Most homeowners researching new floors run into the same three options pretty quickly: LVP (luxury vinyl plank, often the same product as SPC), laminate, and engineered hardwood. The marketing for each makes them all sound perfect. They're not. Here's the honest contractor's take after installing all three across hundreds of LA and OC homes.
Quick Comparison: Which One Wins on What
If you only read one section, read this:
- Best for water resistance: LVP/SPC (100% waterproof)
- Best for resale value: Engineered hardwood (it's still real wood)
- Best for tight budgets: Laminate (lowest material cost)
- Best for pets and kids: LVP/SPC (most scratch-resistant)
- Best for high-end aesthetics: Engineered hardwood (looks and feels like solid wood)
- Best overall for the average LA home: LVP/SPC (the right answer for most homeowners we work with)
That last one is what we actually install most often. Here's why each option ranks where it does, and how to decide which is right for your home.
What LVP/SPC Actually Is
LVP stands for "luxury vinyl plank." SPC stands for "stone plastic composite" — it's a stiffer, more premium type of LVP with a denser core. In practice, the terms are used interchangeably by most homeowners and even some retailers. The key thing to understand: LVP and SPC are 100% synthetic. They're plastic with a printed image of wood on top, sealed with a wear layer.
That sounds bad. It's not. The technology has improved enormously in the last five years. The best LVP/SPC products today look genuinely convincing — even up close — and they have real, measurable advantages over wood:
- Waterproof. Spill an entire glass of wine, leave it overnight, wipe it up the next morning, and the floor is fine. This is genuinely impossible with any wood floor.
- Scratch-resistant. Dog nails, dragged furniture, dropped pots — LVP shrugs it off in ways hardwood can't.
- Dimensional stability. LA's microclimates and seasonal humidity changes make solid wood expand and contract. LVP doesn't move.
- Easy installation. Most LVP is "click-lock" — no glue, no nails, sometimes installable directly over existing tile. Faster install means lower labor costs.
The honest downsides: LVP doesn't add resale value the way real wood does. Some buyers (especially in higher-end LA markets) see it as a downgrade. And while the visuals are impressive, the underfoot feel is harder and quieter than wood — some people love this, some find it uncanny.
What LVP/SPC Costs
Material: $2.50–$6 per square foot for residential-grade products. Premium SPC with thicker wear layers (20-mil or higher) runs $5–$8. Installation: $2–$4 per square foot. Total installed: $5–$11 per square foot for most LA homes.
What Laminate Actually Is
Laminate is the older cousin of LVP. It's typically 5–8 layers of compressed wood fiber (HDF — high-density fiberboard) topped with a printed image and a clear wear layer. It's been around for 30+ years and the technology is mature.
Compared to LVP, laminate has one major advantage and several disadvantages:
- Advantage: Slightly more affordable, especially at the entry level. Budget laminate starts around $1.50/sq ft for materials.
- Disadvantage: Not waterproof. Modern "water-resistant" laminate handles spills if cleaned up quickly, but a real flood will swell the HDF core and ruin the planks.
- Disadvantage: Sounds hollow underfoot. Less acoustic insulation than LVP without an underlayment.
- Disadvantage: Older laminate visuals look obviously fake — you can tell it's not wood from across the room. Newer laminate has improved but LVP has improved more.
Laminate still has its place. If you're flooring a low-traffic guest room, a vacation rental on a tight budget, or you genuinely just need the cheapest decent-looking option, laminate works. For most other situations, the small price difference vs. LVP isn't worth the trade-offs.
What Laminate Costs
Material: $1.50–$4 per square foot. Installation: $2–$3.50 per square foot. Total installed: $3.50–$7.50 per square foot.
What Engineered Hardwood Actually Is
Engineered hardwood is real wood — the top layer is genuine hardwood (often oak, walnut, or maple), bonded to a multi-layer plywood core underneath. It's not solid wood, but it's not a wood-look product either. It's a real wood floor designed to be more dimensionally stable than solid hardwood, especially over concrete subfloors (which most LA condos and many newer homes have).
Engineered hardwood is what you want when:
- You want the warmth, character, and resale value of real wood
- You're installing over concrete (where solid wood can't easily go)
- You want the option to refinish the floor down the road (engineered floors with thicker wear layers can be sanded and refinished 1–3 times)
- You're doing a higher-end remodel where appearance and feel matter
The downsides: Engineered hardwood is the most expensive of the three by a meaningful margin. It's not waterproof — water can warp the wood layer and damage the plywood core. It scratches more easily than LVP. And cheaper engineered products have very thin wear layers that can't be refinished, making them effectively single-life floors.
What Engineered Hardwood Costs
Material: $4–$12+ per square foot. Premium European white oak with wide planks runs $9–$15. Installation: $3–$6 per square foot (more complex than LVP). Total installed: $7–$18 per square foot.
Not sure which is right for your home?
Free 30-min Zoom call. Show us your space, tell us how you live, and we'll give you a real recommendation — even if it's not the most expensive option.
Book Free Zoom Consultation →The Real Decision Framework
Here's how we actually help homeowners decide between these three:
You should pick LVP/SPC if...
- You have pets (especially big dogs)
- You have young kids
- You're flooring a kitchen, bathroom, or basement
- You live in a high-humidity area (parts of Long Beach, the South Bay)
- You want the lowest maintenance flooring possible
- Your budget is in the $5–$11/sq ft installed range
- You're planning to live in the home for the next 5+ years (don't need to maximize resale)
You should pick laminate if...
- You need to floor a large area on a tight budget
- It's a rental property where wear matters less than upfront cost
- You're flooring a low-traffic area (guest rooms, secondary bedrooms)
- You don't care about waterproofing
You should pick engineered hardwood if...
- You have a higher-end home where buyers will expect real wood
- You love the look and feel of natural hardwood
- You're flooring main living areas (not kitchens or bathrooms)
- You don't have pets that will scratch it constantly
- Your budget supports $7–$18/sq ft installed
- You want the floor to be refinishable in 10–15 years
What About Solid Hardwood?
We left solid hardwood out of the main comparison because, in modern LA construction, it's increasingly rare for new installs. Solid hardwood still has a place — particularly for homeowners with existing solid hardwood that needs to be matched, or for traditional homes in Pasadena, Hancock Park, and similar historic neighborhoods. But for most homeowners weighing options today, the choice is really between LVP, laminate, and engineered hardwood.
If you do want solid hardwood, the cost is similar to engineered ($8–$18/sq ft installed), but installation is more limited (typically over plywood subfloors only, not concrete) and the wood is more sensitive to humidity changes.
The TL;DR for LA Homeowners
For about 70% of the homes we work in across LA and OC, LVP/SPC is the right answer. It looks great, it's tough, it's waterproof, and it costs less than engineered hardwood while outperforming it in daily use. The exceptions are higher-end remodels (where engineered hardwood pays off in resale) and tight-budget projects (where laminate's price advantage matters most).
If you're trying to decide for your specific home, we'd love to help. Book a free 30-minute Zoom, show us the rooms, tell us how you live, and we'll give you a recommendation — including which we'd put in our own home, and why.