Pricing guide · 2026

How do you price flooring installation?

Flooring is priced per square foot, and the cleanest bids separate labor from material. Labor typically runs $2–$8 per sq ft by material — floating LVP and laminate at the low end, glue- and nail-down hardwood in the middle, tile at the top for the layout and setting work — with subfloor prep, tear-out, and stairs added on top.

Conservative 2026 labor ranges · Material and labor prices vary by market · Always quote prep separately

Flooring labor by material

Typical installed labor per square foot — material is separate. These assume a sound, flat subfloor; prep, tear-out, and stairs add on top.

MaterialLabor / sq ftInstall methodNotes
LVP / vinyl plank$2–$4Floating clickNeeds a flat subfloor; fast
Laminate$2–$4Floating clickSimilar to LVP
Carpet$1–$3Stretch-in / padOften priced per sq yd
Hardwood$4–$8Nail / glue downSolid vs engineered; site finish higher
Tile$5–$12+Thinset + groutLayout, cutting, waterproofing
Subfloor prep / tear-out+$1–$4 / sq ftAdd-onLeveling, repair, haul-off

Ranges are conservative 2026 labor ballparks; material is separate and varies widely. Bid from your own crew cost and the subfloor you actually find. See Claver for flooring contractors.

The first thing a flooring estimator learns the hard way is that the floor you can see isn't the job — the subfloor is. You can nail the per-foot labor rate and still lose the job to a slab that needs leveling or a soft spot nobody mentioned. The way to bid flooring well is to price labor and material separately, then price the prep honestly once you've actually looked underneath.

Why you split labor from material

Quoting one blended per-foot number ("$9 a foot installed") feels simple but works against you. Separate the two:

  • It keeps your labor rate stable. If the customer upgrades from a builder-grade plank to a premium one, the material line moves and your labor doesn't have to. You're paid for the work regardless of which product they pick.
  • It lets the customer shop within a budget. Give them a labor number, then show material options at cost-plus, or let them supply their own. Either way the conversation is clean.
  • It exposes the real cost drivers. A blended number hides whether the job is expensive because of the floor or because of the prep. Separating them makes the bid defensible.

The common structure: labor per square foot by material, material at cost plus a markup (or customer-supplied), and prep, tear-out, and extras as their own lines.

Labor by material

Install method drives the labor rate far more than the product's price tag:

  • Floating LVP and laminate ($2–$4/sq ft labor) are the fastest — planks click together over an underlayment with no glue or nails. The catch is flatness: floating floors telegraph every dip and bump, so subfloor prep is the variable, not the install itself.
  • Carpet ($1–$3/sq ft, often priced per square yard) is quick to lay but needs proper pad, tack strip, and stretching so it doesn't ripple. Stairs and seams are the labor.
  • Hardwood ($4–$8/sq ft labor) is nailed or glued down. Engineered is generally faster than solid; site-finished (sand and finish in place) adds significant labor and dust control over pre-finished. Acclimation time matters and is part of the schedule.
  • Tile ($5–$12+/sq ft labor) is the most skilled and slowest. You're doing layout, cutting around every obstacle, setting in thinset to a flat, lippage-free plane, then grouting and sealing. Large-format tile, mosaics, and wet areas needing waterproofing all push it higher. The material is the cheap part; the craft is what they're paying for.

Subfloor prep and tear-out — the make-or-break lines

This is where flooring bids go wrong, so price it deliberately:

  • Subfloor prep. Self-leveling a wavy slab, fixing soft or squeaky spots, replacing damaged subfloor, or adding underlayment all take time and material. Floating floors in particular demand a flat base. If you can't see the subfloor at estimate time, say so and quote prep as an allowance or a separate visit — don't absorb the unknown.
  • Tear-out and disposal. Pulling up old carpet and pad is easy; demoing glued-down vinyl, old tile, or nailed hardwood is slow and dusty, and disposal carries tip fees. Glued tile over a slab can be brutal. Price removal as its own line, scaled to what's coming up.
  • Moisture. Slabs especially can need a moisture test or a barrier; skipping it is how a hardwood or glue-down floor fails later. Factor it where it applies.

Stairs, patterns, transitions, and the rest

The flat open room is the easy money. The add-ons are where the labor hides:

  • Stairs. Priced per step (treads and risers), and they're slow, detailed work — a flight can carry meaningful labor. Always count and price stairs separately.
  • Patterns. Diagonal, herringbone, chevron, and borders dramatically increase cutting time and material waste. Price the labor up and add waste to the material take-off; a herringbone floor is not a straight-lay floor with a fancier name.
  • Transitions and trim. Thresholds, reducers, T-molds, quarter-round, and shoe molding all add material and finish labor.
  • Furniture and appliances. Moving rooms of furniture, pulling and resetting toilets, or disconnecting appliances takes time — include it or exclude it explicitly.
  • Room size and cuts. Lots of small rooms, closets, and odd angles mean more cuts and waste than one big rectangle of the same total footage.

Building a flooring bid that holds

Measure carefully, look underneath, and itemize:

  • Measure the area and add a waste factor (more for patterns and cut-heavy layouts).
  • Quote labor per square foot for the chosen material and method.
  • Quote material at cost-plus, or note it's customer-supplied.
  • Add prep, tear-out, stairs, patterns, transitions, and furniture as separate lines.
  • Spell out the subfloor assumption in writing — what you're expecting to find, and what extra prep would cost if it's worse. That one line saves the hardest conversation on the job.

Flooring runs on accurate take-offs, clear quotes, and getting paid for change orders when the subfloor surprises you. Claver handles that business side — itemized estimates, material allowances, scheduling, change orders, and invoicing with card or Stripe payment — so you can stay on your knees laying floor instead of redoing the math at night.

Flooring installation cost — FAQ

How do you price flooring installation?
Flooring installation is priced per square foot, and the cleanest way to bid it is to separate labor from material. Labor typically runs $2 to $8 per square foot as of 2026 depending on the material: floating LVP and laminate are at the low end, glue-down and nail-down hardwood in the middle, and tile at the top because of the layout and setting work. Subfloor prep, tear-out of old flooring, stairs, and patterns are added on top.
How much does it cost to install LVP or laminate per square foot?
Floating luxury vinyl plank (LVP) and laminate are usually the cheapest to install, with labor commonly around $2 to $4 per square foot as of 2026, because the planks click together over an underlayment without glue or nails. The big variable is the subfloor: these floating floors need a flat, sound surface, so any leveling or repair is extra and should be quoted separately.
Why is tile installation more expensive than vinyl?
Tile labor is higher, often $5 to $12 or more per square foot, because it is slow, skilled work: layout, cutting around obstacles, setting in thinset, getting a flat lippage-free surface, then grouting and sealing. Larger-format tile, intricate patterns, and wet areas that need waterproofing all push the price up. The material is only part of it; the craft is what you are paying for.
Should I price flooring labor and materials separately?
Yes. Separating labor from material keeps your bid honest and lets the customer choose a product within a labor budget you have already set. It also protects your margin: if the customer upgrades to a pricier plank or tile, the material line moves but your labor rate does not have to. Many flooring pros quote labor per square foot and material at cost plus a markup, or let the customer supply material.
What adds the most to a flooring quote?
Beyond the material, the biggest additions are subfloor prep (leveling, repair, or a new underlayment), tear-out and disposal of the old flooring, stairs, and any diagonal or herringbone pattern that increases cutting and waste. Transitions, trim, and moving furniture or appliances also add. A flat, empty room over a clean subfloor is the low end; stairs and prep are where quotes climb.

Quote the floor, schedule the install, get paid

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