• Phone
  • Mail
× Send

HOMEOWNER'S GUIDE TO FLOORING DECISIONS DURING RENOVATIONS

Welcome to Club Ceramic — KW Region’s premier hardwood flooring store for quality wood floors and expert installation.

Why Flooring Decisions Make or Break Renovation Timelines

You’ve hired a contractor, finalized your budget, and you’re ready to transform your home. The demolition starts on schedule. Framing proceeds perfectly. Electrical and plumbing rough-ins finish early. Everything is going according to plan.

Then your contractor asks: “Have you decided on flooring yet?”

You haven’t. You’ve been focused on paint colors, cabinet styles, and light fixtures. Flooring seemed like something you could figure out later—a finish detail to finalize once the “important” decisions were made.

But here’s what most homeowners don’t realize: flooring isn’t a finish detail. It’s a critical structural component that affects every other trade in your renovation.

When you delay flooring decisions, you’re not just postponing one choice—you’re creating a bottleneck that stalls trim carpenters, painters, cabinet installers, appliance technicians, and everyone else waiting to complete their work.

This guide will help you understand:

  • When flooring decisions actually need to happen (it’s earlier than you think)
  • How to choose flooring that matches your subfloor conditions
  • What flooring really costs (beyond the price tag you see)
  • How your flooring choice affects your contractor’s timeline
  • Questions you must ask before committing to any material

Your contractor wants you to make informed flooring decisions early so your renovation stays on schedule and within budget. This guide gives you the knowledge to do exactly that.

Part 1: The Renovation Timeline – When Flooring Decisions Actually Need to Happen

The Myth: “We’ll Figure Out Flooring Later”

Most homeowners assume flooring gets chosen sometime in the middle of a renovation—after the “structural stuff” is done but before the final touches. This assumption causes more project delays than almost any other factor.

Here’s the reality: flooring decisions need to happen before your renovation even starts.

The Actual Flooring Decision Timeline

Let’s work backwards from your ideal move-in date to understand when decisions need to happen:

Your goal: Move in December 1st

  • November 20-25: Final walkthrough, punch list completion, move-in
  • November 15-18: Flooring installation complete, baseboards installed, final paint touch-ups
  • November 10-14: Flooring installation (3-5 days depending on material)
  • November 8: Flooring materials delivered to job site
  • October 1 – November 7: Materials in transit/warehouse (4-6 week standard lead time)
  • September 25-30: Flooring ordered and paid for
  • September 15-24: Final decision made, contract signed with flooring supplier
  • September 1-14: Contractor assesses subfloor, confirms material compatibility
  • August 15 – August 30: You visit showrooms, review samples in your actual home, narrow options
  • August 10: Renovation begins, contractor explains flooring decision timeline

Notice the pattern? For a December 1st move-in, flooring decisions need to be finalized by mid-September—just weeks after your renovation starts.

Homeowners who wait until October or November to choose flooring push their move-in date into January or February.

Why Lead Times Matter More Than You Think

That beautiful hardwood you saw at the showroom? It might be:

  • Special order only (6-8 week lead time)
  • Imported from Europe (8-12 weeks including customs)
  • Currently backordered (unknown timeline)
  • Discontinued (no longer available at all)

Even “in stock” flooring often means “in stock at the manufacturer’s warehouse”—not at your local supplier. Shipping, receiving, and delivery can add 1-3 weeks even for “available” materials.

Pro tip from your contractor: If your timeline is tight, prioritize in-stock materials from local suppliers. Beautiful flooring that arrives in 10 weeks doesn’t help a project that needs to finish in 8.

Part 2: Understanding Your Subfloor – Why Not All Flooring Works in All Homes

The Subfloor Reality Check

Here’s a conversation that happens on nearly every renovation:

Homeowner: “We’ve decided on solid hardwood throughout the main floor!”

Contractor: “Your basement has a concrete slab with moisture issues. Solid hardwood won’t work there without extensive prep work that’ll add $3,000 and two weeks to the timeline.”

Homeowner: “Why didn’t anyone tell us this before?”

Answer: Because you chose flooring before your contractor could assess subfloor conditions.

What Your Contractor Checks Before Recommending Flooring

Before you fall in love with any flooring material, your contractor needs to assess:

1. Subfloor Type

  • Plywood/OSB over joists (typical in upper floors)
  • Concrete slab (typical in basements and main floors of bungalows)
  • Existing tile or hardwood that could remain as underlayment

2. Subfloor Condition

  • Level vs. unlevel (some flooring requires near-perfect levelness)
  • Moisture levels (critical for wood products)
  • Structural soundness (can it support tile weight?)
  • Existing damage (water stains, rot, pest damage)

3. Height Considerations

  • Will new flooring match existing floor heights in adjacent rooms?
  • Will doors need trimming?
  • Will appliances (dishwasher, fridge) still fit under counters?

