The Best Flooring for Pets (From a Contractor With Two Dogs)
Three things to optimize for in a pet household: scratch resistance, water resistance, and easy cleanup. Here's how the major flooring types stack up.
The ranked list
1. Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP). Best all-around for pets. Waterproof, scratch-resistant wear layer, comfortable underfoot, easy to clean. The only loss vs hardwood is "real wood" prestige.
2. Tile. Fully waterproof, scratch-proof, lasts forever. Cold underfoot, hard on dog joints in old age, grout can stain. Great for entries and laundry rooms; questionable for whole-house with pets.
3. Quality laminate (AC4 or AC5). Tough wear layer, water-resistant cores available. Loses to LVP on full water exposure (pet accidents that sit overnight).
4. Engineered hardwood. Better than solid for pets because wider planks have fewer seams. Still scratches with nails. Acceptable for adults with calm dogs and good nail-trimming habits.
5. Solid hardwood. Beautiful, will scratch over time. Refinishable - that's the saving grace. If you love hardwood and accept some patina, it's fine.
6. Carpet. Don't.
What we actually recommend
For most pet households, we install LVP everywhere except formal living/dining, where engineered hardwood goes if the owner wants the upgrade. Color-matched so the transition is subtle.
For homes with multiple large dogs or older pets prone to accidents, we go LVP throughout the main floor and skip the hardwood entirely - and the homeowners are always happier a year in.
Things people get wrong
- "Hardwood is fine if the dog's nails are trimmed." Sort of. Trimmed nails still scratch wood floors over time, especially with running on slick surfaces. The patina is a real thing.
- "I'll just use throw rugs." Throw rugs solve scratch but trap accident moisture under them, which is worse for the floor than the original spill.
- "Bamboo is good for pets." Strand-woven bamboo is hard, but it dents like crazy when it does fail. It's not the magic answer it gets sold as.
The realistic conversation
If you're a pet household and we're sitting in your living room with samples, we'll always show you LVP first. If you push back and want hardwood, we'll talk through the tradeoffs and quote both. We're not here to talk anyone out of what they want - we're here to make sure you know what you're signing up for.
Get an in-home estimate with samples - we'll bring both LVP and hardwood and you can decide on your own floor.