San Marcos Elite Flooring handles hardwood floor refinishing in San Marcos, TX for homes and businesses that want their wood floors looking new again. Whether your floors are scratched, dull, or just worn down from years of foot traffic, we bring back the shine with proper sanding, staining, and sealing. We also handle wood floor resurfacing and floor sanding and staining for a wide range of wood types, so no two jobs look the same once we're done. Our crews show up on time, work clean, and treat your floors like they're our own.
We've spent years building a name for quality hardwood floor restoration across Central Texas, and that shows in the certifications we carry and the projects we've completed. Our team trains on the latest sanding equipment and finish products, so the results hold up under daily use. We've worked on everything from small home offices to full commercial buildouts, and we serve folks well beyond San Marcos too — including Seguin, Canyon Lake, Wimberley, Schertz, and Cibolo. No matter the size of the job, we treat it with the same care and attention to detail.
When it comes to quality flooring installation, craftsmanship, and customer satisfaction, San Marcos Elite Flooring stands above the competition. With a commitment to excellence and attention to detail, we help homeowners and businesses achieve beautiful, durable floors that last for years.
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Oil-based finishes give floors a warmer, amber tone and tend to hold up well under heavy use, but they take longer to dry. Water-based finishes dry faster and keep the wood's natural color truer, which a lot of homeowners prefer.
We walk through both options based on your timeline and the look you're going for. Either way, the finish you pick affects maintenance down the road too.
Different wood species, like oak, maple, or hickory, take stain differently because of how open or tight their grain is. We test stain samples on a hidden section of your actual floor before committing to a color.
This avoids surprises once the whole floor is coated. Getting this step right is part of what makes wood floor refinishing look intentional instead of patchy.
Gouges, gaps, and water-damaged boards sometimes need wood filler or patch material before sanding can even begin. We match filler color as closely as possible so repairs blend in once stained.
For boards that are too far gone, we replace them outright rather than patch over a bigger problem. This keeps the whole floor looking consistent once the final coats go on.
Before any sanding starts, we walk the whole space and check for loose boards, gaps, nail heads, and old finish buildup. This step matters because skipping it leads to uneven sanding later on.
We also move furniture and seal off the work area so dust stays contained. Good prep is what separates a smooth refinishing job from a frustrating one.
Sanding happens in passes, starting coarse and moving to finer grits as the old finish and scratches disappear. We use dust-contained equipment, which keeps the mess down compared to older sanding methods.
Each pass gets checked by hand before we move to the next grit. This stage takes the longest, but rushing it is how floors end up with visible sanding marks.
Once the wood is sanded smooth, we apply stain if you've chosen a color change, then move to sealing coats. Drying time between coats matters here, so we don't rush this part just to finish early.
We check the sheen and coverage after each coat dries before adding the next one. By the time we're done, the floor has an even, protected finish from wall to wall.
High-traffic areas like entryways and hallways usually show wear first, with scratches that catch the light differently than the rest of the floor. Once you start noticing dull or worn patches near doorways, that's usually a sign the protective finish has worn through. Left alone, bare wood absorbs moisture and dirt faster. Catching it early keeps the repair simpler and cheaper.
Dark spots or cloudy patches usually point to moisture getting under the finish, often from spills, pet accidents, or humidity. These spots tend to spread if the wood isn't sealed properly again. Refinishing addresses both the stain and the moisture exposure that caused it. Waiting too long can mean replacing boards instead of just refinishing them.
Squeaks and slight unevenness often mean boards have shifted or loosened over time, which refinishing alone won't always fix. Still, addressing it during a refinishing job means we can secure boards before sanding starts. That said, some structural issues need separate repair work beyond refinishing. Either way, it's worth pointing out during your inspection so nothing gets missed.
FAQs About Hardwood Floor Refinishing in San Marcos, TX
It depends on how deep the damage goes. Light surface staining usually sands out fine during refinishing. But if the wood has swelled or rotted, those boards need replacing before we can refinish the rest of the floor.
Not exactly. Engineered hardwood has a thinner top layer, so it can only handle light sanding, if any at all. We always check the wear layer thickness first before recommending refinishing for engineered floors.
Yes, we test stain samples against your existing floor before starting any work. This helps blend patched or replaced sections so they don't stand out once finished. It's a step we never skip, even on smaller jobs.
Uneven color usually comes from inconsistent sanding, wood grain differences, or stain applied too thick in some spots. It can also happen if old finish wasn't fully removed before staining. Proper sanding prep is the best way to avoid this.
We do, and we schedule around what works best for each. Businesses often need after-hours work to avoid closing, while homeowners usually prefer daytime scheduling. Either way, San Marcos Elite Flooring builds the timeline around your space.
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