For those saying rebar is needed, please explain the engineering behind this requirement.
If a section of slab is removed to dig deeper, the new pour should be rebar "pinned" to the existing slab at minimum, but a full rebar lattice is not required.
As for rebar reinforcing on a new pour without tying into existing, it's going to add a safety factor but is not 100% necessary.
A good, actual, uniform 4" pour (many "4-inch pours" are 2.5"-4" thickness, as I have found many times in my career) is fine for most lift applications after 28 days. I went with 18" thick concrete w/ rebar in my lift bay because I have astronomically horrible luck and wanted that safety factor (yes, 18", sectioned and pinned, long story, very overkill). Then, I see backwoods redneck shops lifting full size diesels on 3" cracked concrete daily and they somehow manage it just fine for years...
Concrete is strong in compression loading, but not shear or tension. That's where rebar is required- IF those forces exceed the strength of the concrete. Not all forces are compression, it depends on the distribution, moment loading, shock, etc. There's a lot that goes into it.
Even though a few manufacturers have posted "engineering studies" that claim this isn't true, a 2-post lift has compressive, shear, and tension loading zones in the concrete beneath it. The moment inward creates upward forces behind the lift, even if it's minimal on smaller lifts with a narrower footprint. A top cross-bar typically isn't structural, and is only there for looming cables or hydraulics. Typically where there is a massive lift failure, the concrete was already compromised, lift installed prematurely (before 28 days), or had dangerously thin areas from lazy prep work.
In my case, I went to install anchors and the concrete thickness was so inconsistent that I couldn't wedge several anchors in place. When we tore up that section, it varied from 2" to 4". We dug down through #57 that wasn't properly compacted and re-bedded it. It was like $50 extra in concrete to make it stupid thick, why not, just spanned the whole width of the bay.