Flooring Material Compatibility Chart

Here’s what actually works with different subfloor conditions:

Flooring Type Works on Concrete Slab? Works on Wood Subfloor? Moisture Tolerance Levelness Required
Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP) Yes Yes Excellent (waterproof) Moderate (forgiving)
Engineered Hardwood Yes (with moisture barrier) Yes Moderate (limited water exposure) High (needs level surface)
Solid Hardwood No (moisture issues) Yes Low (no water exposure) High (needs level surface)
Porcelain Tile Yes Yes (if structurally sound) Excellent (waterproof) Very High (must be perfectly level)
Laminate Yes (with moisture barrier) Yes Low (moisture causes buckling) Moderate

Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP)

Concrete Slab: Yes

Wood Subfloor: Yes

Moisture Tolerance: Excellent (waterproof)

Levelness Required: Moderate (forgiving)

Engineered Hardwood

Concrete Slab: Yes (with moisture barrier)

Wood Subfloor: Yes

Moisture Tolerance: Moderate (limited water exposure)

Levelness Required: High (needs level surface)

Solid Hardwood

Concrete Slab: No (moisture issues)

Wood Subfloor: Yes

Moisture Tolerance: Low (no water exposure)

Levelness Required: High (needs level surface)

Porcelain Tile

Concrete Slab: Yes

Wood Subfloor: Yes (if structurally sound)

Moisture Tolerance: Excellent (waterproof)

Levelness Required: Very High (must be perfectly level)

Laminate

Concrete Slab: Yes (with moisture barrier)

Wood Subfloor: Yes

Moisture Tolerance: Low (moisture causes buckling)

Levelness Required: Moderate

The takeaway: Show your contractor your top 2-3 flooring choices BEFORE you commit. They’ll tell you which options are feasible without major additional work.

When Subfloor Prep Adds Cost and Time

Sometimes your dream flooring requires significant subfloor work:

Moisture Barrier Installation: $1-2/sq ft, adds 1-2 days
Needed when installing wood products over concrete

Leveling Compound: $2-4/sq ft, adds 2-3 days (plus drying time)
Needed when subfloor has dips, slopes, or unevenness

Subfloor Replacement: $3-6/sq ft, adds 3-7 days
Needed when subfloor has water damage, rot, or structural issues

Radiant Heat Installation: $10-15/sq ft, adds 5-10 days
Optional upgrade, but must be planned before flooring choice

These costs aren’t your contractor trying to upsell you—they’re real requirements for proper flooring installation. Choosing compatible flooring from the start avoids these surprise expenses.

Part 3: What Flooring Really Costs – Understanding Total Installed Pricing

The Sticker Shock Conversation

Homeowner: “The website says this luxury vinyl is $5 per square foot. We have 1,000 square feet, so that’s $5,000, right?”

Contractor: “The installed price will be closer to $9,000-$11,000.”

Homeowner: “What? Why?”

This conversation happens because homeowners see material cost but don’t understand total installed pricing.

Breaking Down Real Flooring Costs

Here’s what’s actually included in professional flooring installation:

1. Material Cost: $3-12/sq ft depending on quality

  • Entry-level LVP: $3-4/sq ft
  • Mid-range LVP or engineered hardwood: $5-7/sq ft
  • Premium hardwood or designer tile: $8-12/sq ft
  • Exotic hardwoods: $12-20/sq ft

2. Installation Labor: $2-8/sq ft depending on complexity

  • Simple LVP floating floor: $2-3/sq ft
  • Glue-down LVP or engineered hardwood: $4-5/sq ft
  • Hardwood nailing: $5-6/sq ft
  • Complex tile patterns: $6-8/sq ft

3. Subfloor Preparation: $0-4/sq ft if needed

  • Minor cleaning and prep: $0.50-1/sq ft
  • Moisture barrier: $1-2/sq ft
  • Leveling compound: $2-4/sq ft
  • Major subfloor repair: varies widely

4. Transitions and Trim: $100-500 total

  • Doorway transitions: $25-50 each
  • Stair nosing: $40-80 per step
  • Reducer strips between rooms: $30-60 each

5. Waste Factor: Add 10-15% to square footage

  • Cuts, errors, pattern matching, future repairs all require extra material
  • Never buy exactly the square footage you need

6. Removal and Disposal: $1-3/sq ft if replacing existing flooring

  • Labor to remove old flooring
  • Disposal fees for materials
  • Additional time added to project

Real-World Pricing Example

Project: 1,000 sq ft main floor, mid-range luxury vinyl plank

  • Material: $5/sq ft × 1,100 sq ft (with waste) = $5,500
  • Installation labor: $3.50/sq ft × 1,000 sq ft = $3,500
  • Subfloor prep (minor): $1/sq ft × 1,000 sq ft = $1,000
  • Transitions (6 doorways): $40 × 6 = $240
  • Old flooring removal: $2/sq ft × 1,000 sq ft = $2,000
  • Total installed cost: $12,240

That “$5/sq ft flooring” actually costs $12.24/sq ft installed when you account for everything.

This isn’t your contractor padding the bill—this is what professional flooring installation actually costs.

How to Budget Flooring Realistically

Use this framework to estimate total costs:

Entry-Level Renovation ($200-350K home value):

  • Budget $8-10/sq ft total installed cost
  • Prioritize: LVP, basic tile, laminate

Mid-Range Renovation ($350-550K home value):

  • Budget $10-14/sq ft total installed cost
  • Prioritize: Premium LVP, engineered hardwood, quality tile

High-End Renovation ($550K+ home value):

  • Budget $14-20/sq ft total installed cost
  • Prioritize: Real hardwood, natural stone, designer tile

Always add 15-20% contingency for subfloor surprises. Flooring projects almost always reveal hidden issues once existing floors are removed.

Part 4: How Your Flooring Choice Affects Every Other Trade

The Domino Effect You Don’t See

When you delay flooring decisions or choose flooring that arrives late, you’re not just affecting one trade—you’re creating a cascading delay across your entire renovation.

