or polyurethane chemistry.
Elastomeric coatings are used for roof waterproofing and restoration, exterior wall waterproofing, industrial floor protection, secondary containment linings, tank interior linings, bridge deck and infrastructure protection, truck bed liners, and blast-mitigation coatings. The common thread is surfaces that need flexible, seamless, long-lasting protection against water, chemicals, mechanical abuse, or environmental exposure.
High-performance polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric coatings, properly installed and maintained, deliver 20–30 years of service or more. Service life depends on the chemistry, the film thickness, the service environment, UV exposure, the quality of surface preparation, and the maintenance program. Roof coatings with regular inspection and topcoat refresh can last indefinitely. Cheaper acrylic elastomeric products typically last 5–10 years before requiring recoat.
Regular paint has very low elongation (under 5%) and thin film build (2–6 mils dry). It provides color and light surface protection but cracks when the substrate moves, peels under moisture, and provides no meaningful waterproofing or chemical resistance. An elastomeric coating has 100–600% elongation, is applied at 20–250 mils, bridges cracks, waterproofs the surface, and delivers years to decades of protective performance. They are fundamentally different products despite sometimes being marketed in the same "exterior coatings" category.
Yes. Polyurea is the highest-performing elastomeric coating chemistry. Pure polyurea elastomers test at 300–600% elongation, 2,500–4,500 psi tensile strength, and Shore D 45–60 hardness. They are 100% solids, zero VOC, and cure in seconds, making them the professional standard for demanding elastomeric coating applications in secondary containment, tank linings, roofing, infrastructure, and industrial protection.
Yes. Elastomeric roof coatings are one of the most widely used applications. They are applied over metal, single-ply membranes (TPO, EPDM, PVC), spray polyurethane foam (SPF), built-up roofing (BUR), and concrete substrates to waterproof, restore, and extend roof life. Polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric systems are the professional standard; acrylic elastomeric systems are used for lighter-duty residential and commercial applications.
Film thickness depends on the application. For exterior walls and light-duty waterproofing, 20–40 mils dry film is common. For roofing, 40–80 mils is typical. For secondary containment and tank linings, 60–125 mils in a single pass of pure polyurea is standard, with highly aggressive service environments calling for 125–250 mils or more. Always refer to the Technical Data Sheet for the specified product and service environment.
Elastomeric coatings can be applied to concrete, steel, aluminum, masonry, wood, spray polyurethane foam (SPF), single-ply roofing membranes, geotextile fabric, and most existing coating systems that are properly prepared and primed. The primer selection must match the substrate chemistry. Consult the ArmorThane technical team to confirm substrate compatibility and primer selection for your specific project.
Yes. A properly applied, fully-adhered elastomeric coating is an effective waterproofing system. The seamless, continuous film formed by spray application covers every penetration, corner, and transition without gaps. High-quality polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric coatings have extremely low water vapor transmission rates and are used for below-grade waterproofing, roofing, tank linings, and containment — all applications where waterproofness is a primary requirement.
The best elastomeric roof coating depends on the substrate, the climate, and the performance requirements. For maximum waterproofing, impact resistance, and long service life on complex roofs, polyurea or hybrid polyurea-polyurethane systems are the professional specification. For light commercial and residential roofs with simpler geometry and lower performance demands, acrylic or silicone elastomeric systems may be specified. ArmorThane roof coating systems are available in white (high SRI for energy savings) with aliphatic topcoat for UV stability.
High-performance polyurea and polyurethane elastomeric coatings are applied with a plural-component heated spray system. The two components are heated, pressurized, and mixed at the gun, then sprayed in overlapping passes to build the specified film thickness. The process is fast — a professional applicator can coat thousands of square feet per day. Acrylic elastomeric coatings can be brushed, rolled, or sprayed with conventional airless equipment, though spray application produces more uniform results.
Choose polyurea when you need: chemical resistance, immersion service, fast return to service, seamless containment, 300%+ elongation, long service life, and professional-grade performance. Choose acrylic when: the application is above-grade exterior walls or a light-duty residential roof, performance requirements are modest, and professional spray equipment is not available. When in doubt, specify the higher-performance system — the cost of failure always exceeds the cost of upgrading the specification.
Talk to ArmorThane directly. We're the manufacturer — coatings, equipment, and technical support under one roof, supporting a global applicator network. Not a franchise. No franchise fees.