How to Estimate a Flooring Job

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How to Estimate a Flooring Job (With Real 2026 Numbers)

By the Trade Templates Co. desk · Reviewed against real job numbers · June 2026
Quick answer

To estimate a flooring job: measure the area and add a waste factor (5–10% for plank/LVP, 10–15% for tile and diagonal patterns), price the material at your cost, add labor at your burdened rate using a realistic production rate, add prep and old-floor removal, then apply your markup to hit your target margin. Below is the full method on a real 1,000 sq ft LVP job that prices out at $5,900.

Most flooring bids lose money in one of three places: a waste factor that’s too low, labor estimated at the raw wage instead of the burdened cost, and forgetting prep/removal. Get those three right and your estimate holds up. Here’s the step-by-step.

Step 1 — Measure and add waste

Measure each room, add them up, then add a waste factor for cuts, defects, and pattern matching: 5–8% for straight-lay LVP and laminate, 10% for hardwood, 10–15% for tile or diagonal/herringbone layouts. On a 1,000 sq ft LVP job at 8% waste, you order 1,080 sq ft — and round up to full boxes.

Step 2 — Material cost

Price at your real cost including underlayment, adhesive/fasteners, trim, and transitions. Example: 1,080 sq ft LVP @ $2.00 = $2,160, plus $400 underlayment/trim = $2,560 materials.

Step 3 — Labor at your burdened rate

This is where bids go wrong. Use a realistic production rate — a crew lays roughly 400–600 sq ft of LVP per day — and your burdened labor cost, not the wage. A $25/hr installer costs ~$35/hr loaded. At ~500 sq ft/day, 1,000 sq ft ≈ 2 days ≈ 16 crew-hours; figure it per sq ft and you land around $2.10/sq ft = $2,100 labor. Run your true number in the free Labor Burden Rate Calculator before you commit.

Step 4 — Prep and removal

The forgotten line. Old-floor tear-out, subfloor leveling, and haul-away are real labor and dump fees. On this job: $300 removal + $140 disposal = $440. Never bury this in “labor” — call it out so the client sees it and you don’t eat it.

Step 5 — Total it and apply markup

BucketAmount
Materials$2,560
Labor (burdened)$2,100
Prep + removal + disposal$440
Direct cost$5,100
Markup to ~14% margin (÷0.86)$5,930 → $5,900

Remember markup ≠ margin: to actually keep a margin you divide cost by (1 − margin). Don’t eyeball it — the Markup vs Margin Calculator and the free Flooring Job Pricing Calculator do this in seconds.

Recommended template

Flooring Estimate Calculator Pro

Multi-room square footage with per-type waste factors, box-coverage rounding, materials + burdened labor + markup, and a print-ready client estimate. Excel + Google Sheets — the whole method above, automated.

Once the number’s right, put it on a proper estimate template with a scope and an expiration date, and capture any later changes with a change order so the bid that wins is the bid that profits.

TTC

Trade Templates Co. builds back-office templates for solo trade businesses, QA’d against real job numbers before they ship. Numbers are illustrative — use your own local material and labor costs.

Frequently asked questions

What waste factor should I use for flooring?

5–8% for straight-lay LVP/laminate, ~10% for hardwood, 10–15% for tile or diagonal/herringbone patterns. Round up to full boxes.

How do I price flooring labor?

Use a realistic production rate (≈400–600 sq ft/day for LVP) and your burdened labor cost, not the raw wage. It usually lands around $2/sq ft, but run your own burden rate.

Should removal and prep be separate lines?

Yes — call out tear-out, leveling, and disposal so the client sees them and you don’t absorb them into “labor.”

How much should I mark up a flooring job?

Enough to hit your target margin after overhead — and remember to divide by (1 − margin), not just add a percentage.

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