Here’s what can’t happen until flooring is installed:

Baseboard and Trim Installation

  • Trim carpenters measure and cut baseboards to sit flush on finished flooring
  • Quarter-round or shoe molding covers expansion gaps
  • Door casings may need adjustment based on final floor height
  • Delayed flooring = delayed trim = delayed painting

Final Paint Touch-Ups

  • Painters can’t complete final coats along floor lines until flooring is down
  • Baseboard painting happens after flooring installation
  • Touch-ups are needed after flooring installers finish
  • Delayed flooring = delayed final painting

Cabinet Toe Kick Installation

  • Kitchen and bathroom cabinets need toe kicks adjusted to final floor height
  • Appliances must sit level with finished flooring
  • Delayed flooring = delayed cabinet completion

Appliance Installation

  • Dishwashers, fridges, and ranges get positioned and leveled on finished flooring
  • Plumbers and electricians complete final connections after flooring
  • Delayed flooring = delayed appliance installation = delayed occupancy

Door Installation and Adjustment

  • Interior and exterior doors may need trimming for new floor height
  • Door swings must clear finished flooring
  • Delayed flooring = delayed door work

The Two-Week Flooring Delay Becomes a Five-Week Project Delay

Here’s how it compounds:

Week 1-2: Waiting for delayed flooring to arrive
Week 3: Flooring installation (3-5 days)
Week 4: Baseboards installed, painting completed (3-4 days)
Week 5: Cabinets finished, appliances installed, final walkthrough (4-5 days)

A 2-week material delay creates a 5-week project extension once you account for all dependent trades.

Your contractor can’t magically compress this timeline—each trade depends on the previous one being complete.

Part 5: Questions to Ask Your Contractor Before Choosing Flooring

The Pre-Decision Checklist

Before you commit to any flooring material, have clear answers to these questions:

1. “Does this flooring work with our existing subfloor, or will we need additional prep work?”

This is the #1 question that prevents budget surprises. Your contractor should:

  • Assess current subfloor conditions
  • Identify any moisture, levelness, or structural issues
  • Explain what prep work your chosen flooring requires
  • Provide cost and timeline for necessary prep

Red flag answer: “We’ll figure it out once we rip up the old flooring.”
Good answer: “I’ve assessed your subfloor. This material will work with minor leveling ($800, 2 days) or we can choose this alternative that needs zero prep.”

2. “What’s the realistic lead time for this material, and what’s our backup plan if it’s delayed?”

Supply chains still have disruptions. Your contractor should:

  • Confirm current inventory levels with suppliers
  • Verify lead times for your specific product and quantity
  • Identify 2-3 backup options with similar aesthetics and pricing
  • Build material arrival dates into the project schedule

Red flag answer: “The showroom said it’s usually in stock.”
Good answer: “I’ve confirmed with the supplier—this material has a 4-week lead time. We need to order by September 15th to stay on schedule. Here are two alternatives with 2-week lead times as backups.”

3. “When does flooring need to be installed in the project sequence, and what’s the latest we can finalize this decision without affecting the timeline?”

Understanding the critical path helps you prioritize. Your contractor should:

  • Explain how flooring fits into the overall timeline
  • Identify the decision deadline (not suggestion—actual deadline)
  • Show what trades get delayed if flooring is late

Red flag answer: “Whenever you’re ready is fine.”
Good answer: “Flooring installs in Week 9. Materials need 5 weeks lead time, so we need your decision by Week 4. Any later pushes your move-in date back by at least 3 weeks.”

4. “What’s the total installed cost, including subfloor prep, transitions, and waste?”

Get complete numbers upfront. Your contractor should provide:

  • Itemized estimate including all components
  • Explanation of waste factor (why you’re buying more than your square footage)
  • Breakdown of prep work costs
  • Total installed price per square foot

Red flag answer: “Material is $5/sq ft, we’ll figure out the rest later.”
Good answer: “Material is $5/sq ft, installation is $3.50/sq ft, prep is $1/sq ft, transitions are $240, and we’re adding 10% for waste. Total installed cost is $10,740 for your 1,000 sq ft.”

5. “How does this flooring choice compare to alternatives in terms of durability, maintenance, and long-term value?”

Your contractor has seen how different materials perform. They should:

  • Compare your top choices honestly (pros and cons of each)
  • Explain maintenance requirements
  • Share real-world performance based on past projects
  • Recommend materials based on your lifestyle (pets, kids, traffic)

Red flag answer: “They’re all pretty similar, just pick what you like.”
Good answer: “LVP is waterproof and nearly indestructible—great with your two dogs. Hardwood looks beautiful but will show scratches from pet nails and needs refinishing in 7-10 years. Based on your lifestyle, I’d recommend LVP in main areas and save hardwood for the bedrooms.”

Visit Our Showroom

Part 6: Common Flooring Mistakes Homeowners Make (And How to Avoid Them)

Mistake #1: Choosing Flooring Based Only on Aesthetics

The scenario: You see gorgeous wide-plank hardwood on Instagram. It’s perfect for your design vision. You order it immediately.

What goes wrong: You have two large dogs, three kids under 10, and a kitchen that sees daily cooking. The hardwood shows scratches within months, water damage from spills, and constant wear in high-traffic areas.

How to avoid it: Choose flooring based on lifestyle first, aesthetics second.

Ask yourself:

  • Do we have pets? (Prioritize scratch-resistant materials)
  • Do we have young children? (Prioritize waterproof, stain-resistant options)
  • Do we cook frequently? (Kitchen needs waterproof flooring)
  • Are we hard on our belongings or careful? (Be honest)

Match materials to reality:

  • High-wear households: LVP, porcelain tile, engineered hardwood
  • Low-wear households: Solid hardwood, natural stone, premium laminate
  • Pet owners: Scratch-resistant LVP, harder hardwoods (oak, maple), avoid soft woods (pine, fir)

Mistake #2: Assuming “In Stock” Means “Available Tomorrow”

The scenario: You visit a showroom, love a product, and they say it’s “in stock.” You assume it’ll be at your house in days.

