When doing a home renovation or remodel, there are many considerations. Some of the choices that need to be made are structural, some are general design and still others are flow and the visual perspectives that you are trying to achieve. But when it comes to deciding on which floor to select, it isn’t solely a design or preference that drives your choice. Sometimes your floor options are driven by structural and subfloor imperfections and the effects that those have on your budget, which either limit or expand your floor options.

 

Uneven Floor Surfaces

There are many reasons that a floor surface or subflooring can be uneven. The most common reasons are either a basement or other concrete based surfaces -or- a remodel that has various levels of subflooring. In a perfect world, all the old flooring and subflooring would be removed and have everything leveled with a brand new subflooring surface. This would definitely leave your floor project on solid ground that gives you just about every floor option to choose from. However, not every renovation budget supports this costly solution, so what can you do?

Floating Floor – The Best Floor For Uneven Surface

A floating floor is easily installed without using glue, staples or nails, making it an exceptional DIY floor option. Installation of floating floors are easy and fast because planks click or snap together quickly and “float” above the subflooring surface.

A typical floating floor application is done using either wood, laminate or luxury vinyl tile flooring products. The floating floor application allows the flooring material to attach to itself, rather than be nailed to the subfloor. Because a floating floor installation isn’t fastened firmly to the subfloor, it doesn’t show the imperfections of the underlayment. This unique aspect of a floating floor makes it a perfect flooring application for uneven surfaces.

Floating Floor Options

Depending on the application, you have three main choices for floating floors. Below we cover each of the different types of floor that can be installed in a floating application.

Engineered Hardwood Floating Floor

One of the most desired floating floor options is engineered hardwood. Engineered wood flooring is popular because it is made with a top layer of real hardwood, giving it the optimal appearance and characteristics of solid wood flooring, without needing to be fixed to the subfloor surface.

In an application where the subfloor has uneven tendencies and/or crosses over various rooms with differing subfloor surfaces, engineered flooring gives you real wood, where you otherwise would have to put down new subflooring. Because engineered hardwood has a top layer of actual wood, you are able to get the best of both worlds. Easy installation, lower costs and in a floating floor installation without sacrificing on real wood. A simple bead of glue attaching each board to the other is all it takes to install engineered wood flooring as a floating floor.

Luxury Vinyl Tile Floating Floor

Luxury vinyl tile is the newest floating floor option that has dramatically grown in both popularity and appreciation over the last several years. Unlike sheet vinyl flooring, luxury vinyl tile comes in planks like real wood flooring and has a near identical appearance AND texture to traditional hardwood and engineered flooring.

In addition to the floating floor installation method, LVT floors offer scratch, water and high traffic protection that is unequaled in any other flooring types. Priced similarly to laminate flooring and less expensive than engineered ,many consumers are selecting luxury vinyl tile due to its superior look and texture over laminate, at a lower cost than engineered hardwood.

Laminate Floating Floor

Probably the most well-known option in floating floors is laminate flooring. Laminate flooring was first invented and made popular by the Swedish company, Pergo in 1977. Laminate floors are made using a layered, synthetic composite construction of four main materials.

The four layers that make up laminate flooring is the top wear layer, the design layer, the inner core and the backing. The layers of materials combine to make laminate floor a durable, inexpensive and long-lasting alternative to other flooring options on the market today. As one of the least expensive wood-like floating floor choices, it is a very popular option for homeowners.

Installing A Floating Floor

There are hundreds of manufacturers of floating floors. Each have a different method of connecting one plank or piece to the next. Many floating floors also have different subfloor preparation requirements, and some vary depending on the application of the install. For example, a vapor barrier may be suggested in a basement installation of floating floors with some brands, while others require an underlayment material in every application.

When it comes to installing a floating floor, most simply click or snap together. As we discussed earlier, by definition a floating floor floats and is not secured to the subfloor, but the floor pieces do need to be attached to each other in order to perform properly. Though every floating floor manufacturer can have their own unique fitting, every floating floor product is designed to attached together without fasteners, with exception to the slight difference with engineered wood floating floors that usually require a bead of glue at the joints.

The unique installation applications that floating floors afford homeowners make it the best option for uneven flooring surfaces. When you consider the choices in floor construction, pricing and the ability to easily install floating floors yourself, the cost and other advantages are clear.