Local Floor Guide
ReCoat vs. Sanding for St. Louis, MO Hardwood Floors
How St. Louis homeowners can tell when a one-day ReCoat is enough and when hardwood floors need sanding or repair.
Published
St. Louis hardwood floors should not be forced into one answer. Some floors need sanding. Many do not. The useful question is where the damage lives: in the protective finish or down in the wood.
ReCoating is designed for the first case. ReCoat Revolution of St. Louis cleans, tests, preps, and recoats the existing finish without grinding away wood. That matters in homes around St. Louis, MO, Chesterfield, MO, Ballwin, MO, Clayton, MO, Kirkwood, MO, where floors may include older site-finished oak, engineered hardwood, remodel-era flooring, or prefinished boards with limited sandable thickness.
Sanding is more invasive. It removes the finish and a thin layer of wood, which can make sense for deep stains, uneven boards, failed adhesion, or a major color change. It is not the best first move when the floor simply looks dull, hazy, scuffed, or gray in traffic lanes.
During an estimate, the local team checks finish age, floor type, cleaner history, wax or polish residue, pet wear, water marks, sun exposure, and traffic lanes. Rooms that are good ReCoat candidates can be handled differently from rooms that need repair first.
The point is not to avoid sanding at all costs. The point is to preserve sound wood when a cleaner, faster ReCoat will solve the actual problem.
What ReCoat checks before recommending the work
- Whether the floor is solid hardwood, engineered hardwood, prefinished wood, or a non-wood lookalike
- Whether the wear sits in the finish or has reached the wood
- Whether cleaner, wax, polish, acrylic, oil soap, or silicone residue could affect adhesion
- Whether pet stains, water marks, active cupping, loose boards, failed adhesion, or traffic lanes that look gray or heavily worn need testing first
- Whether the homeowner wants a refresh, protection, repair, or a major color change
For St. Louis homeowners, the right answer is the one that preserves sound wood and solves the real floor problem in the room.
Sources used
Communities we serve in St. Louis
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Engineered and Prefinished Hardwood ReCoating in St. Louis, MO
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Seasonal Wear, Moisture, and Hardwood Floors in St. Louis, MO
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Local Questions
When is ReCoating better than sanding in St. Louis?
When does ReCoat Revolution of St. Louis recommend sanding instead?
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