How to Install Engineered Hardwood Flooring on Concrete

Home > How to Install Engineered Hardwood Flooring on Concrete

Concrete catches people out. It looks flat, solid and ready to go, but it is often the reason a timber floor fails. If you are researching how to install engineered hardwood flooring on concrete, the real work is not just laying boards. It starts with moisture, level tolerance and choosing the right installation method for the product and the slab.

Engineered timber is one of the better flooring options over concrete because it is more dimensionally stable than solid timber. That said, stable does not mean foolproof. If the slab is too damp, too uneven or prepared with the wrong materials, boards can move, drum, gap or lift. A good-looking floor depends on what happens underneath it.

How to install engineered hardwood flooring on concrete properly

The first decision is whether the floor will be floated or direct stuck. Some engineered boards are designed for a floating installation over underlay, while others can be glued directly to the slab using an approved adhesive. Some products allow both. The right option depends on the board construction, the slab condition, acoustic requirements, finished floor height and the manufacturer instructions.

A floating floor can be faster and more forgiving on certain projects, especially where minor slab movement or apartment acoustic underlay requirements come into play. A direct stick installation usually gives a firmer feel underfoot and can reduce hollow sound, but it demands a very well-prepared subfloor. Neither method is automatically better. The product specification should lead the decision, not guesswork.

Start with the concrete, not the flooring

Before any boards come inside, the slab needs to be checked properly. New concrete must be fully cured, and old slabs still need testing. Concrete can hold residual moisture long after it looks dry, especially in cooler areas, ground floors and properties with limited ventilation.

Moisture testing is essential. Relying on appearance is one of the most common installation mistakes. If moisture is above the allowed level for the flooring system, the slab may need a moisture barrier or extra time to dry, depending on the product and site conditions. Skipping this step can void warranties and create expensive problems later.

Flatness matters just as much. Most engineered flooring products have a tolerance for how much variation is allowed across the slab. If there are dips, high spots or old adhesive residue, those issues must be addressed first. Grinding high areas and using a quality self-levelling compound on low areas is standard practice when the slab is out of tolerance. This is where many DIY jobs go wrong. The boards might lock together, but they will not perform properly if the base is uneven.

The slab also needs to be clean and sound. Dust, paint, contaminants and loose material can interfere with underlay adhesion, moisture barriers or flooring glue. A proper mechanical clean is often necessary, not just a quick sweep.

Acclimatisation and site conditions

Engineered timber should be delivered into a stable environment, not a building site that is still wet or open to the weather. Windows should be in, wet trades should be finished and indoor conditions should be close to normal living conditions. Depending on the product, acclimatisation requirements can vary. Some engineered floors need time on site before installation, while others are installed straight from sealed packaging under controlled conditions.

This is another point where installer experience matters. Blindly leaving boards in a room for days is not always the right move. The manufacturer instructions and room conditions need to guide the process.

Tools and materials you will likely need

If you are planning how to install engineered hardwood flooring on concrete yourself, keep the tool list realistic. You will generally need moisture testing equipment, a straight edge, levelling products if required, underlay or adhesive depending on method, spacers, tapping block, saw, measuring tools and trims. For direct stick jobs, adhesive type is critical. Not every flooring glue is suitable for engineered timber or concrete slabs.

It is worth saying plainly – the board is only one part of the system. Underlay, primer, moisture barrier, leveller and adhesive all need to be compatible with the product and slab.

Installing a floating engineered floor over concrete

For a floating installation, the slab must first be tested, levelled and cleaned. If the system requires a moisture barrier, that goes down first. Then the correct acoustic or foam underlay is installed in line with the product and site requirements.

Boards are usually laid parallel to the longest wall or in the direction that best suits the room layout and natural light. A perimeter expansion gap must be left around walls, kitchen cabinetry, columns and fixed objects. This gap allows the floor to move naturally with seasonal changes.

The first row sets up the whole floor, so it needs to be straight. Boards are clicked or locked together according to the profile, with end joints staggered for strength and appearance. As the installation continues, rows should be checked regularly to make sure they stay aligned and tight.

Door jambs are typically undercut so the boards can slide neatly underneath, giving a cleaner finish than cutting around architraves. At the perimeter, skirting or scotia is used to cover the expansion gap, depending on the finish you want and whether existing skirting is being removed.

Floating floors are often practical, but they are less forgiving of poor slab preparation than many people think. If the concrete is not flat enough, movement and noise can become an issue.

Direct stick installation on concrete

A direct stick installation starts with the same essentials – moisture testing, levelling and cleaning – but the tolerance for errors is even tighter. If the slab needs priming or a moisture suppression system, that must be done correctly before any adhesive is applied.

The floor is set out carefully so board widths at walls remain balanced and the visual line through the room is clean. Adhesive is spread in manageable sections using the correct trowel notch. Too much glue too early and it can skin over. Too little and bond strength can be compromised.

Boards are then placed into the adhesive, tapped together and checked for full contact. Some systems require rolling or weighted pressure to ensure proper transfer. Excess adhesive should be cleaned immediately from the board surface. Once the floor is down, it needs curing time before heavy foot traffic or furniture placement.

