Final Touch Showroom & Builders
13850 NE Bel Red Rd , Bellevue, WA 98005-4520
BBB Accredited A rated. Home Improvement, Bathroom Remodel, Remodel Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
Top-rated top rated flooring installation pros in Seattle — sorted by reviews, verified licensing, and customer satisfaction. Browse 156 highly-rated contractors and request your free quote today.
Typical cost in Seattle
$5–$20 / sq ft
156 contractors in Seattle
13850 NE Bel Red Rd , Bellevue, WA 98005-4520
BBB Accredited A rated. Home Improvement, Bathroom Remodel, Remodel Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
Kingston, WA 98346
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Remodel Contractors, Drywall Contractors, Bathroom Remodel ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
Bellevue, WA 98005-4542
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Remodel Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Siding Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
13850 NE Bel Red Rd , Bellevue, WA 98005-4520
BBB Accredited A rated. Home Improvement, Bathroom Remodel, Remodel Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
723 Kirkland Ave , Kirkland, WA 98033-6319
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Flooring Contractors, Hardwood Floor Contractors, Carpet Installation ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
Bellevue, WA 98005-4542
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Remodel Contractors, Roofing Contractors, Siding Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
12121 Northup Way, Unit 207 , Bellevue, WA 98005
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Flooring Contractors, Remodeling
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
9618 Roosevelt Way NE , Seattle, WA 98115-2236
BBB Accredited A- rated. Handyman, Painting Contractors, Fence Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
4400 4th Ave S Ste A , Seattle, WA 98134-2355
BBB Accredited A rated. Hardwood Floors, Flooring Contractors, New Carpets ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
4400 4th Ave S Ste A , Seattle, WA 98134-2355
BBB Accredited A rated. Hardwood Floors, Flooring Contractors, New Carpets ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
12121 Northup Way, Unit 207 , Bellevue, WA 98005
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Flooring Contractors, Remodeling
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
113 Cherry St , Seattle, WA 98104-2205
General Contractor, Construction Services, Painting Contractors ...
Serves: 98101, 98102, 98103, 98104 +27 more
For: 800 sq ft floor installation in Seattle, WA
Seattle homeowners pay more for flooring installation than the national average — and for good reason. The Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue metro commands some of the highest flooring labor rates in the Pacific Northwest, driven by a skilled trades shortage, WA L&I contractor registration requirements, and the city's premium housing market. According to BLS Occupational Employment Statistics for SOC 47-2042 (Floor Layers), median hourly wages for floor layers in the Seattle metro are approximately $32–$42/hr — well above the $26 national median.
But material selection in Seattle isn't purely aesthetic — it must account for the region's persistent moisture. Seattle averages 37+ inches of annual rainfall, and interior relative humidity stays in the 70–80% range during winter months, according to NOAA Climate Data for Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. The wrong flooring material installed without proper moisture protocols can buckle, cup, or delaminate within months.
| Material | Typical Scope | Price Range (per sq ft installed) |
|---|---|---|
| Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP) | Full room, click-lock floating | $3.50 – $8.00 |
| Engineered Hardwood | 200–500 sq ft, glue or float | $6.00 – $14.00 |
| Solid Hardwood | Above-grade rooms only | $8.00 – $16.00 |
| Porcelain / Ceramic Tile | Bathroom, entry, kitchen | $8.00 – $18.00 |
| Carpet (mid-grade) | Bedroom, basement | $3.00 – $7.00 |
| Subfloor Repair / Leveling | Per sq ft, additional | $3.00 – $8.00 |
| Moisture Barrier / Vapor Retarder | Per sq ft, additional | $0.50 – $1.50 |
1. Subfloor Moisture Testing Is Mandatory Reputable Seattle flooring contractors will not install hardwood or engineered hardwood without first testing subfloor moisture levels. Per NWFA (National Wood Flooring Association) Installation Guidelines, concrete slabs must pass ASTM F1869 calcium chloride testing (≤ 3 lbs/1,000 sq ft/24 hrs) or ASTM F2170 in-situ RH probe testing (≤ 75% RH) before wood is installed. On crawl-space homes — which are extremely common in Capitol Hill, Fremont, and Wallingford — contractors additionally test subfloor panels with a pin moisture meter, with acceptable levels below 12%. This testing adds $150–$400 to your project but prevents catastrophic failure.
