Hardwood Floor Refinishing in Wedgewood, VA

Floors That Look New Without Replacing Them

Dustless hardwood floor sanding and refinishing that brings back the beauty you remember, without the mess you’re dreading.

Floor Refinishing Services in Wedgewood

What Your Floors Look Like After

Your floors won’t just look cleaner. They’ll look like someone reset the clock on them.

The scratches from moving furniture disappear. The dull, worn-down traffic patterns vanish. The color evens out, and suddenly the room feels bigger, brighter, and worth showing off again.

Refinishing doesn’t just fix surface damage. It adds a protective layer that makes your floors more resistant to the next decade of foot traffic, spills, and daily wear. That means fewer touch-ups, less maintenance, and a floor that actually holds up to how you live.

And if you’ve been putting this off because you’re worried about dust settling into every corner of your home, that’s not how this works anymore. Dustless sanding technology captures up to 95% of the dust at the source. Your furniture stays covered, but your air stays clear.

This isn’t about making old floors acceptable. It’s about making them something you’re proud of again.

Wedgewood Hardwood Floor Refinishing Experts

Two Decades of Refinishing Floors in Virginia

We’ve been working on hardwood floors across Virginia for over 20 years. We’ve seen every type of floor, every level of damage, and every version of “I’m not sure if these can be saved.”

Most of them can. And the ones that need more help than refinishing can offer, we’ll tell you that upfront.

We’re not based in Wedgewood, but we’ve worked in plenty of homes here. The older neighborhoods around Wedgewood have beautiful hardwood floors, many original to the home. Those floors were built to last, and refinishing brings them back to life without tearing them out. We use dustless sanding systems, professional-grade finishes, and a process that’s been refined over thousands of jobs. No shortcuts, no surprises.

Our Hardwood Floor Sanding Process

Here's What Happens From Start to Finish

First, we move your furniture or work around what you’d prefer to leave in place. Then we inspect the floors for any boards that need repair, gaps that need filling, or nails that need setting. If something’s wrong, we fix it before we sand.

The sanding itself is done with dustless equipment. That means the vacuum system is attached directly to the sander, pulling dust into a containment unit instead of into your air. It’s not completely dust-free, but it’s close enough that most clients are surprised by how clean everything stays.

Once the floor is sanded smooth, we apply stain if you want to change or refresh the color. If you’re keeping it natural, we skip straight to the finish. We typically use a high-durability polyurethane that dries clear and holds up to daily traffic. The finish usually takes 24 hours to dry enough to walk on, and about three days before you can move furniture back.

The whole process takes three to five days depending on square footage and how many coats you want. We’ll give you a timeline upfront, and we stick to it.

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About Buff and Coat

Hardwood Floor Buffing and Staining Options

What's Included in a Full Refinishing Job

Every refinishing job includes sanding, finish application, and cleanup. But depending on what your floors need, there are a few other services that might come into play.

If your floors are in decent shape but just need a refresh, a buff and coat might be enough. This process skips the heavy sanding and applies a new topcoat over the existing finish. It’s faster, less invasive, and costs less than a full refinish. It works well if your floors haven’t been neglected too long.

Staining is optional, but it’s popular in Wedgewood where a lot of homeowners want to shift away from outdated orange-toned finishes or gray stains that didn’t age well. The trend right now leans toward warm, natural tones like honey, caramel, and chestnut. Matte finishes are also replacing the high-gloss look, which hides scratches better and feels more modern.

We also handle repairs as part of the process. That includes filling gaps between boards, replacing cracked or damaged planks, and fixing squeaks if they’re accessible from above. If your subfloor has issues, that’s a separate conversation, but we’ll walk you through what’s needed.

How much does it cost to refinish hardwood floors in Wedgewood?

Most full refinishing jobs in Wedgewood start around $3.80 per square foot. That includes sanding, staining if you want it, and applying a protective finish.

The total cost depends on square footage, the condition of your floors, and whether any boards need replacing. A typical living room and hallway might run between $1,500 and $3,000. Whole-home projects obviously cost more, but they’re still a fraction of what you’d pay to replace the floors entirely.

If your floors are in good shape and just need a refresh, a buff and coat runs less because there’s no heavy sanding involved. We’ll assess your floors and give you an accurate quote before any work starts. No surprises, no upselling.

Plan on three to five days from start to finish. That includes sanding, staining, applying the finish, and drying time.

The actual work doesn’t take all day, every day. Sanding usually wraps up in a day or two depending on square footage. Staining adds another day. Then the finish needs time to cure between coats.

You can walk on the floors about 24 hours after the final coat, but they’re not fully cured for about a week. We recommend waiting at least three days before moving furniture back, and even then, use felt pads under the legs. The longer you wait, the harder the finish gets.

Most hardwood floors can be refinished multiple times before they’re too thin to sand again. Solid hardwood is usually three-quarters of an inch thick, and you can safely sand it down several times over its lifespan.

Engineered hardwood is trickier. It has a thin layer of real wood on top of plywood, and that top layer can only be sanded once or twice before you hit the plywood underneath. If you’re not sure what type of flooring you have, we can tell you during the inspection.

Floors with severe water damage, large gaps, or extensive rot might need board replacement before refinishing makes sense. But surface scratches, dullness, and normal wear are all fixable. If your floors can’t be refinished, we’ll tell you that upfront instead of taking your money for a job that won’t last.

It’s not 100% dust-free, but it’s close. Dustless sanding systems capture about 95% of the dust right at the source using a vacuum attached to the sander.

You’ll still want to cover furniture or move it out of the room, and there might be a light layer of fine dust on surfaces nearby. But it’s nothing like traditional sanding, which used to coat everything in a thick layer of sawdust that took days to clean up.

The difference is significant enough that most clients are surprised. No dust clouds, no grit in your vents, and no need to deep-clean your entire house afterward. If you’ve been putting off refinishing because you’re dreading the mess, dustless sanding changes that equation.

If your floors look worn, yes. Buyers notice floors immediately, and refinished hardwood signals that the home has been maintained.

Hardwood floors are a selling point in Wedgewood, especially in older homes where they’re original to the house. But if they’re scratched, dull, or stained, they work against you. Refinishing costs a few thousand dollars and can add significantly more than that to your sale price.

It’s one of the few home improvements that pays for itself. Buyers associate well-maintained floors with a well-maintained home overall, and they’re willing to pay more for it. If you’re on the fence, get an estimate and compare it to what your realtor thinks it’ll add to your asking price. The math usually works out.

Refinishing means sanding the floor down to bare wood and starting over. A buff and coat means lightly scuffing the existing finish and adding a fresh topcoat.

Refinishing is what you do when the finish is worn through, the wood is damaged, or you want to change the stain color. It’s more invasive, takes longer, and costs more, but it completely resets the floor.

A buff and coat is what you do when the finish is dull or lightly scratched but still intact. It’s a maintenance step that extends the life of your floors without the time and cost of a full refinish. If you’re not sure which one you need, we can look at your floors and tell you. Most people wait too long and end up needing a full refinish when a buff and coat would’ve worked a year earlier.

Other Services we provide in Wedgewood

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