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03/08/2020

Wooden floors in bathrooms can add warmth and elegance, but choosing the right type is essential for durability. This guide explores the best hardwood options for moisture-prone areas, including engineered wood, teak, and bamboo. Learn how proper sealing, waterproof finishes, and strategic installation techniques can protect against water damage. Discover expert design ideas for integrating wood floors with tile, using area rugs for extra protection, and maintaining wood floors in high-humidity spaces. Whether you’re aiming for a spa-like retreat or a modern rustic aesthetic, these bathroom-friendly wooden flooring ideas ensure beauty and functionality. Upgrade your bathroom with stylish, water-resistant hardwood flooring solutions!

Solid Hardwood Floors in the Bathroom: Bold Beauty Meets Practical Limits


Few surfaces rival the natural presence of hardwood. Its warmth, grain, and tactile quality add a sophistication that tile and vinyl cannot replicate. But what happens when that beauty enters one of the most challenging rooms in the house—the bathroom? A space defined by water, steam, and constant use requires flooring that can perform under pressure. Solid hardwood can work here, but only with intention. Knowing the advantages, risks, and maintenance demands will help you decide whether hardwood belongs in your remodel.

The Case for Solid Hardwood in Bathrooms

There are four reasons why some people prefer solid hardwood floors in their bathrooms:

1 - Solid Hardwood Just Feels Better

Wood is a natural insulator. It feels warm underfoot, even on a chilly morning. You can’t say that about tile because it’s always cold and uninviting. Solid Hardwood has a nice way of toning down those echoes that tiled bathrooms create.

2 - Beauty That’s Unique

Hardwood is beautiful. Every solid hardwood floorboard has a unique grain, color, and character. Natural hardwood livens up any space and will create a one-of-a-kind room. It adds a style and ambiance that ceramic tile can’t match.

3 - It’s More Resilient When You Drop Things

Ever drop a glass cosmetic bottle or a cell phone on the tile? They almost always shatter or crack. Solid hardwood is a bit springy, and you have a better chance of keeping things intact if you have an accident.

4 - Solid Hardwood Lasts for Generations

With proper care, solid hardwood floors can last for many decades. The key phrase here is “proper care.” The bathroom environment is naturally higher in humidity than the rest of the home. 

Wood and water are not the best of friends, but if you are still thinking about solid hardwood, keep the following in mind.


What to Consider Before Installation

Here are four primary factors before choosing solid hardwood floors.


1 - The Quality of the Finish

The proper finish is your first line of defense against water seeping into the top of the hardwood floor. You’ll want a polyurethane-based sealer to create an invisible barrier on the surface. You may have to reapply it occasionally due to the excess moisture. Be sure to coat the seams as this is the easiest path for water to absorb. 

If you plan to finish the hardwood floor yourself, choose a marine-grade or polyurethane rated for outdoor use. It is your best insurance against water.

Keep in mind that the sealer or top finish only protects the surface. Water that penetrates the joints and edges can cause visible damage to the hardwood floor from the sides and below.

2 - The Type of Hardwood

Some wood resists water better than others. Teak and cedar naturally resist water. However, because of their low density, avoid softwoods like pine or fir.

With proper finishing, any hardwood floor such as white oak, cherry, maple, or hickory will offer the look and durability you want. It depends on the floor design you want and your budget.

3 - The Manufacturer’s Warranty

Now that you’ve narrowed your search to one or two choices, be sure to research the manufacturer’s warranty. Some will explicitly void a warranty if installed in a bathroom. Others are more flexible, provided you follow their instructions. 

Here is a Pre‐Finished Solid Wood Flooring Product Warranty from Easiklip. They list the six “Warranty Voiders” that wood flooring manufacturers have in their warranties.

  • Water soaking into the wood from above or below
  • Wet mopping or failure to clean up spills
  • Using a steam cleaner on the floor
  • Wet subfloor
  • Relative humidity at the site below 40% or above 65%
  • Failure to protect the floors from damage caused by sand or grit, pets, high heels, chair/furniture without protectors, lack of mats at entryways, excessive foot traffic, household chemicals, abrasive cleaners, excessive sunlight, extreme heat, etc.