Direct stick floors can feel more solid and premium, especially with wider boards, but the slab has to be right. On larger residential or commercial jobs, this method is often best handled by professionals with proper prep equipment and product knowledge.

Common mistakes to avoid

The biggest mistakes are usually made before installation starts. Ignoring slab moisture, assuming the concrete is level, using mismatched materials or failing to leave expansion gaps can all cause trouble. Another common issue is installing too early, before the building is weather-tight or before internal humidity settles.

Product choice can also work against you. Extra-wide engineered boards, herringbone formats and premium oak finishes look excellent, but they are less tolerant of lazy preparation. The better the board, the less sense it makes to cut corners underneath it.

When professional installation makes more sense

Some confident renovators can manage a straightforward floating floor in a well-prepared room. But if the slab is uneven, moisture readings are borderline, the layout is complex or the product is premium, professional installation usually pays for itself.

That is especially true when subfloor preparation is involved. Levelling compounds, moisture mitigation systems and direct stick adhesives are not areas where trial and error is cheap. A team with real installation experience can spot issues early, recommend the right method and deliver a result that looks right and lasts.

At Melbourne Quality Timber Flooring, that practical approach matters because the advice is shaped by former installers, not just showroom sales. For homeowners weighing up product options and installation methods, that can save a lot of second-guessing.

The finish matters as much as the fit

Once the floor is installed, the final details lift the result. Trims need to be neat, transition points should be safe and visually clean, and furniture should not be dragged straight onto a fresh floor. If the product allows rugs, cleaning products and furniture pads should all be chosen with timber finishes in mind.

A well-installed engineered floor over concrete should feel stable, look consistent and sit quietly in the room. You should not be noticing bounce, drumming or visible movement in the first place.

If you are planning to install engineered hardwood flooring on concrete, treat the slab as the project, not the background. Get the moisture right, get the level right, and the boards have a fair chance to do what you paid for.

Related Blog

How to Acclimate Engineered Hardwood Flooring

How to Acclimate Engineered Hardwood Flooring

A floor can look perfect on delivery day and still fail a few weeks after...

How Thick Is Engineered Timber Flooring?

How Thick Is Engineered Timber Flooring?

You can spot a flooring quote that skips the important details a mile away. A...

Why Choose Engineered Hardwood Flooring?

Why Choose Engineered Hardwood Flooring?

A floor can look perfect in a showroom and still be the wrong choice once...

What Is Engineered Hardwood Flooring Pros and Cons?

What Is Engineered Hardwood Flooring Pros and Cons?

A lot of flooring problems start before anyone lays a single board. The wrong product...

What Is Engineered Hardwood Flooring vs Laminate?

What Is Engineered Hardwood Flooring vs Laminate?

You can usually tell when someone has been talked into the wrong floor. They come...

What Is Engineered Timber Flooring?

What Is Engineered Timber Flooring?

If you have been comparing flooring options and keep circling back to timber, chances are...

Best Engineered Timber Flooring Australia

Best Engineered Timber Flooring Australia

A lot of people start by asking for the best engineered timber flooring Australia has...

Engineered Timber Flooring Prices Explained

Engineered Timber Flooring Prices Explained

The gap between a cheap floor and a floor that still looks good in ten...

Engineered Timber Flooring vs Hybrid

Engineered Timber Flooring vs Hybrid

You can spot the wrong flooring choice months after install - boards sounding hollow underfoot,...

Laminate Flooring Experts

How to Choose the Right Flooring for Your Melbourne Home

Choosing new flooring is one of the bigger decisions you'll make in a home renovation.Get...

Shopping centre entry in Hawthorn with direct stick engineered flooring installation by Melbourne QTF

Flooring For Rental Properties Melbourne

If you own a rental property in Melbourne, flooring is one of the most importantdecisions...

Hybrid Flooring Melbourne

Engineered Timber vs Hybrid Flooring: Which Is Right for Your Melbourne Home?

If you've started researching new flooring for your Melbourne home, chances are you'vecome across two...

Hybrid Flooring Melbourne

Herringbone Flooring Melbourne: The Complete Guide to Pattern, Style & Installation

Herringbone flooring has made a serious comeback — and it's not hard to see why....

Hybrid Flooring Melbourne

Why Choose Hybrid Flooring?

When it comes to selecting the right flooring for your Melbourne home, hybrid floors have...

Flooring Melbourne

How to Clean Your Floors (Laminate, Hybrid & Engineered Timber)

Keeping your floors clean doesn't just make your home look fresh—it also protects them from...

Engineered Flooring Melbourne

Engineered Flooring: The Complete Guide for Your Home

What Is Engineered Flooring? Engineered flooring is a type of wood flooring designed to replicate...

Laminate Flooring Melbourne

Why Choose Laminate Flooring for Your Home or Business

When it comes to selecting the perfect flooring, homeowners and business owners alike want something...

See Why Our Clients Trust Us
Real Stories, Real Success!

Google Review

Timber Flooring Melbourne — Frequently Asked Questions

How much does timber flooring cost in Melbourne?

