Should I Refinish or Replace My Hardwood Floors?
Most older Inland Empire homes - especially in Redlands, Riverside's historic neighborhoods, and central San Bernardino - have original oak hidden under decades of carpet. The question is always the same: refinish what's there, or rip it out and replace?
The deciding factor: wear-layer thickness
Solid 3/4-inch hardwood has roughly 1/4 inch of usable wood above the tongue and groove. Each refinish takes off about 1/32 inch. Math: a healthy floor handles 4 – 7 full refinishes over its lifetime.
But you only get to refinish if there's enough wood left. We measure this with a moisture meter probe or by lifting a vent register and looking at the cross-section. Less than 1/8 inch above the groove? Replacement is the move.
Engineered hardwood is a different game - wear layers vary from 0.6 mm (no refinishing possible) to 6 mm (3 – 4 refinishes possible). Always check before assuming.
Cost reality
- Refinish: $3 – $7 per sq ft for a full sand-stain-seal.
- Replace: $8 – $16 per sq ft installed (demo + new install).
Refinish is roughly half the cost. That's why we always check whether refinishing is feasible before quoting replacement.
Refinish makes sense when
- The floor is solid hardwood with enough wood left.
- The damage is surface-level: scratches, dull finish, light pet stains, color you don't love.
- The board layout and species suit your taste (or you're changing the stain).
Replace makes sense when
- Boards are too thin to refinish.
- Water damage has gone deep (cupping that won't flatten, severe staining through the wood).
- More than a small percentage of boards need replacement and the layout doesn't allow clean weaving.
- You want a different species, width, or layout direction.
- The house has multiple subfloor issues that demand a tear-down anyway.
A middle path: weave-in and refinish
If a few boards are damaged but most of the floor is fine, we can weave in matching boards and refinish the whole floor. Done well, you can't see the patches. This is half the cost of full replacement and adds another decade-plus to the floor.
Not sure which way to go? Get a free in-home assessment - we'll measure your floor thickness and tell you straight.