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Cherry-stained oak hardwood floor in a Citrus Heights, CA living room
HARDWOOD · Linda

Hardwood Floor Refinishing in Linda, CA

Many Linda homes built in the 1980s came with solid hardwood floors that are now scratched, sun-faded, or buried under carpet installed in the 2000s. Refinishing that existing hardwood is far cheaper than ripping it out for LVP, and it restores the original character these ranch and two-story tracts were built with.

$4–$8 per sq ft
Price range
3–5 days per project (includes cure time)
Install time
Refinish every 8–15 years
Lifespan
Lifetime
Warranty
Hardwood Floor Refinishing in Linda
Free on-site quote, lifetime install warranty.
Prefer to call?(916) 342-4362

Why Hardwood Refinishing Works in Linda

Linda's hot valley climate means hardwood expansion and contraction is real—especially between air-conditioned interiors and outdoor heat. Refinishing with water-based polyurethane is ideal here because it cures faster and has lower VOC, which matters in homes that are sealed tight against 100°F+ summers. Oil-modified finishes work too but cure slower in heat and can trap moisture from swamp coolers if you have one.

Local installation considerations

1
Dust containment is critical in valley homes with aging HVAC systems—we use HEPA sanders to keep silica out of ductwork that's already struggling in heat season.
2
Subfloor moisture varies; 1980s-90s tract homes often have concrete slabs or poor vapor barriers underneath. We test moisture before sanding to avoid adhesion failure when the slab releases humidity in cooler months.
3
Three-grit sanding takes longer in Linda homes because many have never been refinished—original finishes are thick and dull, especially on south-facing rooms that baked in direct sun for 30+ years.

About Hardwood Refinishing

Refinish your hardwood if you have solid wood floors that are scratched, gouged, or simply tired-looking; you'll recover 50–70% of replacement cost while keeping the authentic wood you already own. Laminate and engineered floors can't be refinished—they wear through to plywood—so if your home has true 3/4" solid hardwood, refinishing is the only way to reset the clock. Choose this when you want to change color, restore depth to the grain, or buy another 8–15 years of life from wood that was built to last a century.

Benefits for Linda homes

Save 50–70% vs. full replacement
Update color without removing wood
Restore decades of life
Dust-contained sanding
Price range
$4–$8 per sq ft
Lifespan
Refinish every 8–15 years
Install time
3–5 days per project (includes cure time)
Warranty
Lifetime installation warranty

Free Hardwood Refinishing Estimate in Linda

Tell us about your project. We schedule most Linda estimates within 48 hours.

Free, no-pressure on-site estimate
Written quote provided same visit
Lifetime installation warranty
CSLB licensed & insured
Prefer to call?
(916) 342-4362

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Hardwood Refinishing FAQs — Linda

How many times can solid hardwood be refinished before it's too thin to sand? +
Solid 3/4" hardwood typically tolerates 1–3 full refinishes over its lifetime, depending on how aggressively previous sanding cut into the wood. Each professional refinish removes roughly 1/32" to 1/16" of material, so a floor sanded too deep early on may not have enough wood left for a second pass. We inspect your floors during the estimate to measure remaining thickness and advise whether a full three-grit sand is safe or whether a lighter screen-and-recoat would better preserve longevity. This is why working with experienced installers matters—aggressive amateurs can waste your wood in one job.
Do I need to move out during hardwood refinishing, and how long until the floor is walkable? +
You should plan to stay elsewhere for at least 48–72 hours; dust from sanding penetrates walls, furniture, and HVAC systems even with HEPA containment, and the smell of curing polyurethane is strong. Water-based polyurethane cures to light traffic in 24 hours but takes 2–3 weeks to full hardness; oil-modified cures slower (3–5 days to light foot traffic) but builds a harder final film. We typically schedule refinishes in 3–5 day blocks to allow cure time between coats, and we recommend keeping the house well-ventilated and cool (65–75°F) during and after finishing for even cure.
Why is refinishing so much cheaper than replacing hardwood, and what am I not getting? +
Refinishing costs $4–$8 per square foot because you're only sanding, staining, and sealing the existing wood—no demolition, disposal, subfloor repair, or new material purchase. Replacement typically runs $8–$15+ per square foot installed. The tradeoff: refinishing can't fix structural issues (cupping, gaps, rot), can't change floor height or pattern, and gives you the same plank layout you already have. If your hardwood is fundamentally sound but worn, refinishing is the smart math. If boards are warped, cupped, or severely damaged, replacement is your only real fix.
What's the difference between water-based and oil-modified polyurethane for hardwood refinishing, and which lasts longer? +
Water-based poly dries faster, smells less, and shows the wood's true color without amber tint; it's durable for normal residential use and refinishes more easily in 8–10 years. Oil-modified poly (also called oil-based) builds a thicker, slightly more amber-hued film, feels warmer underfoot, and typically lasts 10–15 years before needing refinish—so it has a longevity edge for high-traffic homes. Oil-modified is harder and more forgiving of foot traffic spikes; water-based is easier to maintain and re-coat. We recommend water-based for most homes and oil-modified for kitchens, entries, and families with kids or pets.
Does the Roseville and Sacramento climate—heat, dry summers, humidity swings—affect hardwood refinishing results? +
Yes. Our hot, dry summers and occasional humidity spikes (especially in spring and fall) can cause solid hardwood to move seasonally; too-fast sanding and finishing in dry months, or applying finish during humidity shifts, can trap moisture and cause the topcoat to blister or cure unevenly. We time refinishes for stable weather (spring and early fall are ideal), maintain shop humidity during cure, and recommend maintaining 30–50% indoor relative humidity year-round in your home to minimize wood movement post-refinish. Sacramento's older homes often have solid hardwood installed decades ago when humidity was less controlled; refinishing restores these floors, but understanding that seasonal movement is normal helps you care for them properly.