
East Sacramento's Fab Forties and McKinley Park homes often hide beautiful original oak floors beneath decades of carpet—and when you refinish or replace those main-floor boards, your staircase becomes the visual anchor that either completes or breaks the renovation. Stair tread replacement ensures your new flooring carries seamlessly up the stairs, whether you're matching newly refinished oak or installing modern LVP that mimics period-appropriate wood tones.
These historic Tudors, Mediterraneans, and Craftsman bungalows were built with solid hardwood stairs as standard, so hardwood treads feel architecturally correct and blend with original trim and balustrades. Sacramento's moderate climate and seasonal humidity shifts mean solid wood requires careful acclimation, but the raised foundations common to this neighborhood provide good air circulation underneath—reducing cupping and movement that would compromise the stair-to-floor transition. LVP-clad treads offer a lower-maintenance alternative if you're installing LVP downstairs, though they're less traditional for homes built in the 1910s–1940s.
Solid hardwood treads deliver authentic grain continuity and unmatched durability on high-traffic stairs, but only if your staircase is stable and your home's moisture is controlled—which they are, here in the Valley. LVP-clad treads give you the look of wood with superior scratch and dent resistance on stairs where kids, pets, and heavy foot traffic are facts of life. Cheap generic stair nosing from big-box retailers won't match your new floor's color or species, won't be fabricated to your exact tread width, and will squeak within months—custom treads from Mak Floors solve all three problems at once.
Tell us about your project. We schedule most East Sacramento estimates within 48 hours.