Flooring Waste Factor

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Flooring Waste Factor: How Much Extra Material to Order

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

Add a waste factor to every flooring order: 5–8% for straight-lay LVP and laminate, ~10% for hardwood, 10–15% for tile, and 15–20% for diagonal or herringbone patterns. Then round up to full boxes. On a 1,000 sq ft straight LVP job at 8%, you order 1,080 sq ft. Under-order and a mid-job reorder costs you days, a possible dye-lot mismatch, and your margin.

Waste factor is the cheapest insurance on a flooring job, and the most common place new installers lose money. Order too little and you stop the job to reorder — eating labor, risking a dye-lot color shift, and looking unprofessional. Order way too much and you’ve bought material you can’t bill. The right percentage, applied every time, fixes both.

Waste factor by material and layout

Flooring / layoutWaste factor
LVP / laminate, straight lay5–8%
Hardwood, straight lay8–10%
Tile, straight lay10%
Diagonal layout (any)+5% on top
Herringbone / chevron / patterns15–20%
Lots of cuts, angles, small roomsadd 2–5%

Layout matters as much as material: the same LVP at straight-lay needs 8%, but run it diagonally and you’re closer to 12–13% because every edge cut creates an offcut you can’t always reuse.

A real example

A 1,000 sq ft LVP living/dining space, straight lay:

  • Base area: 1,000 sq ft
  • 8% waste → 1,080 sq ft to order
  • Plank box covers ~20 sq ft → 54 boxes → round up to 55 boxes (1,100 sq ft)

That box-rounding step is the one people skip. You don’t buy 1,080 sq ft — you buy whole boxes, so you always round up to the next full box. The leftover also becomes the homeowner’s attic spare for future repairs, which is a nice professional touch to mention.

Why under-ordering is the expensive mistake

Running short isn’t just “order more.” It’s: stop the crew, lose a half-day or more of production, pay a second delivery or pickup, and risk the reorder coming from a different dye lot with a visible color/shade variation across the floor. On a job with $2,100 of labor in it, a one-day stall can cost more than the entire waste-factor overage would have. Always err on the full-box side.

Recommended template

Flooring Estimate Calculator Pro

Applies the right waste factor per floor type automatically, rounds to full boxes, and rolls it into materials + labor + markup for a print-ready estimate. Excel + Google Sheets — no more hand-rounding boxes on a notepad.

Waste factor is step one of a clean bid — see the full method in how to estimate a flooring job, put it on a proper flooring estimate template, or sanity-check the order with the free Flooring Job Pricing Calculator.

TTC

Trade Templates Co. builds back-office templates for solo trade businesses, QA’d against real job numbers before they ship. Percentages are field ranges — adjust for your material and room conditions.

Frequently asked questions

What is a good waste factor for LVP?

5–8% for straight lay; add ~5% for diagonal. Round up to full boxes after applying it.

Why is herringbone waste so high?

Angled, interlocking patterns create more unusable offcuts at every edge and direction change — 15–20% is realistic.

Do I round to square feet or boxes?

Boxes. Flooring sells by the box, so always round up to the next full box above your waste-adjusted square footage.

What about dye lots?

Order all the material for a job at once from the same dye lot. A reorder can arrive a shade off and show across the floor.

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