Hardwood Refinishing

Restore the Wood You Already Love

Sand, stain, and refinish existing hardwood floors so tired rooms feel rich, clean, and new again — without replacing the wood when refinishing is the right fit.

Real Wood. Renewed.

Hardwood refinishing brings worn floors back to life.

If your hardwood is dull, scratched, yellowed, stained, or outdated, refinishing may give you a fresh floor without replacing the boards. Royal checks the condition first, then explains the best path clearly.

01

Sand away worn finish

Remove tired polyurethane, surface scratches, dull traffic lanes, and old color so the wood can breathe again.

02

Repair what shows

Address common problem spots like small gaps, loose boards, stained areas, and uneven wear before finishing.

03

Choose your stain

Go natural, warm, rich, modern, or darker depending on your home, lighting, cabinets, and trim.

04

Seal for daily life

Protect the finished wood with durable coats designed for real homes, pets, kids, and daily traffic.

Refinishing Process

Short, clear, and visual.

Most homeowners want to know three things: what gets sanded, how the color is chosen, and how the floor is protected. That is the heart of the project.

Step One

Sand the floor back to clean wood.

A proper refinish starts by removing the worn surface layer. Sanding reveals the real wood underneath and creates the foundation for a smooth, even finish.

  • Old finish removal
  • Scratch and traffic-wear reduction
  • Cleaner surface for stain and sealer

Step Two

Shape the look with stain and tone.

Refinishing lets you keep your real hardwood while changing the mood of the room. Natural, warm brown, espresso, gray-washed, or classic — the stain direction matters.

  • Color guidance for your home
  • Stain samples reviewed before approval
  • A refreshed look without replacing the floor

Step Three

Finish with protection and sheen.

The final coats help protect the wood and control the sheen. Matte, satin, or a subtle glow can change how the entire room feels.

  • Protective finish coats
  • Sheen selection: matte, satin, or more shine
  • Clean finished process and walkthrough

Refinish or Replace?

The right answer depends on the floor.

Royal helps you decide if sanding and refinishing makes sense, or if new hardwood is the smarter investment.

Good fit

Refinishing may work when...

The hardwood is thick enough, the boards are stable, and the main issue is wear, dull finish, scratches, color, or surface staining.

Better path

Replacement may be better when...

The floor is too thin, badly cupped, structurally damaged, heavily patched, or not a refinishable hardwood product.

What We Review

A clear estimate before the work starts.

Refinishing is a detail-driven service. Your estimate should explain the condition, scope, stain direction, finish options, and timing before you approve the project.

In-home floor inspection

Condition and wear review

Sanding and surface preparation

Color and stain guidance

Finish and sheen options

Minor repair recommendations

Project timing guidance

Clear refinishing quote

Project Timeline

From inspection to move-back guidance.

01

Free estimate

Royal checks the existing wood, wear level, room layout, and whether refinishing is the right option.

02

Prep and sanding

The floor is prepared and sanded to remove old finish and create a clean surface for stain and sealer.

03

Stain and finish

You approve the look, then stain and finish coats are applied based on the selected color and sheen.

04

Cure and move back

We explain dry time, cure time, furniture timing, rugs, and simple care for the newly finished floor.

Need New Hardwood Instead?

If refinishing is not the right fit, Royal can still help.

Some floors are better replaced than refinished. If that is the case, we can guide you through hardwood options, samples, and professional installation.

Hardwood Refinishing FAQ

Quick answers before your estimate.

Can all hardwood floors be refinished?

Many solid hardwood floors can be refinished, but the answer depends on wood thickness, previous sanding, damage, stains, and floor condition. Royal checks this during the estimate.

Can I change the color of my hardwood floors?

Yes, in many cases. Sanding removes the existing finish, then you can choose a new stain direction before the protective finish coats are applied.

Is refinishing better than replacing hardwood?

If the wood is in good enough condition, refinishing can restore the existing floor without a full replacement. If the floor is too thin, badly damaged, or structurally failing, replacement may be better.

How long does hardwood floor refinishing take?

Timing depends on square footage, repairs, stain selection, finish type, drying conditions, and cure time. Royal reviews the expected timeline before the project starts.

Do you offer screen and recoat instead of full sanding?

If the floor only needs a surface refresh and the existing finish is compatible, a screen and recoat may be discussed. If there are deep scratches, color changes, or worn finish, full sanding may be needed.

Ready to Restore Your Floors?

Book a free hardwood refinishing estimate.

Royal will inspect your existing hardwood, explain the refinishing options, and help you decide whether sanding, staining, and finishing is the right move.