Best Flooring for Rental Properties (Landlord's Guide)
If you own rental property in the Inland Empire, your flooring math is different from an owner-occupant's. Here's what works.
Goals for rental flooring
- Durable - survives 3 – 5 year tenancies and the occasional hard turnover.
- Easy to clean - no carpet, ideally one continuous flooring across the unit.
- Forgiving on touch-ups - boards or tiles that can be replaced individually if a few get damaged.
- Cost-effective per square foot - the per-unit math has to work.
- Tenant-friendly - flooring that helps you list and lease quickly.
Top picks for rentals
1. Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP). The clear winner for most rental conversions. Waterproof, scratch-resistant, $4 – $6/sq ft installed for a solid product. Replaceable plank-by-plank if a tenant damages a section. Photographs well in listings. We install LVP in rentals more than any other flooring.
2. Tile. Bathrooms, kitchens, entries - bulletproof for decades. Higher install cost per sq ft, but the longevity in wet rooms is unmatched.
3. Quality laminate (AC4). A tier below LVP for rentals because it's only water-resistant, not waterproof. Use in dry-only spaces if budget pushes you below LVP. Otherwise spend the extra dollar per sq ft and get LVP.
Things to avoid in rentals
- Carpet. Stains, allergens, replacement every 1 – 2 turnovers. Bad cost-per-year math.
- Solid hardwood. Beautiful for owner-occupied; expensive to refinish or repair after rough tenants. Rare to recoup the cost in rental market rent.
- Dark colors. Show every speck of dust and pet hair. Listing photos look worse. Stick to medium-light tones.
- High-gloss finishes. Show scratches faster.
Color and style choices
- Light to medium oak look. Universally appealing, photographs well, hides dust.
- 5"+ wide planks. Modern look, listings perform better.
- Matte or low-sheen finish. Hides scratches.
- Continuous color through the unit. Fewer transition strips, simpler look, easier on the eyes.
Whole-unit vs partial install
We almost always recommend whole-unit conversions over partial. Reasons:
- One flooring through the unit photographs better and rents faster.
- Transition strips are wear points; eliminating them improves longevity.
- Per-square-foot price drops slightly on bigger jobs.
Per-unit math (for a typical 1,000 sq ft single-family rental)
- LVP install: $5,000 – $7,000 all-in.
- Lifespan: 12 – 20 years residential use; expect to replace every 2 – 3 tenants in heavy-use units.
- Per-year cost: $250 – $700.
- Add to rent: $20 – $40/month justified by a true LVP listing vs old carpet.
The math works almost every time on the first turnover.
For multi-property landlords, we offer volume pricing - call to discuss.