Calculate hardwood flooring needed in square feet and board count. Enter room dimensions, waste factor, and board size for accurate estimates.
Solid hardwood flooring remains one of the most popular and enduring choices for residential homes. Whether you're installing red oak, maple, walnut, or hickory, buying the right amount of hardwood planks is critical. Too little and your project stalls while you wait for a matching lot. Too much and you've spent hundreds of dollars on material sitting in storage.
This hardwood flooring calculator takes your room dimensions, applies a configurable waste factor, and shows you the total square footage of hardwood you need to order. It also calculates the number of individual boards based on standard plank widths and lengths, so you can verify box counts before placing your order.
Hardwood flooring is typically sold by the square foot in random-length bundles. Understanding how plank dimensions translate into coverage helps you compare pricing between different species, grades, and widths. Use this calculator to plan your budget and material list accurately.
Hardwood flooring often costs $4–$12 per square foot for material alone, with installation adding another $3–$8 per square foot. An accurate material estimate prevents waste, ensures lot consistency, and helps you budget the full project cost including overage for future repairs. Consistent use of this tool across projects builds a library of reference data that improves estimating accuracy over time and reduces reliance on individual experience alone.
Net Area = Length × Width Total Sq Ft = Net Area × (1 + Waste%/100) Board Coverage = (Plank Width (in) / 12) × Plank Length (ft) Boards Needed = Total Sq Ft / Board Coverage
Result: 330 sq ft (349 boards)
A 20 × 15 ft room = 300 sq ft. With 10% waste: 300 × 1.10 = 330 sq ft. Each 3.25-inch wide × 3.5-ft long board covers 0.948 sq ft. Boards needed = ⌈330 / 0.948⌉ = 349 boards.
Narrower planks (2.25”) give a traditional look and work well in small rooms. Mid-width planks (3.25”–5”) are the most popular for modern homes. Wide planks (6”+) create a rustic feel but expand and contract more with humidity changes, requiring tighter climate control.
Select grade has the most uniform color and fewest knots. #1 Common (also called Choice) has moderate color variation and small knots. #2 Common (Builder grade) shows the most character with knots, mineral streaks, and color variation. Lower grades are cheaper and increasingly popular for rustic aesthetics.
Nail-down is the standard for solid hardwood over plywood subfloors. Staple-down works for engineered wood. Glue-down is used over concrete with engineered hardwood. Floating click-lock installation is the easiest DIY method for engineered products.
Material costs range from $3/sq ft for builder-grade red oak to $15+/sq ft for exotic species. Professional installation adds $3–$8/sq ft. Total project costs including underlayment, trim, and transitions are typically $8–$20/sq ft installed.
A 12 × 12 ft room has 144 sq ft of floor area. With a 10% waste factor, order 158.4 sq ft — round up to about 160 sq ft. That's typically 7–8 boxes depending on the product.
Use 5–8% for straight-lay installation in rectangular rooms. Use 10–15% for diagonal or herringbone patterns, rooms with many closets, or complex layouts.
Solid hardwood is milled from a single piece of wood and can be refinished multiple times. Engineered hardwood has a real wood veneer over plywood layers, is more dimensionally stable, and can be used over concrete or with radiant heat.
Most boxes of hardwood flooring contain 20–25 sq ft of material. Check the product label for the exact coverage. Wider and longer planks may have different box sizes.
Wood expands and contracts with humidity changes. Acclimating planks in the installation room for 3–7 days allows the wood to reach equilibrium with the room's moisture level, preventing gaps or buckling after installation.
Solid hardwood should not be installed directly over concrete because moisture can damage it. Use engineered hardwood or install a plywood subfloor with a moisture barrier over the concrete first.
Keep leftover planks from the same lot for future repairs. Store them flat in a climate-controlled space. Matching a discontinued product or different lot years later can be very difficult.
Hickory and hard maple are the most durable domestic species. Brazilian cherry (jatoba) and Santos mahogany are extremely hard exotic options. Red oak is the most popular all-around choice for its balance of hardness, availability, and cost.