Acrylic, polyurethane, modular tiles or bare concrete — which surface suits your court, sport and budget? An honest comparison for Malaysian conditions.
| Acrylic (Duracourt) | Polyurethane (PU) | Interlocking tiles | Bare concrete / asphalt | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost | Low–moderate | High | Moderate | Lowest |
| Lifespan | 10–15 yrs (recoat 5–8) | 8–12 yrs | 5–10 yrs | Surface only |
| Grip & ball response | Excellent, tunable | Very good, cushioned | Fair (jointed) | Poor / slippery |
| Maintenance | Low — wash & recoat | Moderate | Low, but joints/warping | Low |
| Repair / resurface | Easy — recoat in place | Specialist | Replace tiles | n/a |
| Indoor / outdoor | Both | Both | Both | Both |
| Best for | Most courts — schools, councils, clubs | Premium / pro & indoor | Quick DIY / temporary | Sub-base only |
A multi-coat acrylic system over concrete or asphalt. Best all-round value: durable, non-skid, fade-resistant, easy to recoat, and water-based (indoor-safe). The standard for Malaysian school, council and club courts.
A thicker, cushioned rubber-PU system. Excellent player comfort for premium and indoor competition courts, but costs more, needs specialist installation and is harder to repair.
Modular plastic tiles that snap together over a hard base. Fast to lay and movable, but joints affect ball roll, tiles can warp/fade, and the feel is firmer.
Only a base, not a finished sports surface — hard, glary, slippery when wet and tough on joints. It is the substrate an acrylic or PU system is built on.
For the majority of Malaysian courts — schools, universities, councils, clubs and community facilities — an acrylic system like Bina Duracourt gives the best balance of cost, durability, grip and easy maintenance. It is applied over your existing or new concrete/asphalt, recoats in place every few years, and is water-based so it works indoors and out. Polyurethane makes sense for premium cushioned competition courts; interlocking tiles suit quick or temporary setups. For everything in between, acrylic wins.
For most courts, acrylic gives better value — lower cost, easy maintenance and recoating. PU is a premium cushioned option for high-end or indoor competition courts where player comfort is the priority.
Tiles are quick to install and removable, but joints affect ball roll and they can warp or fade. A bonded acrylic surface gives a truer, seamless play surface and is easy to refresh.
Yes — as long as the base is sound, Duracourt is cleaned, crack-repaired and coated over existing concrete or asphalt, including resurfacing an old painted court.
10–15 years with periodic recoating every 5–8 years. Recoating refreshes colour and grip without rebuilding the base.
Tell us your sport, court size and whether it is indoor or outdoor — we will recommend the right Duracourt system and quote it.