Floating vs. Nail-Down vs. Glue-Down: Which Method Is Right?
Compare floating, nail-down, and glue-down hardwood flooring installation methods. Learn the pros, cons, costs, and best applications for each system.
Walk into any flooring showroom, and you'll get a different answer depending on who you ask. The contractor pushing nail-down will tell you it's the only way to get a solid feel. The product rep with engineered planks will swear floating is just as good. The truth is that no single installation method is universally better; each is the right answer in specific conditions and the wrong answer in others. This guide breaks down exactly how each method works, what it costs, what it requires, and which one belongs in your project.
TL;DR — Quick Answer
- Floating: Best for DIY, concrete subfloors, and anyone who wants a reversible installation. Lowest tool requirement.
- Nail-down: Best for plywood subfloors, professional installs, and wide planks needing maximum stability. Requires pneumatic nailer.
- Glue-down: Best for thin-profile hardwood or situations where floating isn't practical over concrete. Permanent and messy.
- For most DIYers: A floating clip-in system combines real solid hardwood with beginner-accessible installation — no rented tools, no adhesive, reversible.
How Each Method Works
Floating Installation
In a floating floor, the planks are connected to each other, not to the subfloor. They lock together via a tongue-and-groove click joint or a mechanical clip system, and the entire assembly rests on top of a foam, cork, or combination underlayment. The floor moves as a single unit, expanding and contracting with changes in temperature and humidity. Nothing is glued, nailed, or screwed to the subfloor.
This method works on concrete, plywood, OSB, tile, and even existing hardwood (if flat and properly prepped). Because no fasteners penetrate the subfloor, the installation is completely reversible. The floor can be disassembled and removed without leaving a trace. For a deeper look at how click and clip floating systems compare in practice, see what modern installers prefer: nailer vs. floating system.
The trade-off: The expansion gap required at all walls (typically 3/4 inch for solid oak) must be covered by baseboards or shoe molding. And floating floors can have a slightly hollow sound in unsupported areas, a quality underlayment minimizes this significantly. See our guide to click-lock solid oak flooring for DIYers for more detail on how these systems behave in practice.
Nail-Down Installation
Nail-down is the traditional method, dating back to when all hardwood floors were hand-nailed by craftsmen. Today, it's done with a pneumatic flooring nailer, a specialized tool that drives a cleat or staple at a 45-degree angle through the tongue of each plank into the plywood subfloor below. The nailer strikes a rubber mallet surface to drive each fastener, and the installer advances plank by plank, row by row.
Nail-down requires a plywood or OSB subfloor of at least 3/4-inch thickness. It does not work over concrete without a plywood sleeper system first. The mechanical connection between the plank and subfloor creates an exceptionally stable floor, which is particularly important for wide planks (5 inches and wider) that would otherwise have more tendency to cup or gap in floating format.
The trade-off: You need a pneumatic flooring nailer and compressor ($70–$110/day rental). The installation is permanent, removing nail-down hardwood damages both the planks and the subfloor. And if the subfloor isn't perfectly flat and structurally sound, the nail-down method won't compensate for it. The guide on the best saw for cutting wood flooring is an essential companion reading for any nailed-down project.
Glue-Down Installation
Glue-down hardwood is bonded directly to the subfloor with a moisture-control urethane adhesive applied with a notched trowel. Each plank is pressed into the adhesive bed and held in place while the adhesive cures. The result is a floor with no expansion gap required at the perimeter (the adhesive manages movement at the plank level) and no hollow sound underfoot.
Glue-down works over both concrete and plywood, and it's the only method that works well with very thin hardwood profiles (3/8 inch and thinner) that can't be nailed without splitting. The adhesive itself costs $3–$5 per square foot, a significant addition to project cost, and the work is time-sensitive: most urethane adhesives have a working time of 30–45 minutes per spread.
The trade-off: It's messy, difficult to time correctly, and essentially irreversible. Once the adhesive cures (24–48 hours), removing planks requires destructive methods. Not recommended for DIY first-timers.
