ADR HARDWOOD FLOORS LLC
1121 101ST ST E TRLR 18, Tacoma, WA 98445
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
Expert flooring installation in Tacoma. Get the job done right the first time — 160 licensed installers, manufacturer warranties, and proper permits included.
160 contractors in Tacoma
1121 101ST ST E TRLR 18, Tacoma, WA 98445
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
2037 E MORTON ST, Tacoma, WA 98404
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
PO BOX 112127, Tacoma, WA 98411
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
16019 21ST AVENUE CT E, Tacoma, WA 98445
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
5416 34TH STREET LOOP NE, Tacoma, WA 98422
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
3416 PACIFIC AVE, Tacoma, WA 98418
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
6605 E Grandview Ave, Tacoma, WA 98404
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
3810 163RD ST E, Tacoma, WA 98446
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
3908 E Roosvelt Ave, Tacoma, WA 98404
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
7009 S SHERIDAN AVE, Tacoma, WA 98408
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
13316 C ST S, Tacoma, WA 98444
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
2545 N NARROWS DR APT 4203, Tacoma, WA 98406
Floor Covering and Counter Tops. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98401, 98402, 98403, 98404 +11 more
Washington State has no specific DIY restriction on homeowner flooring installation — you can install your own floors without any contractor license. However, Tacoma's Pacific Northwest moisture environment creates technical challenges that make flooring installation more skill-sensitive here than in drier climates. What fails in a Tacoma flooring installation usually fails because of moisture, subfloor prep, or acclimation — not because of the installation itself.
LVP/LVT (Luxury Vinyl Plank/Tile) — highest DIY success rate: LVP click-lock floating floors are the most DIY-accessible flooring product. They require no acclimation period (dimensionally stable), no adhesive (floating system), no specialized tools beyond a circular saw or jigsaw, and are waterproof — eliminating the primary Tacoma moisture risk. A motivated DIYer can install 400–600 sq ft of click-lock LVP in a weekend. Labor savings: $600–$1,800 for a typical Tacoma living room. The main DIY risk with LVP in Tacoma is subfloor leveling — LVP requires a flat subfloor within 3/16" per 10-foot span. Out-of-level subfloor creates perimeter gapping and joint peaking. Subfloor leveling with self-leveling compound is achievable DIY but takes practice.
Carpet — moderate DIY feasibility: Carpet installation requires a carpet stretcher (rented, ~$30–$50/day), a knee kicker, and a hot-melt seaming iron for any seams. Rectangular rooms without stairs are DIY-accessible with quality tool rental from a Tacoma Home Depot or McLendon Hardware. Stairs are high-skill and most DIYers should pay for professional carpet stair installation even when doing the rooms themselves. Labor savings: $750–$2,500 for a Tacoma home carpet project.
Laminate flooring — moderate DIY feasibility: Laminate click-lock is similar to LVP in installation — floating system, no adhesive. The added Tacoma consideration is that laminate (unlike LVP) is NOT waterproof and should not be installed below grade (basements), in bathrooms, or in laundry rooms in Pacific Northwest homes. Acclimation of 48–72 hours is recommended for laminate.
Solid hardwood (nail-down or staple-down): Nail-down or staple-down solid hardwood requires a pneumatic floor nailer/stapler (rental available but heavy — 60–80 lbs), precise joist spacing knowledge, and subfloor moisture testing capability. In Tacoma, the most critical DIY risk with solid hardwood is crawl space moisture — installing solid hardwood over a crawl space foundation without proper moisture testing and crawl space vapor barrier is a high-probability failure mode. A Tacoma flooring professional with NWFA training will conduct a calcium chloride test (ASTM F1869) or moisture probe test on concrete, and assess crawl space conditions before recommending solid hardwood. A DIYer without this knowledge may install correctly but still get cupping and buckling 6–18 months later due to unaddressed crawl space moisture.
Engineered hardwood — glue-down over concrete: Floating engineered hardwood is DIY-feasible for experienced DIYers. Glue-down engineered hardwood over concrete is not — moisture vapor emissions testing, trowel spread-rate matching, and open time management for flooring adhesives are skills developed through experience. Adhesive failure in a Tacoma glue-down installation from a DIY error is a $5,000–$15,000 failure (adhesive removal + reinstallation + replacement materials).
Tile and natural stone: Tile installation requires a flat-within-1/8" subfloor; proper backer/underlayment (cement board or uncoupling membrane like Schluter Ditra); a wet saw for cuts; and correct mortar selection for the tile format. Large-format porcelain tile (24x24" or larger) requires back-buttering and a medium bed mortar — techniques that matter significantly for adhesion. Natural stone (slate, marble) is even higher-skill. The risk for Tacoma DIYers: tile installed without proper substrate preparation over a deflecting subfloor will crack grout and pop tiles within 1–2 years. The Pacific Northwest freeze/thaw cycle (rare in Tacoma but occasional) accelerates failure in improperly installed tile near exterior doors.
| Factor | DIY Tacoma Homeowner | WA L&I Registered Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| WA contractor registration required? | No | Yes (RCW 18.27) |
| LVP click-lock installation | ✅ DIY-feasible | Professional quality + warranty |
| Solid hardwood nail-down | High risk without tools/knowledge | NWFA-trained installer; moisture testing |
| Glue-down engineered hardwood | Not recommended | Professional adhesive selection |
| Subfloor moisture testing | Equipment purchase/rental required | Standard pre-install protocol |
| Crawl space moisture assessment | Limited without expertise | Professional crawl space evaluation |
| EPA RRP (pre-1978 homes) | DIY can comply with proper protocol | EPA RRP certified firm |
| Manufacturer warranty | Often voided for DIY install | Preserved if authorized installer |
| Subfloor leveling (self-leveling compound) | DIY-feasible with practice | Professional precision |
| Labor savings (full home, LVP) | $3,000–$8,000 | N/A |
| Timeline (DIY, 1,000 sq ft) | 2–4 weekends | 3–7 days |
Crawl space moisture the most common Tacoma flooring failure mode: A DIYer installs beautiful engineered hardwood in a North Tacoma bungalow over the weekend, skipping subfloor moisture testing. By the following spring, after Tacoma's wet season, the floors are cupped — boards curled up at the edges from moisture absorbed from below. The cause: inadequate crawl space vapor barrier + high ambient humidity + a subfloor with existing moisture content above 12% at time of installation. This scenario plays out every year in Tacoma. The fix: new vapor barrier ($1,500), engineered hardwood floor removal ($1,500), replacement flooring ($8,000). Total preventable cost: $11,000. The prevention cost: a $150 moisture test before installation.
Acclimation shortcuts on Pacific Northwest humidity swings: Tacoma humidity swings between 50–60% RH in dry summer months and 75–85% RH in wet winter months. Solid hardwood or engineered hardwood installed in August (low RH) without acclimation will expand significantly by November when indoor humidity rises with fall rain. Expansion with nowhere to go creates crowning (center-high boards), buckling at walls, and squeaking. NWFA-required acclimation (3–7 days for solid wood on-site) prevents this.