Concrete & Cement Tools help you plan, mix, place, finish, cut, cure, and repair concrete and cementitious materials on jobs of every size. Whether you’re pouring a slab, shaping a countertop, or cutting expansion joints, the right tools boost productivity, improve surface quality, and extend the life of your work.

Popular tool groups include:
- Mixing: drum and paddle mixers, mortar hoes, and measuring pails for consistent batches.
- Placing and leveling: shovels, rakes, screed boards, laser levels, and vibrators to reduce voids and achieve flatness.
- Finishing: bull floats, magnesium and steel hand floats, trowels, edgers, groovers, and power trowels for smooth, durable surfaces.
- Cutting and drilling: concrete saws, diamond blades, core drills, and joint saws for clean, controlled cuts.
- Surface prep and polish: grinders, scarifiers, shot blasters, and polishers to remove coatings, correct high spots, and reach gloss targets.
- Reinforcement and formwork: rebar cutters and benders, tying tools, wire mesh tools, and form accessories to control cracking and maintain geometry.
- Protection and repair: curing blankets, sprayers, sealers, patching compounds, epoxy injection kits, and moisture meters to protect and diagnose slab conditions.

Choose tool materials and specs to match your mix and climate. Magnesium floats open the surface; steel floats close it. Softer-bond diamond blades cut hard concrete; harder bonds suit green concrete. Use internal or surface vibrators to consolidate thicker placements, and follow jointing guidelines to control shrinkage cracking.

Plan for safety and upkeep. Wear gloves, eye and hearing protection, respirators for silica dust, and proper footwear. Clean tools before cement hydrates, check cords and guards, and store blades dry. Projects include driveways, patios, footings, foundations, retaining walls, precast, and decorative overlays, with tools for mortar, grout, curing, and sealing in varied weather. Browse listings to compare brands, specs, and rentals so you can pour, finish, and maintain concrete with confidence.