Laminate has spent the last fifteen years in a strange position. The material has improved dramatically; modern wear layers and embossed surfaces are nearly indistinguishable from real hardwood at conversational distance, but its reputation has not kept up. Most homeowners still think of laminate as the budget choice, a downgrade from “real” wood. The data tells a different story.
Property managers, hoteliers, and rental investors across the country have shifted toward laminate flooring over the last decade for a simple reason: it outlasts hardwood in high-traffic environments at a fraction of the cost of installation.
The problem is rarely the material. The problem is the installation.
Why laminate fails when it fails
Laminate floors installed by our company are a floating installation over an underlayment that clicks together as the flooring expands and contracts with the room temperature. Laminate floors require considerable precision in the subfloor installation. No seams should be cut in the expansion space around the perimeter of rooms.
This means that the subfloor must not be out of flat by more than three-sixteenths of an inch over a 10-foot span. Allow all planks to acclimate to your home’s indoor environment for at least 48 hours before installing. If you ignore this step, your floor will show signs of distress within months, possibly as early as a year or so, including peaking joints, buckling edges, and hollow-feeling sections.
What a credible installation looks like
The crews at Vintage Stairways install laminate in single-family homes, rental properties, hotels, and small commercial spaces across Northern Virginia and the company’s process reflects the discipline the material actually requires.
Subfloor preparation comes first, not last. Existing flooring stays only when it passes a flatness and structural-soundness check. Cement substrates are evaluated for moisture content before underlayment is applied. Perimeter spacing is set deliberately along every wall, transition, and vertical fixture, not eyeballed at the end of a long day.
Many contractors avoid doing a walkthrough inspection at the end of a project, even though this is what matters most to homeowners. We pay attention to every detail, from seams and transition strips to cove bases, making sure everything is installed correctly. The finished floor you get is the one you’ll live with for years.
The case for working with a flooring-specific contractor
Why You Should Choose a Specialty Flooring Contractor for Your Next Floor!
General remodelers install laminate as one trade among many. Flooring specialists install it as their primary work, and the difference compounds across a project. Vintage Stairways operates in both the laminate and stairs markets simultaneously, which matters in homes where a laminate run meets a staircase or transitions between rooms with grain alignment that has to read as intentional.
Laminate flooring installation by a qualified contractor in Northern Virginia is crucial for a laminate floor to last as long as it is rated to. To the average homeowner, laminate flooring installation is timely and looks good when completed. To the homeowner who is an investor in his or her home, a good laminate flooring installation occurs when the floor performs equally well after the sale of the house and the installation of new flooring by the next homeowner as it does for the current homeowner.
For details on the company’s full process and product range, see Laminate Wood Flooring Installation.



