What Flooring Adds the Most Resale Value in the Inland Empire
Flooring is one of the highest-ROI improvements you can make before selling. Here's what actually moves the price.
The hierarchy buyers respond to
1. Real hardwood. Still the gold standard in mid-to-upper price points. "Hardwood throughout" gets called out in listings and walk-throughs. Refinishing existing hardwood is the highest-ROI move available.
2. Wide-plank hardwood-look LVP. A close second in mid-market homes. Most buyers can't tell quality LVP from hardwood at a glance, and "waterproof, pet-friendly LVP" is a strong listing feature.
3. Quality laminate. A tier below LVP in buyer perception. Acceptable in budget-price-point homes; less effective above $500K.
4. Tile. Strong in kitchens and bathrooms. Neutral in living areas - buyers expect wood-look in those spaces.
5. Carpet. Negative in main living areas. Acceptable in bedrooms but loses to the alternatives. If your house has carpet in the living room or hallways, replacing it before sale almost always pays for itself.
What actually moves price
- Tearing out carpet, installing wood-look flooring throughout main floor: typically returns $1.50 – $2.50 per dollar invested in mid-market Inland Empire homes.
- Refinishing existing hardwood: highest ROI of any flooring move. $3 – $7 per sq ft in, often returns 3x or more in sale price uplift.
- Replacing tile in kitchens and bathrooms (if dated or damaged): modest ROI but addresses inspection-period concerns.
- Adding hardwood to stairs: $80 – $200 per tread, often returns 2x in perceived value.
- Whole-house consistency in flooring: matters more than the specific material. A house with three different flooring types reads as patchwork; one consistent material reads as renovated.
What doesn't move price
- Premium LVP vs mid-grade LVP - buyers can't tell the difference in walk-through.
- Exotic species hardwood vs domestic oak - oak is what buyers expect; exotic adds cost without proportional value.
- High-end finish vs standard polyurethane - invisible to most buyers.
Pre-listing flooring strategy
- 6+ months before list: consider full hardwood install or refinish. Plan for completion 30 – 60 days before listing photos.
- 3 months before list: carpet replacement, LVP install. Faster turnaround than hardwood.
- 1 month before list: spot repairs, scratch fills, professional clean. Don't start big projects.
Inland Empire-specific notes
- Mid-tier ($400K – $700K): LVP throughout main floor is the highest-ROI move.
- Upper-tier ($700K+): wide-plank engineered hardwood expected. Refinish existing or install new.
- Historic homes (Redlands, Riverside): restore original wood floors. Replacing with modern hardwood is a value mistake on character homes.
- Rentals being sold to investors: LVP throughout. Tile in wet rooms.
If you're planning to sell in the next 1 – 3 years, we'll do a free walkthrough and tell you what actually moves the price.