What Hardwood Floor Installation Actually Costs in the Inland Empire (2026)
Most homeowners ask the same first question: "What's a hardwood floor going to run me?" The honest answer in the Inland Empire today is $8 to $16 per square foot installed for solid or engineered hardwood. That window is wide because four things move the number more than anything else.
What's actually in the price
A square-foot install price typically includes:
- Materials - the planks themselves, plus underlayment, moisture barrier, fasteners, and trim.
- Labor - demo of existing floor, subfloor prep, install, and finish carpentry around transitions.
- Disposal - haul-away of old flooring (almost always included; ask).
- Acclimation time - 3 to 5 days where boards sit in your home before install. No labor cost, but it's part of the timeline.
What's not always included: moving heavy furniture, baseboards (sometimes quoted separately), and stairs (always quoted separately).
Four things that move the price
1. Species and width. Domestic red oak at 3-1/4" strip is the budget end, around $8 – $10 per sq ft installed. Wide-plank white oak or European oak runs $14 – $18+. Hickory and exotic species sit in between.
2. Subfloor condition. A flat slab is fast. A subfloor with high spots, low spots, water damage, or moisture issues adds prep time - sometimes a full day before any flooring goes down.
3. Stairs. Hardwood stairs run $80 – $200+ per tread because each tread is custom-cut and finished. A 14-tread staircase is a separate project budget on its own.
4. Demo complexity. Pulling carpet is fast. Pulling glued-down tile or vinyl is slow. We see this most on 1950s ranches in Redlands and central San Bernardino where multiple flooring layers sit on top of each other.
Solid vs engineered: what we actually recommend
In the Inland Empire's climate - dry summers, occasional humid spells, hot attic spaces - both work. Here's how we usually steer the conversation:
- Solid hardwood (3/4" thick) if you want the option to refinish 4 – 7 times over the floor's lifetime, you're on a raised foundation, and you're staying long-term.
- Engineered hardwood if you're on slab (most homes built after 1990 in the Inland Empire), if you want wider planks (5"+ is hard to do in solid here without movement), or if budget calls for fewer dollars per square foot.
What about the cheaper quotes?
If a quote is significantly under $8/sq ft installed for hardwood, ask: Is the moisture testing skipped? Is the subfloor prep included? Is the labor warranty in writing? Are they pulling permits where needed? The cheap number always shows up somewhere later.
Get a written, itemized quote from at least two contractors and compare them line-by-line, not just the bottom number. That's the single best move you can make as a homeowner.
For a free in-home estimate anywhere in the Inland Empire, reach out.