Close

Hardwood Floor Problems

Floor Detective® Claims and Conditions Guide

Summary

Hardwood floor problems may involve moisture-related movement, finish performance, installation conditions, structural wood behavior, environmental exposure, milling irregularities, maintenance influences, or normal hygroscopic dimensional change. Because wood flooring continuously responds to surrounding environmental conditions, appearance and performance may change over time as temperature, relative humidity, sunlight exposure, subfloor conditions, and occupant use patterns interact with the flooring system. Common conditions include cupping, buckling, finish-related conditions such as peeling finish, and moisture-related conditions such as water damage. Proper evaluation typically requires analysis of environmental conditions, dimensional movement patterns, installation configuration, flooring construction, service history, and overall condition distribution rather than appearance alone.

What You Need to Know

• Hardwood flooring is hygroscopic and naturally responds to environmental moisture conditions
• Some seasonal movement, minor gapping, and dimensional change may be normal depending on species and environmental conditions
• Moisture imbalance is one of the most common contributors to hardwood flooring distress
• Similar visual conditions may develop from different underlying mechanisms
• Wood flooring performance may be influenced by HVAC operation, sunlight exposure, maintenance, installation methods, and subfloor conditions
• Engineered, solid, bamboo, and cork flooring systems may respond differently under similar environmental conditions
• Proper evaluation requires consideration of condition pattern, severity, location, construction type, and service history

Moisture and Environmental Conditions

Cupping
Crowning
Buckling Hardwood Flooring
Water Damage
Dry Cupping Engineered Hardwood
Greenhouse Effect
Vapor Retarder
Panelization
Wood Distortion
End Lift / Peaked Ends
Bamboo Cupping
Bamboo Gaps
Side Bonding

Gaps, Cracks, and Structural Wood Movement

Gaps Abnormal
Hardwood Floor Checking
Checks Engineered Hardwood
Checks vs Splits vs Shake Solid Hardwood
Splits Cracks
Shake Wind
Wood Shear Engineered Flooring
Splinters Slivers

Finish and Surface Appearance Conditions

Applicator Marks
Bubbles in Finish Hardwood
Crawling Hardwood Finish
Fish Eyes
Grain Raise Hardwood Finish Issue
Lap Marks
Peeling Finish
Picture Framing Halo Effect
Poly Beads
White Lines
Bleed Back Hardwood
Color Change
Enzymatic Stain
Contamination of Textured Grain

Manufacturing, Milling, and Construction Conditions

Core Void
Delamination Engineered Wood
Milling Issues
Kiln Drying
Grading
Bamboo Flooring Construction and Dimensional Behavior
Cork General Info
Janka Hardness Rating

Installation and Subfloor Conditions

Hardwood Floor Acclimation
Hollow Sounds
Vapor Retarder
Side Bonding
Noise Snap Crackle Pop

Use, Wear, and Mechanical Damage

Chair Protectors
Early Wear Pet Damage
Scratching Dents Impact Hardwood Flooring
Dishout
Maintenance

Biological and Pest Conditions

Powderpost Beetles Hardwood Flooring
Termite Damage Hardwood Flooring
Wood Decay Hardwood Flooring

Refinishing and Sanding Conditions

Sanding Marks Drum Edger and Chatter
Applicator Marks
Lap Marks
Grain Raise Hardwood Finish Issue
Picture Framing Halo Effect

Testing and Evaluation Context

• Hardwood flooring evaluations commonly involve review of environmental conditions, moisture relationships, installation configuration, and dimensional movement patterns
• Moisture content testing, relative humidity measurement, and environmental documentation are commonly used during hardwood flooring inspections
• Wood flooring systems may continue responding to changing environmental conditions following installation
• Visual conditions alone do not independently establish manufacturing defect or installation deficiency
• Additional analytical evaluation may be available through Professional Testing Laboratory

Related Pages

Cupping
Water Damage
Wood Distortion

Contributors

Independent peer review (non-authoring) — this page only
David Zack, Mike Harde, Fred Gamble, Roy Reichow


© 2015–2026 Floor Detective®
Last revised: 05/10/2026

“`