Method Comparison Table
| Factor | Floating | Nail-Down | Glue-Down |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY Difficulty | Low | Medium–High | High |
| Tool Cost | $100–$200 (saw + mallet) | $70–$110/day rental | $30–$60 (trowels, tape) |
| Material Add-On Cost | $0.25–$0.75/sqft (underlayment) | $0.10–$0.25/sqft (cleats/staples) | $3–$5/sqft (adhesive) |
| Subfloor: Concrete | Yes (with moisture barrier) | No (needs plywood first) | Yes (with moisture check) |
| Subfloor: Plywood/OSB | Yes | Yes (minimum 3/4") | Yes |
| Sound Underfoot | Good (underlayment dependent) | Excellent | Excellent |
| Stability (wide planks) | Good | Excellent | Excellent |
| Reversibility | Yes — fully removable | No (destructive removal) | No (destructive removal) |
| Expansion Gap Required | Yes — 3/4" at walls | Yes — 1/2"–3/4" at walls | Minimal (glue controls movement) |
When to Use Each Method
Use Floating When
- Your subfloor is concrete (slab-on-grade, basement)
- You want to DIY without renting specialized equipment
- You may want to take the floor with you (rental property, investment home)
- You're installing over radiant heat (floating allows seasonal movement)
- You're a first-time hardwood installer
Use Nail-Down When
- You have a plywood or OSB subfloor in good condition
- You're installing very wide planks (5 inches and wider) in a humid climate
- You're comfortable with power tools or hiring a professional
- You want the most traditional feel and sound underfoot
- Permanence is an advantage rather than a drawback
Use Glue-Down When
- You're installing thin-profile hardwood (3/8 inch or less)
- You have a concrete subfloor but floating isn't an approved method for your product
- The project is commercial or requires maximum floor rigidity
- A professional is doing the work

Pros and Cons by Common Situation
Slab-on-Grade Main Floor
Floating wins clearly. Concrete provides no nailing surface without a plywood overlay, and glue-down adds significant cost and mess. A floating system with a quality vapor barrier installs directly over the slab, handles the concrete's thermal mass, and accommodates seasonal moisture variation better than a bonded floor. Owners of slab homes in the South and Southwest, where slab foundations are the norm, will find floating the most practical choice. For the full step-by-step on concrete installs, see how to install hardwood floors over concrete.
Plywood Subfloor, Existing Home
Nail-down is a strong option here, especially if a contractor is doing the work. If it's a DIY project, floating over plywood is entirely viable and eliminates tool rental. The floor performance difference between nail-down and floating on a good plywood subfloor is minimal in normal residential conditions. Prepping that plywood subfloor correctly is covered in the complete subfloor prep guide.
Basement Installation
Floating is the only sensible choice for most basements. The combination of a concrete subfloor, potential for moisture variation, and the possibility of future flooding makes anything permanent a liability. A floating system can be removed in hours if water intrusion occurs. For homes with elevated basement humidity, the step-by-step basement hardwood installation guide covers the specific challenges in detail.
Rental Property or Flip
Floating is preferable for the same reason as basements — reversibility. A floor that can be removed and reinstalled protects your investment in the material. The economics of floating vs. professional nail-down are laid out in our DIY vs. professional cost comparison.
Can You Switch Methods Later?
Not in place, the methods are fundamentally incompatible. A nailed-down floor cannot be converted to glued-down without removal. A floating floor cannot be converted to a nail-down in place. However, because a floating floor doesn't bond to or damage the subfloor, removing it leaves you with a clean starting point for any method. This is one of the strongest practical arguments for floating when you're uncertain: it preserves all future options.
If you install a nail-down or glue-down floor and need to remove it, expect damage to both the planks and the subfloor. Glued planks, especially, often destroy the surface layer of plywood or leave adhesive residue that requires grinding. Factor this into your long-term planning, particularly for rooms where lifestyle needs might change. It's also worth understanding how seasonal humidity affects hardwood floors long-term; the method you choose determines how much movement your floor can accommodate across those seasonal cycles.

