Most people who walk into our showroom looking for a hardwood floor want solid over engineered. Why? They assume it’s better.
When that happens, Adrienne brings them to a table where two samples sit side by side. Both are the same wood species with the same finish and total thickness, but one is engineered and the other is solid.
She walks them through the veneer, the core, and a few different products. Once they see how each floor is built, they almost always change their minds. They understand that both types of wood floors have their advantages.
That’s not a sales tactic. It’s what happens when buyers see the trade-offs honestly. And the trade-offs depend on this question: which engineered are you comparing to solid?
A 1mm veneer floor and a 6mm engineered floor are not remotely the same product. The 1mm competes on price. The 6mm competes with solid hardwood.
Product quality matters more than category. The fair comparison is solid vs premium engineered. Solid vs cheap engineered is barely a comparison at all.
Quick Verdict: Which Floor Is Right for You?
Solid hardwood is usually best if…
- You want the longest possible refinishing life
- You have an above-grade wood subfloor
- You prefer traditional plank widths (2.25″ to 5″)
- You plan to stay in the home for decades
- You maintain stable indoor conditions year-round
- You want a floor with strong resale potential
Engineered hardwood is usually best if…
- You’re installing over a concrete slab or below grade
- You want wide planks (6″ and above)
- You have radiant heat
- Your home experiences significant humidity swings
- You want installation options
Side-by-Side Comparison
What Is Engineered Hardwood Flooring?
Engineered hardwood is a type of real wood flooring with a hardwood veneer bonded to a stable core. The core may be plywood, HDF, or another engineered material. It depends on the product.
Because the wear surface is real wood, the NWFA classifies engineered hardwood as wood flooring.
Two terms worth knowing before you shop:
Prefinished: the factory applies the finish before installation. Almost all engineered floors are prefinished (we do carry premium unfinished engineered) and prefinished planks have small, beveled edges between boards.
Site-finished (unfinished): installed raw, then sanded and finished in place. The edges are sanded flush, so there‘s no bevel between boards. Costs less in material but more in labor.
Read our guide about the difference between prefinished and site-finished flooring.
Two Specs Worth Understanding Before You Buy
Two specs matter more than most: veneer thickness and veneer cut.
Refinishing potential matters, but it’s not everything. Many homeowners never refinish their floors at all, which is why a quality engineered floor with a thinner wear layer can still be an excellent long-term choice. Veneer thickness matters most for lifelong ownership.
Solid hardwood isn’t infinitely sandable either. A typical 3/4″ solid floor has roughly 1/4″ (6-7mm) of sandable wood above the tongue-and-groove. Premium 5–6mm engineered narrows that gap more than most people expect.
How the Veneer Is Cut
The cut of the veneer affects appearance, sanding tolerance, and price.
Sawn: cut with a saw, similar to slicing a thin board off solid hardwood. This cut looks and behaves the most like solid wood, so it tolerates refinishing the best. It’s also the most expensive.
Sliced: knife-cut from a squared section of log. The workhorse of quality engineered, it gives you the best balance of appearance, stability, and price. Sliced veneers are refinishable if the veneer is thick enough.
Rotary-peeled: peeled off the log in continuous sheets the way plywood face veneer is made. It’s real hardwood, but the grain can look stretched or repetitive. Usually the lowest-cost and least natural-looking veneer. You can refinish it if the veneer is thick enough.
The key takeaway: Engineered hardwood varies from product to product. A premium engineered floor and a budget engineered floor may have less in common than a premium engineered and a quality solid hardwood floor.
Where Each Floor Works the Best
Concrete Slabs, Basements, and Radiant Heat
Wood expands and contracts with moisture, and that movement happens across the width of the plank. That’s why wide solid planks show more seasonal gapping, cupping in high humidity, and edge lift.
Engineered’s cross-ply core resists this movement better than a single piece of wood. This is why engineered works well where solid doesn’t.
Engineered can still have moisture issues if water gets under the floor or if the environment is mismanaged long-term. But overall, it offers greater dimensional stability.
Over concrete, always test the slab before installation. The slab needs to meet the manufacturer’s moisture threshold before you install the floor.
You can install most engineered hardwood over radiant heat if the manufacturer specifically rates it. Temperature limits apply. Surface temperatures above about 80°F risk damage on most wood floors.
Engineered hardwood installed over a concrete slab in a finished basement
Wide Planks
Above about 5″, solid hardwood starts running into stability problems.
Engineered more easily handles 6″, 9″, even 12″ widths because the cross-ply core absorbs the movement that would cup or gap a solid board of the same width.
Pets, Scratches, Dents, and Water
Durability is one of the most misused words in flooring. It means different things depending on how you live and what the floor must withstand.
