LIVE
Booking estimates this week · (916) 342-4362
HomeServicesWide PlankElk Grove
Commercial vinyl plank conference room floor in a Granite Bay, CA office
HARDWOOD · Elk Grove

Wide Plank Flooring Installation in Elk Grove, CA

Wide plank flooring transforms the open layouts that define Elk Grove's newer tract and custom homes—especially the high-ceilings great rooms in Laguna West and Sheldon neighborhoods. But installing 5- to 9-inch boards on Sacramento Valley slab foundations demands precision: the wider the plank, the more movement shows, and the hotter, drier summers here can expose poor prep work within months.

$11–$20 per sq ft installed
Price range
3–5 days for 1,000 sq ft
Install time
50+ years
Lifespan
Lifetime
Warranty
Wide Plank Flooring Installation in Elk Grove
Free on-site quote, lifetime install warranty.
Prefer to call?(916) 342-4362

Why Wide Plank Works in Elk Grove

Elk Grove's slab-on-grade construction is ideal for engineered hardwood or LVP wide planks because concrete subfloors are inherently stable—no joist flex like older homes. However, the valley's dramatic humidity swings (dry summers, occasional wet winters) mean wide planks are less forgiving than narrow boards; they expand and contract across their width, so subfloor moisture testing and proper acclimation aren't optional in Elk Grove installs.

Local installation considerations

1
Subfloor moisture testing is non-negotiable on Elk Grove slabs before installation—Sacramento's summer heat drives moisture up from concrete, and wide planks will gap or cup if the slab exceeds 3–4 lbs/1000 sq ft per 24 hours.
2
Wide engineered hardwood or LVP planks need staggered layouts and expansion gaps around perimeter walls to account for seasonal width changes in 7–9 inch boards, especially critical in two-story Sheldon homes where upper floors see temperature swings.
3
Adhesive or fastener selection must suit slab-direct installation; most Elk Grove new construction skips underlayment, so you're relying on the right glue bond and subfloor prep to keep wide boards from separating as concrete shifts slightly with season changes.

About Wide Plank

Choose wide plank if you have open floor plans, great rooms, or modern/farmhouse aesthetics where fewer lines create intentional visual impact—not because someone told you it's trendy. Narrow strip is cheaper and more forgiving on older, uneven subfloors; wide plank demands respect for moisture, flatness, and installation technique, but rewards you with a cohesive, gallery-quality look that actually makes rooms feel bigger and costs only slightly more per square foot.

Benefits for Elk Grove homes

Visually expands rooms
Fewer seams = cleaner look
Available in oak, hickory, walnut
Premium aesthetic
Price range
$11–$20 per sq ft installed
Lifespan
50+ years
Install time
3–5 days for 1,000 sq ft
Warranty
Lifetime installation warranty

Free Wide Plank Estimate in Elk Grove

Tell us about your project. We schedule most Elk Grove 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

Also Installing Wide Plank In

Other Flooring Services in Elk Grove

Wide Plank FAQs — Elk Grove

Why do wide plank boards cup or gap more than narrow strip? +
Wider boards have more surface area exposed to seasonal humidity swings, so they absorb and release moisture across a larger footprint—this causes more noticeable cupping (edges higher than center) or gapping (seams opening) if the subfloor isn't perfectly flat or if the board wasn't acclimated properly. A narrow strip can hide minor subfloor waves; a 7-inch plank broadcasts them. We combat this by laser-checking subfloor flatness before we start and letting boards acclimate to your home's actual humidity level for a week before installation, so the wood isn't shocked by a sudden environment change.
What subfloor preparation is non-negotiable for wide plank installation? +
Your subfloor must be flat to within 1/8" over a 10-foot span—that's the industry baseline for wide plank. If you have concrete below, it must be sealed, dry (calcium chloride test under 3 lbs/1000 sq ft), and preferably with a moisture barrier and underlayment. Joist spacing and bounce matter too: we verify structural integrity before we lay a single board. Mak Floors uses a moisture meter on every job and won't proceed if conditions aren't right, because cutting corners on prep means callbacks in 18 months.
Is wide plank more expensive than narrow strip, and is it worth it? +
Wide plank typically costs $11–$20 per square foot installed (compared to $8–$15 for narrow strip), so you're paying maybe $1,000–$2,000 more for a 1,000 sq ft room. The return is visual: fewer seams = cleaner, more open aesthetic that actually makes rooms feel 10–15% larger and reads as higher-end without premium wood species pricing. If you're in a modern or farmhouse home with open floor plans, that difference is worth every dollar; if you have a compartmentalized layout, narrow strip does the job fine.
How long will wide plank last, and what maintenance does it need? +
Wide plank hardwood lasts 50+ years or more with normal care—our lifetime installation warranty backs every nail and adhesive point. Maintenance is simple: vacuum weekly, wipe spills immediately (don't let liquid sit), and recoat the finish every 3–5 years depending on foot traffic. Avoid excessive moisture (no steam cleaners), use felt pads under furniture, and keep humidity between 30–50% year-round. Sacramento's dry summers and mild winters are actually ideal for hardwood, so you won't fight the climate the way folks in humid regions do.
Does wide plank make sense for a typical Roseville or Sacramento home? +
Absolutely—especially if you have a newer open-concept layout, vaulted ceilings, or farmhouse/modern aesthetics. Older homes with small compartmented rooms often look better with narrow strip because it respects the original spatial logic. Sacramento's building boom favors open great rooms, and that's where wide plank shines. Our local hardwood species—oak, hickory, walnut—all come in wide plank widths and handle our climate well, plus they complement the contemporary and transitional styles we see across Placer and Sacramento counties.