ENGINEERED WOOD FLOORING

Engineered Wood Flooring Explained: UK Guide

Engineered wood flooring combines a real wood top layer with plywood base layers for dimensional stability and compatibility with underfloor heating.

Quick answer

Engineered wood flooring has a 3–6mm real wood wear layer bonded to plywood or HDF backing layers. More stable than solid wood (doesn't cup or bow with humidity changes), compatible with underfloor heating, and can be sanded 1–4 times depending on wear layer thickness. Costs £25–70 per m² in the UK.

What is engineered wood flooring?

Engineered wood flooring is a multi-layer product with a top layer of real hardwood (oak, walnut, etc.) bonded to 5–9 layers of plywood or high-density fibreboard underneath.

The top layer is called the wear layer. It's the part you see and walk on. Thickness ranges from 0.6mm (budget products) to 6mm (premium). This layer is genuine hardwood, not printed vinyl or laminate.

The base layers run perpendicular to each other (cross-ply construction). This arrangement resists expansion and contraction caused by humidity changes, making engineered wood more dimensionally stable than solid wood boards.

Total thickness: 10–21mm depending on product. A typical mid-range board is 14mm total (3mm wear layer + 11mm plywood base).

How engineered wood flooring is made

Manufacturing process:

  1. Slice the wear layer: Hardwood logs are sliced into thin veneers (3–6mm for premium flooring, 0.6–2mm for budget)
  2. Prepare the core: Birch or spruce plywood sheets are cut and stacked in cross-grain orientation, or HDF panels are pressed
  3. Bond under pressure: Wear layer and core are glued and pressed at high temperature to create permanent bond
  4. Mill the edges: Tongue and groove profiles cut into the sides for click-together or glue-down installation
  5. Apply finish: UV-cured lacquer or oil applied in factory (most UK engineered wood is pre-finished)

The cross-ply construction is what separates engineered wood from solid wood. Solid boards are cut from a single piece of timber. Engineered boards use thin slices bonded to engineered backing.

Engineered wood vs solid wood

FeatureEngineered woodSolid wood
ConstructionWear layer + plywood/HDF coreSingle piece of hardwood (18-20mm)
StabilityHigh (resists cupping/bowing)Lower (moves with humidity)
Underfloor heatingCompatible (check specs)Not recommended (heat causes gaps)
InstallationFloat, glue or secret-nailNail or glue only
Times can be sanded1–4 (wear layer dependent)5–7 (full thickness available)
Lifespan20–40 years50–100+ years
Cost (UK, per m²)£25–70£40–120

Engineered wood wins for installation flexibility and compatibility with modern heating systems. Solid wood wins for longevity and total number of sandings over its lifetime.

3mm
Minimum wear layer thickness for quality engineered wood. Thinner layers (0.6–2mm) can't be sanded and wear through in 10–15 years.

Wear layer thickness: what it means

The wear layer determines how many times you can sand the floor to remove scratches or refinish it.

Sanding removes 0.5–1mm of wood per pass. You need 0.5mm minimum remaining after sanding to maintain structural integrity. So:

Most UK suppliers sell 3mm or 4mm wear layer products. Avoid anything under 2mm if you want the option to refinish later.

Installation methods

Engineered wood can be installed three ways:

Floating installation (click-together)

Planks click together via tongue and groove. No glue or nails. Floor floats on underlay over existing subfloor. Fastest method, easiest to remove or replace individual planks. Requires expansion gap at walls (10mm). Not suitable for rooms over 10m long without expansion joints.

Most common method for DIY installation. Takes 1–2 days for typical room.

Glue-down installation

Planks glued directly to subfloor with flexible wood adhesive. More stable than floating (no hollow sound underfoot). Harder to remove if you need to replace damaged boards. Subfloor must be perfectly flat and dry. Common in commercial installations.

Requires 24 hours for adhesive to cure before walking on floor.

Secret-nail installation

Planks nailed through the tongue edge (nail hidden by next plank's groove). Requires solid wood subfloor or battens. Traditional method for thicker engineered boards (18mm+). Not suitable for thin products or concrete subfloors.

Underfloor heating compatibility

Engineered wood works with underfloor heating if:

Floating installation over UFH requires underlay designed for heated floors (no thick foam, use thin felt or cork). Glue-down installation transfers heat better but costs more in labour.

Solid wood is not recommended over UFH because heat accelerates expansion/contraction, causing gaps at the board edges.

Finishing options

Most UK engineered wood is sold pre-finished (lacquer or oil applied in factory). Advantages:

Unfinished engineered wood is also available. You install it, then sand and finish on-site. Allows custom stain colours and finish type. Takes 3–5 days longer (sanding + 2–3 finish coats with drying time between).

Finish types:

Species and grades

Oak is the most popular species for UK engineered wood (accounts for 70%+ of sales). Also available:

Grades refer to how many knots and colour variation are visible:

Cost of engineered wood flooring UK

Material costs:

Installation costs:

A 20m² living room costs £700–1,000 for materials (mid-range oak) plus £200–300 for floating installation or £360–500 for glue-down.

How long does engineered wood flooring last?

Lifespan depends entirely on wear layer thickness:

Wear shows as loss of finish in hallways and doorways. Scratches accumulate. You can sand and refinish when the finish is worn (provided wear layer is thick enough).

The plywood core doesn't deteriorate unless exposed to water. Keep engineered wood dry and it lasts decades.

Maintenance

Lacquered floors need no oil or wax. Oiled floors need annual re-oiling in high-traffic zones (kitchen, hallway).

Where to use engineered wood

Suitable for:

Not suitable for:

For wet areas, use LVT or tile instead.

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