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Carpet Problems

Floor Detective® Claims and Conditions Guide

Summary

Carpet problems are common and may involve appearance changes, texture distortion, fiber behavior, backing or adhesion concerns, installation-related conditions, or issues influenced by maintenance and environmental exposure. Common conditions include buckling / wrinkling, delamination, and seam-related appearance concerns such as dark or light line at the seam, which may develop from a combination of material behavior, installation conditions, traffic, or maintenance practices. These carpet flooring problems may also include appearance-related effects such as pile reversal, cornrowing, or pattern-related variation, fiber conditions such as pilling or bearding, and cleaning-related conditions such as recurring spots and stains, filtration soil, or browning. In some cases, field and laboratory evaluation may be used to further assess backing integrity, fiber performance, or contamination-related conditions when field observations alone are not sufficient. Carpet systems consist of face fibers, primary and secondary backing, and often a cushion layer, and performance depends on how these components interact under use conditions. The same visible symptom may result from multiple mechanisms, so evaluation relies on pattern, distribution, severity, and service history rather than appearance alone.

What You Need to Know

• Carpet problems may involve texture change, fiber loss, wrinkling, seam issues, shading, or backing-related conditions.
• A single symptom may have more than one possible cause depending on installation, use, or maintenance conditions.
• Some conditions are primarily appearance-related, while others may affect durability or serviceability.
• Traffic, maintenance, moisture, installation method, and cushion support all influence carpet performance.
• Cleaning-related issues such as recurring spots, browning, or filtration soil often involve residue, moisture movement, or retained contamination rather than new staining.
• Accurate evaluation depends on pattern, severity, and distribution across the installation.

Primary Mechanisms

• Fiber wear, distortion, or displacement from traffic and use.
• Backing or adhesive-related separation affecting structural stability.
• Installation factors such as stretch, seam construction, or cushion interaction.
• Moisture or contamination influencing fiber or backing behavior.
• Residue retention or moisture migration affecting stain and soil visibility.

Movement and Installation Issues

Buckling / Wrinkling
Bubbles – Glue Down
Double Stick Bubbles
Installation Damage
Dark / Light Line at the Seam
Squeaking / Noise

Appearance and Manufacturing Conditions

Appearance Retention
Pile Reversal
Pile Reversal Within Roll
Cornrowing
Pattern Elongation
Pattern Walkout
Color Crocking
Dye Lot Differences
Bowing
Turned Carpet
Gauge Lines / Rows
High Rows and Low Rows

Fiber and Texture Conditions

Matting
Crushing
Pilling
Bearding
Twist Loss
Bare and Bald Spots
Roll Crush
Roll Core Crush / Pile Reversal
Cat Track Depression

Staining, Chemical, and Environmental Conditions

Acne Medication Color Loss
Color Loss / Bleach Spots
Dye Bleeding
Dye Spots
Fading
Fume Fading
Browning
Filtration Soil
Recurring Spots and Stains
Pet Urine Damage
Plasticizer Migration
Chemical Degradation
Machine Oil Contamination

Backing and Structural Conditions

Delamination
Dimensional Stability
Latex Bleed Through
Latex Encapsulation / Penetration
Bad Mend
J-Cut Rows

Carpet Tile Conditions

Carpet Tile Curling / Peaking
Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges

Biological and Contamination Conditions

Bugs / Insect Presence
Carpet Beetle Damage
Foreign Yarn

Technical and Reference Pages

Carpet Fiber Identification (Field and Laboratory Methods)
Carpet Fiber Degradation
Fiber Properties

Field Evaluation

• Document the type, location, and distribution of the condition.
• Determine whether the issue is isolated, traffic-related, or widespread.
• Evaluate installation factors including seam construction, stretch, and cushion performance.
• Inspect for moisture, contamination, or maintenance-related influence.
• Consider cleaning history and whether symptoms reappear after cleaning cycles.
• Compare affected and unaffected areas to identify pattern and severity.

Repair and Remediation Considerations

• Some appearance-related conditions may be improved through cleaning, grooming, steaming, or maintenance adjustment.
• Residue-related or recurring stain conditions may require additional cleaning, extraction, or drying cycles.
• Installation-related issues may be addressed through re-stretching or localized repair when feasible.
• Backing or structural separation may require partial or full replacement.
• Repair feasibility depends on condition type, severity, and underlying mechanism.

Interpretation

• Carpet problems often reflect interaction between material behavior, installation, use, and environmental conditions rather than a single isolated cause.
• Many conditions are interconnected and should be evaluated as part of a system rather than in isolation.
• Appearance changes do not necessarily indicate structural failure.
• Classification requires correlation of pattern, traffic exposure, installation conditions, maintenance history, and service environment.

Find a Flooring Inspector

• If you are experiencing a carpet problem and need professional evaluation, a qualified flooring inspector can document conditions, identify contributing factors, and provide an independent assessment.
• Floor Detective® maintains one of the most comprehensive directories of certified flooring inspectors across North America.
Find a Flooring Inspector near you

Key Terms

• Pile — The visible surface fibers of the carpet.
• Backing — Structural layer supporting the carpet fibers.
• Delamination — Separation of backing layers.
• Stretch-In Installation — Installation using tension and tack strip.
• Cushion — Padding layer beneath carpet influencing performance.

Related Pages

Carpet Problems
Carpet Fiber Identification (Field and Laboratory Methods)

Contributors

Independent peer review (non-authoring) — this page only
David Zack, Carey Mitchell, Fred Gamble, Jeff Bishop, Jim Hernandez, Alan Buttenhoff, Claudia Lezell, Bruce Gentry, Jim Burnett, Lew Migliore, Lee Phillips, Mike Harde, Will Stoner


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Last revised: 04/04/2026