What goes wrong: “In stock” means in stock at the manufacturer’s warehouse—possibly in another province or country. Shipping, receiving, and delivery add 2-4 weeks even for “available” products.

How to avoid it: Ask specific questions about availability.

Ask the supplier:

  • “Is this in stock at your local warehouse or the manufacturer’s?”
  • “What’s the lead time from order to delivery at my job site?”
  • “What’s the current inventory—do you have enough for 1,200 sq ft plus 15% waste?”
  • “What happens if this product goes out of stock between now and when I’m ready to order?”

Get delivery confirmation in writing before your contractor schedules installation.

Mistake #3: Choosing Flooring Before Knowing What Subfloor Work Is Required

The scenario: You commit to beautiful tile without knowing your subfloor needs $2,500 in leveling work.

What goes wrong: Your budget is now blown, or you have to choose different (cheaper) flooring to stay within budget.

How to avoid it: Have your contractor assess subfloors before you finalize flooring choices.

Request a subfloor inspection that includes:

  • Current subfloor type and condition
  • Any moisture, levelness, or structural issues
  • What prep work each of your top flooring choices requires
  • Cost and timeline for necessary prep

Only commit to flooring after you know total installed costs including prep.

Mistake #4: Underestimating How Long Flooring Decisions Take

The scenario: You think you’ll “just pick something quickly” and end up spending 6 weeks visiting showrooms, debating samples, and changing your mind.

What goes wrong: Your renovation stalls while you deliberate. Your contractor’s schedule gets disrupted. You end up rushing a decision and regretting it.

How to avoid it: Start the flooring decision process early and set firm deadlines.

Use this decision timeline:

  • Week 1: Visit 3-4 showrooms, gather samples, research materials
  • Week 2: Review samples in your actual home lighting, narrow to top 3 options
  • Week 3: Get contractor feedback on feasibility and costs, finalize decision
  • Week 4: Order materials

Don’t let yourself extend this process indefinitely. Perfectionism in flooring choices delays entire projects.

Mistake #5: Ignoring Maintenance Requirements

The scenario: You install beautiful natural hardwood throughout your home. Then you discover it needs special cleaning products, can’t handle water, and requires refinishing every 7-10 years at $3-5/sq ft.

What goes wrong: You love how it looks but hate maintaining it. You resent the ongoing costs and effort.

How to avoid it: Understand maintenance before committing.

Ask about:

  • Cleaning requirements: What products can/can’t be used?
  • Water tolerance: What happens if liquids sit on the surface?
  • Scratch resistance: Will furniture, pets, or dropped items damage it?
  • Long-term maintenance: Does it need refinishing, resealing, or replacement?
  • Repair options: If damaged, can it be repaired or must entire sections be replaced?

Be honest about your maintenance tolerance. Low-maintenance LVP might serve you better than high-maintenance hardwood, even if hardwood is your aesthetic preference.


Part 7: Budget-Friendly vs. Premium Options – When Each Makes Sense

The Value Equation: Cost Per Year, Not Just Upfront Cost

Homeowners often choose flooring based on upfront cost: “This laminate is $2/sq ft, this LVP is $5/sq ft—let’s save $3,000 and go with laminate.”

But smart homeowners evaluate cost-per-year:

Budget Laminate Example:

  • Upfront cost: $2/sq ft × 1,000 sq ft = $2,000
  • Lifespan in high-traffic home: 5-7 years
  • Cost per year: $285-400/year
  • Replacement required: Every 5-7 years

Premium LVP Example:

  • Upfront cost: $5/sq ft × 1,000 sq ft = $5,000
  • Lifespan in high-traffic home: 15-20 years
  • Cost per year: $250-333/year
  • Replacement required: Rarely

The “expensive” flooring actually costs less per year—and that doesn’t include the hassle of replacing flooring twice during your time in the home.

When Budget Options Make Sense

Budget flooring isn’t always wrong. It makes sense when:

You’re planning to move in 3-5 years:
If you’re not staying long-term, budget flooring gets you through to sale time without major investment.

You’re doing a rental property:
Rental flooring needs to be durable but doesn’t need to be premium. Mid-range LVP ($4-5/sq ft) is the sweet spot.

The space sees minimal traffic:
Guest bedrooms, formal dining rooms, or basement bonus rooms don’t need premium materials.

You’re staging for sale:
You need flooring to look good for showings, not last 20 years. Budget-friendly options work fine.

Budget-Friendly Options Worth Considering:

  • Entry-level luxury vinyl plank (LVP): $3-4/sq ft
  • Quality laminate in low-traffic areas: $2-3/sq ft
  • Basic porcelain tile: $3-5/sq ft
  • Engineered hardwood (builder grade): $4-5/sq ft

When Premium Options Are Worth the Investment

Premium flooring makes sense when:

This is your forever home:
If you’re staying 15-20+ years, invest in materials that last without replacement.

You have high traffic or challenging conditions:
Families with kids and pets benefit from indestructible premium LVP or hardwood.

Resale value matters:
Premium flooring appeals to buyers and can increase home value $10,000-$30,000.

You want specific aesthetics only premium materials deliver:
Some looks (real hardwood character, natural stone veining) can’t be replicated with budget options.