The cost of timber flooring in Melbourne depends on the type of flooring you choose. As a general guide:

  • Laminate flooring: $20–$50 per m² for materials, plus $18–$30 per m² for installation
  • Hybrid flooring: $30–$50 per m² for materials, plus $18–$30 per m² for installation
  • Engineered timber: $70–$130 per m² for materials, plus $40–$70 per m² for installation

Additional costs such as subfloor levelling, carpet removal, and skirting board replacement may apply. We offer free on-site measures and quotes — contact Melbourne QTF today for an accurate estimate tailored to your project.

Both are popular choices, but they suit different needs:

Engineered timber features a real hardwood veneer bonded over a plywood core. It looks and feels like solid timber but is more dimensionally stable, meaning it handles Melbourne’s temperature and humidity fluctuations better. It can be sanded and refinished once or twice, extending its lifespan significantly.

Hybrid flooring is a fully synthetic product combining a rigid stone-plastic composite core with a vinyl wear layer. It is 100% waterproof, highly scratch resistant, and ideal for households with pets, children, or wet-prone areas like kitchens and laundries.

Not sure which is right for you? Our team are former installers who can walk you through the best option for your home and budget.

Yes — in most cases, both engineered timber and hybrid flooring can be installed directly over existing tiles or concrete slabs. The key requirement is that the subfloor is flat, clean, and structurally sound.

Where subfloors are uneven, we use Cemimax self-levelling compound to create a perfectly flat surface before installation. This step is critical for long-lasting results and is something many cheaper operators skip.

Our team will inspect your subfloor during the free measure and recommend the correct preparation method for your specific situation.

For busy households with pets or children, we recommend hybrid flooring as the top choice. Here’s why:

  • 100% waterproof — spills and accidents wipe up with no damage
  • Highly scratch and dent resistant wear layer
  • Easy to clean with a damp mop
  • Built-in underlay for comfort underfoot and noise reduction

Laminate flooring is another excellent budget-friendly option with strong scratch resistance, though it is not fully waterproof. For a more premium look, some of our engineered timber ranges also offer enhanced coatings suited to active family homes.

Come into our Ravenhall showroom or book a free consultation and we’ll help you find the perfect match.

Floating installation means the boards click together and sit over an underlay without being fixed to the subfloor. It is faster to install, easier to replace individual boards if damaged, and is the standard method for hybrid and laminate flooring.

Glue-down installation involves adhering each board directly to the subfloor using a flexible flooring adhesive. It is the preferred method for engineered timber, particularly in high-traffic areas or when installing over concrete. It produces a more solid, stable feel underfoot with less movement and noise.

Our team will recommend the right method based on your subfloor type, the flooring product you select, and your budget. Both methods are available across our full product range.

Keeping your new floor looking great is straightforward with a few simple habits:

  • Sweep or vacuum regularly to remove dust and grit that can scratch the surface
  • Wipe up spills immediately, especially on laminate which is not fully waterproof
  • Use a barely damp mop with a pH-neutral timber floor cleaner for deeper cleaning
  • Place felt pads under furniture legs to prevent scratching
  • Use a doormat at entrances to reduce the amount of dirt and grit tracked in
  • Avoid steam mops — the heat and moisture can damage both the boards and adhesive

Engineered timber floors can be lightly sanded and recoated if they develop surface scratches over time, giving them a renewed look. Hybrid and laminate boards are not refinishable but are highly resistant to everyday wear.

Yes — absolutely. We offer free on-site measures and obligation-free quotes for all flooring projects across Melbourne. One of our team will visit your property, assess your subfloor, discuss your flooring options, and provide a detailed written quote with no pressure and no hidden costs.

You can also send us your floor plan by email if you’d like a ballpark figure before we visit. Contact us today on 03 8352 0641 or fill in the form on our contact page to get started.

We service all Melbourne suburbs. Based in Ravenhall in Melbourne’s west, we specialise in the western corridor including Hoppers Crossing, Caroline Springs, Deer Park, St Albans, Sunshine North, Werribee, Tarneit, Point Cook, Cairnlea, and Albion.

We also regularly install flooring across Melbourne’s inner-city and eastern suburbs including South Yarra, Toorak, Hawthorn, Kew, Camberwell, Brighton, and Melbourne CBD.

No job is too far — get in touch and we’ll confirm coverage for your area.

    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

    Get in Touch

    Located in Ravenhall, Melbourne QTF provides premium timber flooring Melbourne-wide, specialising in the western suburbs including Hoppers Crossing, Caroline Springs, Avondale Heights, Cairnlea, Deer Park, Albion, Sunshine North, St Albans, and Werribee.

    We also service inner-city and eastern suburbs including Melbourne CBD, South Yarra, Toorak, Hawthorn, Kew, Camberwell, and Brighton, delivering high-quality timber flooring in Melbourne to homes and businesses across the city.

    To learn more about our timber flooring products or to discuss your project, contact our team today or visit our Ravenhall showroom.

    Opening Hours

    Monday - Friday 9am - 5pm

    Scroll to top