The job of the GRAMMA (or SubDude, or any other decouling device) is to act as a "shock absorber" between your subwoofer and the floor. The construction of your floor (wood frame, concrete, marble, etc.) is not what determines whether or not the GRAMMA will give you any sort of audible result/improvement. ALL types of floor construction move in sympathy with the vibrations of your subwoofer. Concrete flooring is typically more dense and has more mass, which means that it takes more energy in order to get it to move than a typical wood floor. But concrete WILL STILL MOVE and decoupling is still something that will almost always improve the bass within your theater as well as greatly decrease the bass that is heard in other rooms outside of your theater.
So whether or not the GRAMMA will be useful to you is more about how effective your CARPET is acting as a decoupling device - it's not about the concrete floor beneath it. If you have a very thick carpet pad and thick carpet, then that might act as an effective decoupling device and the GRAMMA won't really add anything. However, a lot of carpet and carpet pads get "crushed" enough by the weight of many subwoofers that they fail to actually decouple the subwoofer. Furthermore, many subwoofers have "feet" of some sort (rubber feet, spikes, cones, etc.) Having all of the downward force of the subwoofer's weight "focused" into those four little feet means that those feet often "penetrate" many carpets and carpet pads, which in turn, means that the subwoofer is once again "coupled" to the floor.
It is rather easy to tell whether your subwoofer is already effectively decoupled or not. If it is not effectively decoupled, you will notice things like windows rattling, other objects in the room vibrating - and perhaps the easiest test of all - if you go into other rooms of the house, you will be able to hear the bass thumping away, even when you cannot hear the higher frequencies.
If your subwoofer is already effectively decoupled by your carpet and carpet pad, then you will only notice the rattling, vibrations and "bleeding" of bass into other rooms at a handful of very specific frequencies (those being the inherent resonant frequencies of the materials that make and populate your room, which will react to bass that is simply travelling through the air, rather than the structure-borne transmission, which is what decoupling devices eliminate).
The final piece of the puzzle is just how much your subwoofer physically shakes to begin with. If your subwoofer has a balanced driver arrangement (subwoofer drivers firing in opposing direction, in phase), then it might not shake very much to begin with! This is the idea behind something like the Paradigm Sub1 and Sub2. If your sub already doesn't shake on it's own, then it isn't going to transmit energy into the surface beneath it.
Personally, I decouple every speaker. It never hurts the sound quality and
almost always helps - even if only a little bit. But if $50 is money that you would rather keep (and I can certainly understand wanting to do so!), then I understand wondering whether the GRAMMA will be of any value to you. I would say, do my recommended listening tests first - especially going into other rooms of your house while you have some solid bass playing. If you can clearly detect that bass thumping away, then I would recommend that you try a GRAMMA isolation riser. Buy it from a retailer that offers a good return policy. Nothing tells you whether or not a GRAMMA was worth it better than hearing the results for yourself! We can speculate, but the results can sometimes be surprising. Sometimes, we expect the GRAMMA to make a big difference, but it doesn't. Sometimes, we don't expect any change, but then there's a VERY noticeable difference with the GRAMMA in place.
The GRAMMA is not magic and it is not a panacea for all bass problems. It is simply an effective decoupling device that I think is reasonably priced and therefore, I heartily recommend it! But the point is to decouple your subwoofer. Whether you accomplish that with the GRAMMA or whether it is already accomplished with a thick carpet pad doesn't matter! You just want to avoid having the structure of your house shake in sympathy with your subwoofer, and the GRAMMA will do that if it isn't being done already