Why Floating Is Ideal for DIY
The case for floating in a DIY context comes down to five factors:
- No specialized tools. A circular or miter saw, a mallet, a pull bar, and a tape measure are everything you need. No pneumatic nailer rental, no compressor, no trowels and adhesive.
- More forgiving of subfloor imperfections. A floating floor can tolerate slightly more variation than a nail-down because the underlayment absorbs minor inconsistencies. (Note: "more forgiving" still means you need to be within 3/16 inch over 10 feet — not an excuse to skip leveling.)
- Reversible mistakes. If you miscut a row or place a row incorrectly, you can disassemble and re-lay without damaging the planks. Nail-down mistakes require a pry bar and new material.
- Works on concrete. The most common DIY subfloor challenge, concrete, is where floating excels and nail-down fails without additional prep.
- No cure time. Walk on the floor immediately after installation. Glue-down requires 24–48 hours of no foot traffic. Nail-down floors are walk-on immediately, but the room is inaccessible during the often multi-day installation process.
Easiklip's clip-in system extends these advantages further with a mechanical clip that locks planks together without requiring perfect tap alignment of a click tongue and groove. The result is a real ¾-inch solid hardwood floor, not engineered or laminate, that installs with a skill level comparable to assembling flat-pack furniture. Before installation, make sure your hardwood has had adequate acclimation time; the acclimating hardwood floors guide explains exactly how long to wait and why it matters.

The Best Installation Method Depends on the Floor Beneath It
Floating, nail-down, and glue-down hardwood all work well when they are matched to the right environment.
Concrete slabs, basements, radiant heat systems, wide planks, and DIY projects all place different demands on the floor. The mistake is not choosing the “wrong” method universally. It is choosing the wrong method for your specific subfloor, climate, and long-term goals .
Once you understand how each system behaves, the decision becomes much simpler.
Choose the Installation System That Fits Your Home
Easiklip’s floating solid oak system removes many of the biggest challenges homeowners face with traditional hardwood installation.
No pneumatic nailers.
No glue spread across the floor.
No permanent attachment to the subfloor.
Just real solid oak flooring designed to install cleanly over concrete, plywood, or OSB using a simple clip-in system.
👉 Order a Sample Pack
https://easiklip.com/products/easiklip-floor-sample-pack
👉 Shop Hardwood
https://easiklip.com/collections/diy-hardwood-floor-store
Because the right flooring system should simplify the project, not complicate it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you switch from a floating to a nail-down installation later?
Not in place, the methods are fundamentally different. You would need to remove the floating floor entirely and install a new nail-down floor. The existing floating planks typically cannot be reused as nail-down. However, because a floating floor is not bonded to the subfloor, it can be removed without damaging the subfloor, giving you a clean starting point for a nail-down or glue-down project in the future.
Is floating hardwood as durable as nail-down?
For everyday durability, scratch resistance, dent resistance, finish longevity, the installation method has no effect. What you're standing on is the same 3/4-inch solid oak either way. Where nail-down has a slight edge is in long-term stability for very wide planks (5 inches and wider) in high-humidity environments. For standard-width planks in normal residential conditions, floating performs comparably.
Can glue-down hardwood be installed over concrete?
Yes. Glue-down is one of the only methods besides floating that works directly over concrete without a plywood subfloor. It requires a moisture-tolerant urethane adhesive and a concrete slab that passes moisture testing. The adhesive adds $3–$5 per square foot to the project cost, and the floor is essentially permanent once bonded.
Which installation method has the best sound performance underfoot?
Nail-down over a plywood subfloor provides the most solid, quiet underfoot feel because the planks are mechanically fixed to a stable base. Glue-down is similar. Floating floors can have a slightly hollow sound in areas without underlayment support, though a quality foam or cork underlayment minimizes this significantly. The difference is most noticeable in empty rooms, furnished rooms show much less contrast.
What is the easiest hardwood installation method for beginners?
Floating, by a significant margin. It requires no pneumatic tools, no adhesive, and no plywood subfloor over concrete, and mistakes are more forgivable; you can disassemble and re-lay sections without damaging the planks. A clip-in floating system like Easiklip further reduces complexity by eliminating the need to perfectly tap-align a click joint.
