If your hardwood floors look tired, scratched, or just plain dated, you're facing one of two paths: refinish them (sand them down and apply a new finish) or replace them entirely (rip them out and install something new). The cost difference between these two is huge — often 4 to 10 times — and yet most homeowners don't realize they have a choice. Here's how to decide.
The 5-Minute Decision: Can Your Floors Be Refinished?
Before we talk about cost or aesthetics, there's a basic technical question: are your floors physically refinishable? Not all wood floors can be sanded down. Here's the quick checklist.
You CAN refinish if...
- You have solid hardwood (the entire plank is wood, top to bottom)
- You have engineered hardwood with a thick wear layer (3mm+ — the wear layer is the top layer of real wood; thin ones can't be sanded)
- The boards are not deeply gouged through to the subfloor
- The wood hasn't been previously sanded so many times it's about to expose the tongue-and-groove joints
You CANNOT refinish if...
- You have laminate (it's not wood — sanding would destroy the printed image)
- You have LVP or SPC (also not wood — you'd just sand through the wear layer)
- You have engineered hardwood with a thin wear layer (under 2mm — common in budget engineered products)
- Your floors have severe water damage causing the boards to buckle or cup beyond what sanding can flatten
- Termite damage or rot has compromised the structural integrity of the planks
If you have laminate or LVP and you don't like how it looks, the only option is replacement. There's no refinishing path. But if you have any kind of real wood — solid or engineered with enough wear layer — refinishing is almost always worth considering before you commit to replacement.
The Cost Difference Is Bigger Than Most People Realize
Here's the honest cost comparison for a typical 1,000 sq ft project in LA:
- Refinishing existing hardwood: $4,000–$8,000 total
- Replacing with new engineered hardwood: $9,000–$18,000 total
- Replacing with new LVP/SPC: $5,500–$11,000 total
- Replacing with new laminate: $4,000–$7,500 total
Replacement costs include demolition (removing the existing floor, hauling debris), subfloor inspection and prep, new flooring materials, and installation. Refinishing costs include sanding, optional staining, and three coats of new finish. For most homeowners with sandable hardwood, refinishing is 40–60% cheaper than replacing with anything other than budget laminate.
And refinishing has another quiet advantage: it preserves real wood floors, which most buyers prefer over LVP or laminate. So you save money and you protect (or even increase) the resale value of the home.
Real-world example: A homeowner in Sherman Oaks called us about replacing the "ugly" hardwood floors in her 1950s ranch home. We did a Zoom consultation, looked at the floors over video, and saw they were original red oak — solid, in good structural condition, just heavily scratched and stained from decades of furniture and pets. Replacement quote: $14,000. Refinishing quote: $5,200. She refinished. Six months later her floors look better than the day they were originally installed.
When Replacement Actually Makes Sense
Refinishing isn't always the answer. Here are the legitimate cases where replacement is the right call:
1. The floors aren't real wood
If you have laminate, LVP, vinyl, or any other non-wood product, refinishing isn't possible. Replacement is your only option.
2. The wood is too thin to sand again
Solid hardwood can typically be refinished 4–8 times over its lifetime. Engineered hardwood with thicker wear layers can be done 1–3 times. Both have a finite life. If your floors have been refinished multiple times already, you may have run out of wood — sanding any further would expose the tongue-and-groove joints. A flooring contractor can usually tell by looking at the floor edges and gaps between boards.
3. You want a completely different look
Refinishing can change the color (via stain) and the sheen (matte vs gloss), but it can't change the species, the plank width, or the layout. If you have narrow 2-inch oak strips and you want wide-plank European white oak, refinishing won't get you there. You need replacement.
4. The wood has structural problems
Severe water damage that's caused the boards to buckle, termite damage, or wood that's gone soft from rot can't be saved by sanding. The boards have to come out.
5. You're going to a moisture-prone area
If your existing hardwood is in a kitchen or near a bathroom and you've had water issues, refinishing won't fix the underlying problem — wood will keep absorbing moisture. Replacing with LVP/SPC eliminates the issue permanently.
What Refinishing Can Actually Fix (And What It Can't)
Refinishing CAN fix:
- Surface scratches and scuffs
- Faded or worn finish
- Uneven color or sun damage
- Pet stains (most of them — deep urine stains sometimes need board replacement)
- Water rings and spot damage on the surface
- Squeaks (sometimes — depends on cause)
- Outdated stain colors (changing from honey oak to a modern walnut or natural)
Refinishing CANNOT fix:
- Deep gouges through to the subfloor
- Cupped or warped boards from water damage
- Gaps between boards from age and shrinkage (only minor gaps can be filled)
- Damage from moisture below the floor
- Plank width or species — you keep what you have
Not sure which path is right for your floors?
We'll do a free Zoom consultation, look at your floors over video, and give you a straight answer — including the option that costs us less to do.
Book Free Zoom Consultation →The Hybrid Option Most Contractors Won't Mention
Sometimes the best answer is neither pure refinishing nor pure replacement. It's a hybrid:
- Refinish what's salvageable, replace what's damaged. If 90% of your hardwood is in great shape but the kitchen and a hallway are too damaged, we can replace the damaged sections with matching wood and refinish everything together so it looks like one continuous floor.
- Refinish the main floor, install LVP in the wet areas. Keep the beautiful real hardwood in living and dining areas; switch to waterproof LVP/SPC in kitchens, bathrooms, and laundry rooms. This is what we recommend most often for older LA homes that have water damage in specific zones.
The hybrid approach typically lands at 60–80% of the cost of full replacement while preserving the parts of the home that are still beautiful.
How to Decide in 5 Minutes
Run through this decision tree:
- Are your floors real wood? If no → replacement is your only option.
- Are they structurally sound (no buckling, soft spots, termite damage)? If no → replacement.
- Have they been refinished 3+ times already? If yes → likely time to replace.
- Do you want a different species or plank width? If yes → replacement.
- If you answered "no" to all the above → refinishing is your answer. You'll save thousands and the result is genuinely beautiful.
One Last Thing
If a flooring contractor tells you your floors "have to be replaced" without first looking carefully at whether they're refinishable, get a second opinion. We've seen perfectly good 50-year-old hardwood floors marked for demolition because the homeowner didn't know refinishing was an option. Refinishing is one of the highest-ROI home improvements possible — a few thousand dollars often delivers floors that look better than the day they were installed and add real value to the home.
If you're trying to decide what to do with your floors, book a free 30-minute Zoom with us. Show us the floors over video. We'll tell you the truth — including the option that's cheaper for you, even if it means we make less money on the job.