Premium Options Worth Considering:

  • Premium luxury vinyl plank (LVP): $5-7/sq ft
  • Engineered or solid hardwood: $7-12/sq ft
  • Natural stone or designer tile: $8-15/sq ft
  • Exotic hardwoods: $12-20/sq ft

The Middle Ground: Where Most Homeowners Should Focus

For most renovations, mid-range flooring delivers the best value:

Mid-Range Luxury Vinyl Plank ($4-6/sq ft):

  • Looks like hardwood, waterproof, scratch-resistant
  • Lasts 15-20 years in residential settings
  • Appeals to future buyers if you sell
  • Low maintenance, high durability

Mid-Range Engineered Hardwood ($6-8/sq ft):

  • Real wood veneer over plywood core
  • More stable than solid hardwood (better for temperature changes)
  • Can be refinished 1-2 times
  • Adds resale value

Mid-Range Porcelain Tile ($5-8/sq ft):

  • Waterproof, nearly indestructible
  • Modern designs look like natural stone or wood
  • Perfect for kitchens, bathrooms, entryways
  • Lasts 20+ years

This range gives you quality materials that last without over-investing in your home’s flooring.

Part 8: Flooring and Lifestyle – Matching Materials to How You Live

The Honest Assessment: How Do You Actually Live?

Before choosing flooring, answer these questions honestly (not aspirationally):

Do you:

  • Cook daily and deal with spills/splashes?
  • Have kids who drop things, spill drinks, track in dirt?
  • Own pets who shed, scratch floors, or have accidents?
  • Entertain frequently with lots of foot traffic?
  • Prefer low-maintenance homes or don’t mind upkeep?
  • Live in a region with harsh winters (salt, moisture, snow)?

Your answers determine which materials will serve you well vs. create frustration.

Flooring Recommendations by Lifestyle

Families with Young Children (Under 12):

Best choices:

  • Luxury vinyl plank (waterproof, scratch-resistant, forgiving)
  • Porcelain tile in kitchens, bathrooms, entryways
  • Engineered hardwood (more durable than solid hardwood)

Avoid:

  • Solid hardwood (dents, scratches, water-sensitive)
  • Light-colored carpet (stains instantly)
  • Natural stone (porous, stains easily)

Why: Kids drop things, spill constantly, and are hard on floors. You need materials that tolerate abuse and clean easily.


Pet Owners (Dogs and Cats):

Best choices:

  • Premium scratch-resistant LVP
  • Harder hardwoods if you prefer real wood (oak, maple, hickory—avoid pine, fir, cherry)
  • Porcelain tile in high-traffic areas

Avoid:

  • Soft hardwoods that scratch easily
  • Laminate (buckles if pets have accidents)
  • Carpet (absorbs odors, stains, and pet hair)

Why: Pet nails scratch soft surfaces. Accidents happen. You need waterproof, scratch-resistant materials that clean easily and don’t trap odors.


Empty Nesters/Retirees:

Best choices:

  • Solid hardwood for classic beauty and long-term value
  • Natural stone for elegance
  • Premium LVP if low-maintenance is priority

Avoid:

  • High-gloss finishes that show every speck (you’ll spend your time cleaning)
  • Extremely trendy materials that feel dated quickly

Why: You’re likely staying in your home long-term, maintaining it carefully, and want materials that age beautifully with minimal wear.


First-Time Homebuyers (Planning to Move in 5-7 Years):

Best choices:

  • Mid-range LVP (durable, affordable, appeals to future buyers)
  • Neutral engineered hardwood
  • Classic tile in bathrooms and kitchen

Avoid:

  • Exotic hardwoods (over-investment for short ownership)
  • Very trendy materials (may feel dated by time you sell)
  • Carpet in main living areas (reduces resale appeal)

Why: You need flooring that lasts through your ownership, looks good for resale, but doesn’t over-improve beyond your home’s value.


High-Traffic Households (Large Families, Frequent Entertainers):

Best choices:

  • Commercial-grade luxury vinyl plank
  • Porcelain tile rated for heavy traffic
  • Harder engineered or solid hardwoods

Avoid:

  • Laminate (shows wear quickly in high-traffic areas)
  • Soft hardwoods
  • Light-colored materials that show every footprint

Why: Your floors endure constant use. You need materials designed for commercial durability that still look residential.


Low-Maintenance Preferences:

Best choices:

  • Luxury vinyl plank (wipe and go, no special products needed)
  • Porcelain tile (nearly indestructible, minimal maintenance)
  • Sealed engineered hardwood

Avoid:

  • Solid hardwood requiring periodic refinishing
  • Natural stone needing regular sealing
  • Grout-heavy tile (grout maintenance is ongoing)

Why: You want flooring that looks great with minimal effort and no special care requirements.


Part 9: What “In Stock” Really Means vs. Special Order

Decoding Supplier Language

When you visit flooring showrooms, you’ll hear terms like “in stock,” “quick ship,” “special order,” and “custom.” Here’s what they actually mean:

“In Stock”

  • Material is physically in the supplier’s local warehouse
  • Typical availability: 3-7 days
  • Reality check: Confirm they have enough for your square footage plus waste

“Quick Ship”

  • Material is in the manufacturer’s regional warehouse
  • Typical availability: 1-3 weeks
  • Reality check: “Quick” is relative—still plan for 2+ weeks

“Special Order”

  • Material must be ordered from manufacturer, possibly overseas
  • Typical availability: 4-8 weeks
  • Reality check: Add buffer time for shipping delays, customs (if imported)

“Custom”

  • Material is made to order based on your specifications
  • Typical availability: 8-16 weeks
  • Reality check: These timelines are estimates, not guarantees

Questions to Ask About Availability

Don’t just ask “Is this in stock?” Ask:

  1. “Where physically is this material right now?”
    • In your warehouse, manufacturer’s warehouse, or needs to be manufactured?
  2. “How long from order to delivery at my job site?”
    • Get a specific timeline in days/weeks
  3. “Do you currently have enough inventory for 1,200 sq ft plus 15% waste?”
    • Confirm they can fulfill your entire order
  4. “What’s your contingency plan if this material goes out of stock or gets delayed?”
    • Understand backup options before committing
  5. “Can I lock in this material with a deposit while I finalize my decision?”
    • Some suppliers allow reservations to secure inventory

The Material Delay Reality

Even “in stock” materials can experience delays:

  • Shipping disruptions (weather, logistics issues)
  • Inventory errors (supplier thought they had it, they don’t)
  • Quality issues (damaged in shipping, manufacturing defects)
  • Order errors (wrong color, wrong quantity delivered)

Always build 1-2 week buffer into your timeline for material arrival. Your contractor schedules installation based on material delivery—late materials delay everything.