2. Crawl Space Homes Require Vapor Barrier Work Seattle's pre-1970 housing stock sits heavily on pier-and-beam foundations with exposed crawl space dirt floors. Moisture vapor migrates upward through the framing, creating elevated MC (moisture content) in subfloor panels. Before installing any hardwood, contractors install or inspect 6-mil polyethylene vapor barriers with 12-inch overlaps and perimeter tape. Crawl space remediation alone can add $400–$1,500 to a flooring project if barriers are deteriorated.
3. Hill Lot Construction Creates Multi-Grade Transitions Seattle's hillside neighborhoods — Queen Anne, Capitol Hill, Madrona, Beacon Hill — frequently have split-level homes where one room sits on-grade while an adjacent room is partially or fully below-grade. Different flooring materials are appropriate for each zone, and transitions between them require careful planning. Installing the wrong product in a below-grade daylight basement is the #1 moisture failure scenario Seattle contractors encounter.
4. Lead Paint in Pre-1978 Homes Fremont, Ballard, Wallingford, Capitol Hill, and Mount Baker have high concentrations of pre-1978 homes. Removing baseboard trim, existing flooring, or floor adhesive in these properties can disturb lead paint. Under EPA's RRP Rule (40 CFR 745), contractors must be EPA Lead-Safe Certified when work disturbs ≥ 6 sq ft of painted surface in pre-1978 homes. Verify contractor certification at EPA's LRRP Firm Search (cfpub.epa.gov/flpp). RRP-compliant work adds $200–$600 in containment and disposal costs.
Higher end of range:
Lower end of range:
LVP with a waterproof SPC (stone plastic composite) core is the most failure-proof option for Seattle's moisture environment, especially in below-grade rooms, laundry rooms, and kitchens. Engineered hardwood performs well in above-grade and on-grade rooms when properly acclimated (72 hrs minimum in the installation space). Solid hardwood is appropriate only in above-grade, climate-controlled rooms — and even then, expect seasonal expansion and contraction of 1/16" to 3/16" in Seattle's humidity swings.
Every flooring contractor working for compensation in Washington State must be registered with the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) under RCW 18.27. This is not optional — working as an unregistered contractor is a gross misdemeanor under Washington law.
Before signing any flooring contract in Seattle, verify your contractor's registration status at secure.lni.wa.gov/verify. What you must confirm:
Unregistered contractors cannot legally pull permits, are not bonded, carry no workers' comp coverage (meaning workplace injuries become your liability), and have zero regulatory accountability.
Most flooring replacement does not require a building permit in Seattle. However, permit requirements are triggered in these situations:
For projects that don't require permits, the L&I registration and contractor bond serve as your primary protection layer.
Step 1 — L&I Registration: secure.lni.wa.gov/verify — confirm Active status, bond amount ($12K minimum), workers' comp coverage.
Step 2 — EPA Lead-Safe Certification: For homes built before 1978 (Fremont, Ballard, Wallingford, Capitol Hill, etc.), confirm the contractor holds an EPA RRP Firm Certification. Without it, they cannot legally perform renovation work that disturbs lead paint.
Step 3 — NWFA Membership or Certification: The National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) offers certified installer and sand-and-finish credentials. NWFA-certified contractors are trained in the moisture testing protocols Seattle homes require.
Step 4 — Written Subfloor Assessment: Any Seattle flooring contractor who doesn't assess your subfloor moisture before quoting has either skipped this step or intends to cut corners. Get the moisture content readings in writing before install begins.