Scratch and dent resistance depend on wood species and finish, not on whether the floor is engineered or solid.
A factory-finished engineered white oak with a ceramic-bead coating can resist scratches better than a softer solid floor with a site-applied finish.
Wood hardness also matters. Harder species like white oak and hickory hold up better than pine, cherry, or American walnut.
When it comes to water, engineered is more stable through humidity swings, but most engineered hardwood isn’t waterproof.
That said, some newer products, such as Raintree and Robbins HydroGuard, offer significantly better moisture performance than standard solid and engineered wood floors.
But if your home has frequent leaks or serious ongoing moisture issues, LVP is the more practical choice.
When it comes to repair, site-finished solid hardwood blends touch-ups invisibly. Prefinished planks, solid or engineered, are harder to patch without showing any of the work.
For dogs specifically: species and finish matter more than construction type. Large dogs with unclipped nails will scratch your floor. No finish is 100% scratch-proof.
Resale Value
Solid hardwood carries the strongest resale perception in most markets. Premium engineered white oak from a respected manufacturer also performs very well with buyers.
What can hurt resale is thin-veneer engineered that looks worn and signals a future replacement cost to the buyer.
For a five-to-ten-year resale horizon, solid or premium engineered are both strong choices.
What People Actually Regret
On engineered:
- Thin veneer that can’t be sanded when the finish wears through
- Hollow sound and flex from floating installation over an uneven subfloor
- Water damage from appliance leaks, pet accidents, or kitchen spills
- Beveled edges that collect dirt and are a pain to clean
- “I wish I’d kept spare planks from the original installation”
On solid:
- Seasonal gapping in winter when the indoor air dries out
- Cupping near windows or in kitchens
- Moisture problems in basements where solid wasn’t appropriate
Featured Floors of 2026
Castillian Premier European White Oak Boardwalk
For a premium engineered white oak floor built to last, see Castillian Premier by Mullican. Featuring the prized grain of European white oak, this floor delivers a clean modern look. 9.44” wide planks and a 4mm wear layer over a multi-ply core give you style and longevity for decades.
Expert Hard Maple Café Au Lait
For a premium solid hardwood floor built for generations, see Lauzon Expert Hard Maple Café Au Lait. Crafted from solid hard maple, this floor pairs exceptional durability with a warm, inviting color and lifelong refinishing potential.
Reclaimed Industrial Oak from Historic Michelin Tire Factories
For a one-of-a-kind floor with a 150-year-old story, see our Reclaimed Industrial Oak by Old World. Salvaged from historic Michelin Tire factories, this engineered floor gives you proven durability and true character. It also gives century-old timber a second life. Stock is limited, and once it’s gone, it’s gone for good.
Want samples or to have a real conversation about your project? Call us at 614.488.0334, email us, or stop by the showroom.
FAQ
Is engineered hardwood real wood?
Yes. The wear layer is real wood with the same species and grain as solid hardwood. Per NWFA, engineered hardwood is real wood flooring.
What are the advantages of engineered wood flooring?
Greater dimensional stability, wider plank options, proven performance over concrete slabs and radiant heat, and more installation options than solid hardwood.
What are the disadvantages of engineered wood flooring?
Refinishing potential varies by wear-layer thickness, water damage can be harder to repair than on solid hardwood, and lower-quality products may not last as long. Performance depends on the veneer, core construction, and installation quality.
Can engineered hardwood be refinished?
It depends on the veneer thickness. Under 2mm, probably not. At 4mm or above, most products can handle at least one careful refinish. At 5–6mm, the refinishing options are close to what solid hardwood offers.
Which lasts longer, engineered or solid hardwood?
Solid hardwood has the longest proven track record. Premium engineered at 4mm or above lasts decades. Thin engineered is replacement flooring.
Is engineered hardwood better for basements?
Usually yes. Engineered is more dimensionally stable over concrete and below grade. Not every engineered product is below-grade approved, so check the spec sheet.
Is engineered hardwood better for dogs?
Not necessarily. Scratch and dent resistance depend on wood species and finish, not on construction type. A harder species like white oak or hickory with a tough factory finish holds up better. Doesn’t matter if it’s engineered or solid.
Is waterproof engineered hardwood actually waterproof?
Some newer engineered floors, including brands like Raintree, offer legitimate waterproof performance, but water puts real wood at risk. For a 100% waterproof product, LVP is the best choice.
Summary
Solid hardwood and premium engineered can both be excellent floors.
The real question isn’t “engineered or solid?” It’s which grade of engineered you are comparing, and whether it fits the room, the subfloor, and the timeline.
Our team is NWFA-certified and happy to walk through your project. Call us at 614.488.0334 or come see the floors in our showroom. Walking on them side by side tells you more than any comparison table.