If you're picking new hardwood for your home, the first decision usually isn't species or color — it's solid versus engineered. Both are real hardwood. They behave differently, and the right choice depends on your house.
Solid Hardwood
Solid hardwood is exactly what it sounds like: a single piece of wood, typically 3/4" thick, milled with tongue and groove. It's installed by nailing or stapling to a wood subfloor.
Strengths:
- Can be refinished many times over its life (often 4–6+ refinishes).
- Traditional, premium feel underfoot.
- Long-game value for homes you plan to stay in.
Limitations:
- Not appropriate over concrete slabs.
- Not recommended in basements or below-grade installations.
- More sensitive to humidity swings.
Engineered Hardwood
Engineered hardwood has a real hardwood wear layer on top of a multi-ply plywood or HDF core. The cross-grain construction makes it more dimensionally stable than solid wood.
Strengths:
- Works over concrete (glue-down or floating installs).
- Better for basements, slab-on-grade homes, and high-humidity environments.
- Often pre-finished from the factory with very durable top coats.
Limitations:
- Refinishing is limited by wear-layer thickness (usually 1–3 light refinishes).
- Quality varies dramatically between cheap and premium engineered products.
Choosing for a Middle Tennessee Home
If you're in a typical Spring Hill or Thompson's Station single-family home with a wood subfloor, solid hardwood is a great choice and will last generations. If you're in a slab-on-grade home, building over a basement, or planning hardwood in a finished basement — engineered is usually the right answer.
What About Cost?
Premium engineered hardwood often costs as much as or more than solid hardwood once you factor in higher-end wear layers. The "engineered is always cheaper" assumption isn't true at the quality level most people actually want.
Want help choosing for your specific home? Get a free installation quote and we'll walk you through options.
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