Part 10: Working with Your Contractor – Communication That Keeps Projects on Track

Setting Clear Expectations from Day One

The best contractor-homeowner relationships start with clear communication about flooring timelines.

At your kickoff meeting, your contractor should:

  • Explain when flooring decisions must be finalized
  • Walk you through the decision process timeline
  • Identify what happens if decisions are delayed
  • Provide a recommended decision framework

You should:

  • Acknowledge the timeline and commit to meeting deadlines
  • Ask questions immediately if the timeline feels unrealistic
  • Communicate early if you’re struggling with decisions
  • Be honest about your decision-making style (quick vs. deliberate)

Red Flags Your Contractor Isn’t Managing Flooring Properly

Watch for these warning signs:

Red Flag #1: “Pick your flooring whenever you’re ready, no rush.”

  • Translation: Your contractor doesn’t understand how flooring affects timelines
  • Reality: There absolutely is a deadline, and missing it delays your entire project

Red Flag #2: “We’ll deal with the subfloor once we rip up the old flooring.”

  • Translation: Your contractor isn’t planning ahead for potential issues
  • Reality: Subfloor surprises should be anticipated and budgeted for upfront

Red Flag #3: “All flooring costs about the same installed.”

  • Translation: Your contractor isn’t providing accurate estimates
  • Reality: Installed costs vary dramatically by material type and subfloor condition

Red Flag #4: “The flooring installer handles everything, I just coordinate.”

  • Translation: Your contractor isn’t taking ownership of the flooring phase
  • Reality: Good contractors manage flooring as part of the overall project timeline

Green Flags Your Contractor Knows What They’re Doing

Look for these positive signs:

Green Flag #1: “Let’s assess your subfloor before you choose flooring so we know what prep work is needed.”

  • Shows proactive planning and cost transparency

Green Flag #2: “Here’s your flooring decision deadline. After this date, we’ll need to push your completion timeline back by X weeks.”

  • Shows clear timeline management and honest communication

Green Flag #3: “I’ve worked with these materials before—here’s how they perform in real homes.”

  • Shows experience-based recommendations, not just spec sheet reading

Green Flag #4: “Let me show you the full installed cost breakdown so you understand where your money is going.”

  • Shows transparency and helps you make informed decisions

How to Communicate Effectively About Flooring

When you’re struggling with decisions:

  • Tell your contractor early: “I’m having trouble deciding between these two options. Can we review pros/cons?”
  • Don’t go silent and miss deadlines—that’s when projects derail

When you want to change your mind:

  • Understand the impact first: “If I switch to different flooring now, how does that affect timeline and cost?”
  • Be prepared for consequences: Later changes mean delays and potentially lost deposits

When materials are delayed:

  • Ask your contractor: “What’s our backup plan? Do we wait or choose alternative materials?”
  • Understand how delays cascade through the remaining schedule

When you have budget concerns:

  • Be upfront: “The installed cost is higher than expected. What are comparable alternatives within my budget?”
  • Don’t wait until materials are ordered to address budget issues

Part 11: The Decision Framework – A Step-by-Step Process

Week 1-2: Research and Sample Gathering

Your goals:

  • Visit 3-4 flooring suppliers/showrooms
  • Gather samples of materials that appeal to you
  • Get preliminary pricing (material cost only at this stage)
  • Take photos of displays you like

What to bring to showrooms:

  • Photos of your space
  • Room dimensions
  • Information about your subfloor (if you know it)
  • Your lifestyle details (pets, kids, traffic level)
  • Your budget range

Questions to ask at showrooms:

  • “What’s the lead time for this material?”
  • “Is this in stock or special order?”
  • “What’s the warranty on this product?”
  • “How does this perform with pets/kids/moisture?”
  • “What maintenance does this require?”

Week 2-3: Home Testing and Narrowing

Your goals:

  • Review samples in your actual home lighting
  • Narrow options to your top 2-3 choices
  • Show samples to your contractor for feasibility feedback
  • Get complete installed pricing for top choices

Testing samples at home:

  • Place samples in the actual rooms where they’ll be installed
  • View them at different times of day (morning light vs. evening)
  • Put samples next to existing finishes (cabinets, counters, paint)
  • Walk on samples barefoot—how do they feel?
  • If you have pets, test scratch resistance (gently)

Getting contractor feedback:

  • “Do these materials work with my subfloor?”
  • “What prep work does each option require?”
  • “What’s the total installed cost for each?”
  • “Based on my lifestyle, which would you recommend?”
  • “Any concerns about durability or maintenance?”

