Serving all of Montana, plus Spokane, WA and Coeur d'Alene, ID Mon–Sat, 8am–6pm  ·  (406) 555-0148
Protect the Investment

Sport Court Resurfacing in Montana

Montana sun and freeze-thaw are hard on acrylic. Resurfacing every 4–8 years restores color, grip, and true bounce — and heads off damage that gets expensive to ignore.

Every acrylic court ages on a schedule: UV fades the color, freeze-thaw opens hairline cracks, and traffic polishes away the texture that gives shoes their grip. In Montana's climate, the smart interval for resurfacing is every 4–8 years — sooner for courts in full sun or heavy use. Catch it on time and resurfacing is straightforward: repair cracks, level low spots, and rebuild the surface with fresh acrylic. Wait too long and water works into the slab, where winter turns small problems into structural ones.

Montana Court Company resurfaces basketball, tennis, and pickleball courts we built — and plenty we didn't. Every project starts with an honest slab assessment: we fill and reinforce cracks, correct birdbaths, apply an acrylic resurfacer coat, then two to three coats of 100% acrylic color, and finish with fresh regulation striping. Most resurfacing projects finish in under two weeks of dry weather. Licensed, insured, and warrantied, serving Montana, Spokane, and Coeur d'Alene.

Most residential resurfacing projects run $6,000–$15,000 depending on size and condition — a fraction of the cost of the court it protects.

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Benefits

Why Homeowners Choose Us for Court Resurfacing

A Fraction of Replacement Cost

Resurfacing a structurally sound court costs a small percentage of new construction. It is the highest-leverage maintenance dollar a court owner spends.

Restored Grip and Safety

Worn acrylic gets slick, especially with morning dew or first frost. New color coats rebuild the sand texture that keeps footing predictable through hard cuts.

Crack Repair Done Properly

We rout, clean, fill, and membrane cracks before coating — not just paint over them. Skipped prep is why bargain resurfacing jobs crack again the first winter.

Fresh Look, New Layout Options

Resurfacing is the natural moment to change colors, add pickleball lines to a tennis or basketball court, or put a logo at center court.

Stops the Damage Clock

A sealed acrylic surface keeps water out of the slab. In freeze-thaw country, that waterproofing is the difference between cosmetic aging and structural decline.

Honest Slab Assessment First

If your slab has base failure that coating cannot fix, we will tell you before taking your money. Resurfacing a failing slab wastes everyone's time and yours especially.

Our Process

How Your Court Resurfacing Project Runs

Surface Assessment

We inspect cracks, drainage, low spots, and slab condition, then tell you plainly whether resurfacing makes sense or deeper repair is needed.

Scope & Color Selection

You receive a fixed-scope quote with repair details, plus color and striping options — including layout changes like added pickleball lines.

Repair & Preparation

Pressure washing, crack routing and filling, birdbath leveling, and membrane work where needed. Preparation quality determines how long the new surface lasts.

Resurfacer & Color Coats

An acrylic resurfacer coat locks down the repairs, followed by two to three coats of 100% acrylic color with your chosen texture.

Striping & Walkthrough

Fresh regulation striping, a joint inspection of every repair and line, and updated care guidance with your workmanship warranty.

Recent Work

Court Resurfacing We've Built

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FAQs

Court Resurfacing Questions, Answered

How often should a court be resurfaced in Montana?
Every 4–8 years is the honest range. Courts in full sun, at altitude, or under heavy daily use trend toward four to five years; shaded, lightly used courts stretch toward eight. The tell-tale signs are visible fading, surface cracking, texture worn smooth in high-traffic zones, and water no longer beading. An overdue court does not just look tired — it lets water reach the slab.
What does resurfacing cost?
Most residential resurfacing projects run $6,000–$15,000 depending on court size and condition — a basketball half court sits at the lower end, a full tennis court at the upper end. Extensive crack repair or leveling adds cost, which is why we quote after inspection rather than by the square foot sight unseen. Either way, it is a fraction of the $30,000–$150,000 a new court represents.
Can you fix the cracks in my court permanently?
It depends on the crack. Surface and shrinkage cracks can be routed, filled, and membraned so they stay sealed for years. Structural cracks driven by base movement will eventually telegraph through any coating — reputable contractors will tell you that plainly. We identify which type you have during assessment, and for structural movement we discuss crack-bridging membrane systems or slab repair honestly, with realistic expectations.
How long does resurfacing take, and when can we play?
Most projects take five to ten working days of dry weather above 50°F: cleaning and repairs first, then resurfacer and color coats with drying time between each, then striping. The court is typically playable 24–48 hours after the final stripe. We schedule resurfacing throughout Montana's April–October season, though late spring and early fall offer the most reliable coating temperatures.
Can I change my court's colors or add sports when resurfacing?
Yes — resurfacing is the ideal time. The old surface disappears under the new system, so color changes cost nothing extra, and adding pickleball lines to a tennis or basketball court is a modest striping upcharge. Custom center-court logos can also be applied during the color coat stage. Roughly half our resurfacing clients change something about their layout; it is the cheapest remodel you will ever do.
Service Areas

Court Resurfacing Across Montana

One crew, one standard of work — from the Bitterroot to the Flathead, and west into Spokane and Coeur d'Alene.

Related Services

Complete the Build

Bring Your Court Back to Day One

Free site visits. Honest numbers. Courts built to outlast Montana winters.

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