Moisture failure. DIY flooring installation in Seattle that skips ASTM F1869 or F2170 moisture testing is the region's most common flooring disaster. Planks buckle, joints separate, and mold colonizes the subfloor within 6–18 months. Remediation typically costs $3,000–$8,000 — more than the original installation.
HOA violations. Hundreds of Seattle's Capitol Hill and Belltown condo buildings require HOA approval for flooring changes (especially sound-transmission issues when wood replaces carpet). Skipping approval can result in fines and forced removal.
Warranty invalidity. Nearly every hardwood and engineered hardwood manufacturer requires installation by a professional following NWFA guidelines for the warranty to apply. DIY installation — or installation by an unregistered contractor who skips moisture testing — voids the manufacturer warranty.
Lead contamination. Sanding or removing old adhesive in pre-1978 Seattle homes without RRP protocols can spread lead dust throughout the living space, creating a remediation cost of $5,000–$20,000+ and a disclosure obligation when you sell.
Seattle's moisture environment, hillside housing stock, high concentration of pre-1978 homes, and premium labor market make the DIY vs. pro calculation more consequential here than in most U.S. cities.
| Factor | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Material cost (LVP, 300 sq ft) | $525–$1,050 | $525–$1,050 (same) |
| Labor cost | Your time (15–30 hrs) | $1,050–$2,400 |
| Subfloor moisture testing | Likely skipped | Mandatory (ASTM F1869/F2170) |
| Vapor barrier installation | Often forgotten | Included in scope |
| Skill required | Moderate (floating LVP) to high (glue-down hardwood) | Expert |
| Tools required | $300–$600 for rental/purchase | Provided by contractor |
| Permit / inspection | N/A for most flooring | Pulled when required |
| EPA Lead-Safe compliance | Not possible without certification | Required — verify cfpub.epa.gov/flpp |
| Manufacturer warranty | Often voided | Preserved per NWFA guidelines |
| Typical failure risk in Seattle | High (moisture skipped) | Low (protocols followed) |
| Failure remediation cost | $3,000–$8,000 | Contractor liability |
DIY flooring is reasonable only under these conditions:
Even then, rent a pin moisture meter ($25–$35/day) from Home Depot, test the subfloor (target < 12% MC for wood subfloor), and acclimate your LVP planks for 48 hours before installing.
Any crawl-space home in Seattle — Fremont, Capitol Hill, Wallingford, the Central District, and Beacon Hill are loaded with pier-and-beam homes where subfloor vapor migration is the single biggest flooring risk. A pro will test, assess the crawl space vapor barrier, and prescribe the correct moisture mitigation before a single plank goes down.
Pre-1978 homes anywhere in Seattle — If your home was built before 1978, any flooring work that touches baseboard trim, existing adhesive, or painted subfloor triggers EPA RRP requirements. DIY on these homes without certification is federally illegal and creates significant health risk.
Below-grade and on-grade concrete slab areas — Any LVP or hardwood going onto concrete must pass ASTM F1869 calcium chloride testing first. If RH exceeds 80%, a two-component epoxy moisture vapor barrier is required before any flooring goes down. This is not a DIY step.
Engineered hardwood, glue-down — Glue-down hardwood installation requires a notched trowel, proper adhesive spread rate (per manufacturer spec), roller application, and a controlled environment. Done wrong, you'll have hollow spots, peaking, and adhesive squeeze-out on the face of the boards.
Hillside homes with multi-grade transitions — Queen Anne, Madrona, Beacon Hill, and similar addresses often have rooms at different moisture exposure levels within the same home. Matching material species and finish color while changing product between grades is a pro-level task.
For a 400 sq ft LVP project in an above-grade, post-1978 Seattle home with a level subfloor, DIY saves approximately $1,200–$2,000 in labor. For anything involving crawl spaces, concrete slabs, pre-1978 lead paint risk, or engineered hardwood, the risk of getting it wrong in Seattle's moisture environment makes professional installation the only financially sound choice. The $1,500–$3,500 professional labor cost is cheap insurance against a $5,000–$8,000 moisture failure.
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