Week 3-4: Final Decision and Ordering

Your goals:

  • Make final decision based on aesthetics, cost, and contractor feedback
  • Confirm material availability and lead time
  • Place order and pay deposit
  • Get delivery timeline confirmed in writing

Before you commit:

  • Review total installed cost one final time
  • Confirm lead time and delivery date
  • Understand return/exchange policy
  • Ask about what happens if materials are damaged in shipping
  • Get written confirmation of order details

After ordering:

  • Share delivery timeline with your contractor
  • Confirm installation is scheduled in project timeline
  • Set reminder to follow up 1 week before expected delivery
  • Keep all order documentation organized

Decision-Making Shortcuts

If you’re overwhelmed by choices:

  • Ask your contractor: “What do you install most often in homes like mine?”
  • Research what builders use in new homes in your price range
  • Visit recently sold homes in your neighborhood to see what’s current

If you can’t decide between two options:

  • Choose the more durable one (it’ll serve you better long-term)
  • Choose the one your contractor recommends (they know how materials perform)
  • Choose the one with better warranty coverage

If your budget is tight:

  • Prioritize main living areas (living room, kitchen, main hallway)
  • Use budget options in bedrooms and low-traffic spaces
  • Consider phasing—do main floor now, upstairs later

Part 12: Protecting Yourself – Contracts, Warranties, and Documentation

What Should Be in Your Flooring Contract

Whether your contractor handles flooring or you hire a separate flooring installer, get these details in writing:

Material Specifications:

  • Exact product name, model number, color/finish
  • Quantity (square footage plus waste percentage)
  • Material cost per square foot
  • Total material cost

Installation Details:

  • Installation method (floating, glue-down, nail-down, etc.)
  • Labor cost per square foot
  • Total labor cost
  • Estimated installation timeline (number of days)

Subfloor Preparation:

  • Specific prep work included (cleaning, minor leveling, etc.)
  • Additional prep work that may be needed (and cost per sq ft)
  • How subfloor issues will be communicated and priced

Scope of Work:

  • Removal and disposal of existing flooring (if applicable)
  • Installation of underlayment or moisture barriers
  • Transition strips and thresholds
  • Baseboard removal and reinstallation (or who handles this)

Timeline and Delays:

  • Material delivery date (or estimated range)
  • Installation start date (dependent on material arrival)
  • What happens if materials are delayed
  • How delays affect overall project timeline

Payment Terms:

  • Deposit amount and when it’s due
  • Payment schedule (typically deposit, payment at delivery, final payment at completion)
  • What payment covers (materials, labor, prep, disposal)

Warranty Information:

  • Manufacturer’s warranty on materials (length, what’s covered)
  • Installer’s warranty on labor (length, what’s covered)
  • How to file warranty claims if issues arise

Understanding Flooring Warranties

Manufacturer Material Warranties typically cover:

  • Structural defects (delamination, warping)
  • Wear-through of finish (for certain thicknesses/ratings)
  • Staining resistance (for specific products)
  • Duration: 10-50 years depending on product (but read the fine print)

What manufacturer warranties DON’T cover:

  • Installation errors (that’s the installer’s responsibility)
  • Damage from improper maintenance
  • Scratches, dents, or impacts
  • Color variation between production lots
  • Normal wear and tear

Installer Labor Warranties typically cover:

  • Installation defects (poor adhesion, improper transitions)
  • Workmanship issues (uneven installation, gaps)
  • Duration: 1-5 years depending on installer

What installer warranties DON’T cover:

  • Material defects (manufacturer’s responsibility)
  • Damage after installation is complete
  • Issues caused by subfloor problems not disclosed upfront

Documentation to Keep

Before installation:

  • Written quote/contract with all specifications
  • Material samples with product information
  • Photos of subfloor condition
  • Any communication about prep work needed

During installation:

  • Photos of work in progress
  • Notes about any issues discovered
  • Confirmation of materials delivered (check for damage)

After installation:

  • Final walkthrough checklist
  • Warranty documentation (both manufacturer and installer)
  • Maintenance instructions
  • Leftover materials for future repairs
  • Final invoice showing payment in full

Red Flags in Contracts

Avoid contracts that:

  • Don’t specify exact material (just “luxury vinyl” without brand/model)
  • Have vague timelines (“sometime in October”)
  • Don’t include warranty information
  • Require full payment before work begins
  • Don’t explain what happens if materials are delayed or damaged
  • Include phrases like “may require additional charges” without specifics

Request clarification immediately if you see:

  • Unclear payment terms
  • Missing material specifications
  • No mention of subfloor prep
  • Installation timeline that seems unrealistic
  • Warranty terms that aren’t explained

Conclusion: Empowering Yourself for Better Flooring Decisions

Flooring is one of the most visible, most-used elements in your home. It affects your renovation timeline, your budget, your daily life, and your home’s resale value. Making informed flooring decisions—early in your renovation process—sets you up for success.

The Key Takeaways

1. Start Early Flooring decisions need to happen at the beginning of your renovation, not in the middle. Material lead times, subfloor prep, and installation sequencing all require advance planning.

2. Assess Your Subfloor First Don’t fall in love with flooring materials before your contractor assesses compatibility. Subfloor conditions dictate which materials are feasible and what prep work you’ll need.

3. Understand Total Installed Costs Material cost is only part of the equation. Installation labor, subfloor prep, transitions, and waste all affect your final investment. Get complete pricing before committing.

4. Match Materials to Lifestyle Beautiful flooring that doesn’t match how you live creates frustration. Choose materials based on your real-world needs (pets, kids, traffic) first, aesthetics second.

5. Respect Lead Times “In stock” doesn’t always mean “available tomorrow.” Build realistic timelines that account for material delivery, and always have backup options if your first choice gets delayed.

6. Communicate with Your Contractor Clear, early communication about flooring prevents delays and surprises. Ask questions, share concerns, and meet decision deadlines. Your contractor can’t manage what they don’t know about.

