Hardwood vs Luxury Vinyl Plank: How to Actually Choose
Half the calls we take start with "I'm trying to decide between hardwood and LVP." Here's the honest tradeoff.
Where LVP wins
- Water. Spills, pet accidents, dishwasher leaks - LVP shrugs them off. Hardwood can't.
- Cost. LVP installed runs $4 – $9 per sq ft. Hardwood is $8 – $16. The gap is real.
- Speed. A whole-house LVP install is usually 1 – 3 days. Hardwood with acclimation is 3 – 7.
- Pet households. If you have dogs and the worry of nail scratches keeps you up, LVP is the answer.
Where hardwood wins
- Resale. "Real hardwood" still appears in listing remarks. LVP usually does not. In neighborhoods where hardwood is expected (parts of Redlands, Riverside's Wood Streets, custom homes in Etiwanda), it matters.
- Refinishability. Solid hardwood can be sanded and re-stained 4 – 7 times. LVP can't be refinished - when the wear layer is gone, it's replaced.
- Feel underfoot. Quality LVP is good. Hardwood is unmistakable.
- Lifespan. A well-cared-for hardwood floor outlasts the house. LVP is rated for 20 – 30 years residential.
How we usually steer the conversation
- Wet rooms (full bath, mudroom, kitchen by the dishwasher): LVP, every time.
- Living, dining, bedrooms in a forever home: hardwood if budget allows.
- Rental property or short-term hold: LVP.
- Pet household, especially big dogs: LVP unless the owner is committed to nail trimming and accepts the look of a few scratches over time.
- Historic home with original wood underneath: refinish the original. Don't cover real oak with LVP.
A middle path most people don't consider
You don't have to pick one for the whole house. We do plenty of jobs where the main living areas are hardwood and the bathrooms, laundry, and entryway are LVP - color-matched so the visual transition is subtle. It's the best of both worlds and almost always the right answer for kitchens.
If you want to see samples of both side-by-side in your own light, we bring them to every free estimate. Schedule one here.