If you follow the preventative measures we’ve stated below, you should not have an issue.


What Can Go Wrong—and Why

Wood is a natural product that’s very porous. Even with a top coat of polyurethane, it still absorbs and releases moisture through the edges and bottom. Unlike tile, wood expands, and contracts. Indeed, there are drawbacks to laying down hardwood floors for bathrooms. Let’s take a look at them and then how we can mitigate these potential issues.

Excess Water from Spills, Splashes, and Flooding

There will always be water splashes from the sink, tub, or shower. If you have kids, water on the floor is inevitable. Even the most careful adult can easily splash drops of water while rinsing their face or hands.

High Humidity

Does someone in your house like to take steaming hot showers? Bathrooms typically have the highest humidity in the home, due to a combination of hot showers and poor ventilation. Constant high humidity can be detrimental to solid wood floors.

Uneven Subfloor

If the subfloor is uneven, it could create low spots on the solid hardwood floor above, which can create small puddles. Prep the subfloor, so it’s level and smooth.

Lack of Moisture Barrier

Typically, hardwood floors install using glue screws or nails. That won’t work for a bathroom floor. You want to put down a moisture barrier to prevent water from seeping into the subfloor. Nails and screws will puncture the barrier. The solution is to use a clip together hardwood floor system that won’t pierce the moisture barrier.

Chemical Staining

Most bathroom cleaning products contain bleach, lye, or other harsh chemicals. These can cause permanent stains in hardwood flooring.

Mold and Mildew

Anytime a surface stays wet for extended periods, mold and mildew will grow. Wet wood can harbor mold and mildew in the seams, underneath and along the edges. Humidity levels above 65% support mold and mildew growth.

You can work around all the problems mentioned above. Here are solutions to overcome these issues.


How to Protect Hardwood Floors In Your Bathroom

The number one enemy of hardwood floors is water. The best way to prevent excess water on your hardwood floor is to use bathmats to intercept any water splashing from the sink, tub, or shower. Clean up any remaining drops of water with the mat or other absorbent material. Don’t leave damp bathmats on the hardwood floor. Always hang them up to dry before using them again.

While the finish protects the top of the hardwood flooring, you still need to wipe up any water immediately so that it doesn’t seep down between seams. 

Some other preventative measures include:

    • Regular Floor Maintenance – Clean and wax the hardwood floor regularly. You can see if the top finish layer is still suitable if a small drop of water beads up. If it lays flat or soaks in, you need to reseal or wax immediately. Take care to seal the joints and cracks between the boards.
    • Maintain Plumbing Fixtures – Plumbing joints and toilets are notorious for causing slow leaks and drips. Always keep an eye out for the first drops of water and fix them immediately.

Install Tub and Shower Surrounds – These devices help deflect water back into the shower and not on the floor. Seal any joints around shower doors to prevent water leaking onto the hardwood flooring.

Proper Ventilation – Poor ventilation causes most moisture issues in bathrooms. If you can’t open a window, consider installing a vent fan to remove excess humidity. If you already have a window and vent fan, use them often.

Prevention is always less expensive than a cure. However, if the floor finish gets damaged, you can always refinish it to make it look like new.


A Bold Choice, Made Smarter

Hardwood in a bathroom is both daring and rewarding. It brings an unmatched sense of warmth and luxury but demands a higher level of care than conventional tile or vinyl. For those willing to commit to the maintenance, the payoff is a space that feels serene, tactile, and distinct. And with modern clip-together hardwood systems, the choice is no longer impractical—it’s a thoughtful statement of design.

Bring Natural Elegance Home

Transform your bathroom with Easiklip’s solid oak floating floors—prefinished, durable, and designed for easy DIY installation. Keep the beauty of real hardwood while preserving a secure moisture barrier.

Order your free sample today: https://easiklip.ca/pages/order-samples
Explore pricing here: https://easiklip.ca/pages/pricing

Experience a bathroom floor that balances natural luxury with everyday practicality.

03/08/2020