7. Document Everything Get specifications, warranties, and timelines in writing. Keep photos, samples, and invoices. Documentation protects you if issues arise.

Your Next Steps

If you’re planning a renovation:

  1. Schedule a subfloor assessment with your contractor before browsing flooring options
  2. Create a flooring decision timeline based on your overall project schedule
  3. Visit showrooms early to understand material options, pricing, and lead times
  4. Test samples in your home before committing
  5. Get complete installed pricing for your top 2-3 choices
  6. Make your decision by the deadline your contractor provides
  7. Document everything from order to installation completion

How Club Ceramic Cambridge Can Help

At Club Ceramic Cambridge, we understand that flooring decisions feel overwhelming. We work with homeowners and contractors to:

  • Assess subfloor conditions and recommend compatible materials
  • Provide realistic timelines for material delivery and installation
  • Offer complete installed pricing (no hidden costs or surprises)
  • Help match flooring to your lifestyle, budget, and design vision
  • Maintain inventory of popular materials to minimize lead times
  • Support contractors with reliable scheduling and quality installation

Whether you’re renovating your forever home or preparing a property for sale, we’re here to help you make flooring decisions that serve you well for years to come.

Ready to start your flooring journey? Visit us at Club Ceramic Cambridge or contact us to discuss your renovation project.


About the Author

Hannad Hadid is the owner of Club Ceramic Cambridge, a flooring specialist serving homeowners, contractors, and real estate professionals throughout the Cambridge and Kitchener-Waterloo region. With years of experience helping clients navigate flooring decisions, Hannad understands the intersection of design, durability, budget, and lifestyle that makes flooring choices successful.

CUSTOMER REVIEWS

Adam Peerson profile pictureAdam Peerson
19:59 24 Oct 25
Great customer service and wide selection on luxury vinyl flooring and tiles, definitely will recommend and come back for all my future purchases.
marcel hadid profile picturemarcel hadid
23:56 22 Oct 25
Great tile shop! Has a huge variety of tiles to pick from. The owner was great, and gave a lot of guidance along the way.
Abbas Ali profile pictureAbbas Ali
18:26 08 Oct 25
Very happy with club ceramic in Cambridge the kitchen backsplash tiles were installed beautifully
Ahmad Raza profile pictureAhmad Raza
18:41 30 Sep 25
They Add elegance to my bathroom and the installation service was quick smooth and So Professional
namra shah profile picturenamra shah
23:32 05 Sep 25
Best flooring store in Cambridge
Darren Brogreen profile pictureDarren Brogreen
12:52 31 Aug 25
Hadid and Antonio made the purchase and process flawless! Best price and great selection! Devroe and his crew were great on the install! Could not be happier with them all!
John Wang profile pictureJohn Wang
01:18 14 Aug 25
We were looking for ceramic tiles from a few places, and saw a specific type that worked out very well for the bath. Everyone in the store was helpful, and the pricing is very competitive. Will definitely recommend.
Photo from customer reviewPhoto from customer review
Herry Đặng profile pictureHerry Đặng
18:03 21 Jul 25
Good service and price. U will be surprised. Come and experience it.
Oreoluwa O. Olawunmi profile pictureOreoluwa O. Olawunmi
19:00 15 Jul 25
Doing some renovations for the summer and they were really helpful with suggestions on the best items for my reno project.

Quality products with amazing and super helpful staff, I’ll definitely recommend!
Mark Town profile pictureMark Town
17:26 10 Jul 25
We were impressed with the tile selection and found exactly what we were looking for. Ghadi laid out various tiles on their showroom floor to help with our selection. Our order came in sooner than we expected, which was very appreciated and helped allay some of our pre-renovation anxiety.

Finishes & Styles

We carry hardwood flooring in every finish and style imaginable:

  • Prefinished Hardwood: Factory-finished with durable coatings, ready to walk on immediately
  • Unfinished Hardwood: Allows for custom staining and on-site finishing
  • Wire-Brushed & Textured: Enhanced grain patterns with rustic character
  • Smooth & Contemporary: Clean, modern aesthetic for contemporary homes
  • Hand-Scraped: Old-world charm with authentic distressed appearance
  • Wide Plank: Modern, spacious look with planks up to 10″ wide

VISIT US TODAY

HARDWOOD BRANDS WE CARRY

Hardwood Flooring Solutions

KW Region’s diverse architectural landscape requires flooring solutions that work with various home styles and ages. Our hardwood flooring expertise extends to:

Historic Homes

Authentic solid hardwood and period-appropriate finishes that honour the character of the area’s heritage properties while meeting modern durability standards.

New Construction

Work with us from the planning stages to select hardwood flooring that fits your budget and timeline. We supply builders and contractors throughout the region.

Condo & Townhome

Engineered hardwood solutions that meet acoustic requirements, install over concrete, and provide the elegance of real wood in multi-unit dwellings.

Basement Renovations

Moisture-resistant engineered hardwood and luxury vinyl options perfect for the region’s below-grade spaces, offering beauty without the worry.

Kitchen Remodels

Durable hardwood species and protective finishes that withstand the demands of high-traffic kitchen environments while maintaining their beauty.

Commercial Projects

High-traffic commercial-grade hardwood and luxury vinyl solutions for businesses, offices, restaurants, and retail spaces.

Southwestern Ontario’s Climate

Southwestern Ontario experiences significant seasonal temperature and humidity variations. We help customers select hardwood flooring products and installation methods that account for Ontario’s climate challenges.

Engineered hardwood, in particular, offers superior dimensional stability for our region, while proper acclimation and professional installation ensure your floors perform beautifully for decades.