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Sand & Refinish vs Recoat vs Replace: Which Does Your Auckland Floor Need?

A clear guide to the three options for a tired timber floor — what each costs, how long it takes, and how to tell which one your floor needs.

Call: 09 888 0793

Years of experienceFully insuredLow-dust machineryNon-toxic, non-yellowing coatingsFree on-site quotes
Quick answer: Choose a recoat if the finish looks dull but the timber is sound. Choose sand & refinish if there are scratches, grey or bare patches, or stains. Choose replacement only if boards are rotten, badly cupped, or too thin to sand again. For most Auckland floors, sanding and refinishing is the right call — replacement is rarely needed.

Which option does your floor need?

Answer five quick questions for an instant recommendation.










Call 09 888 0793 for a Free Assessment

This is a planning guide only. The surest way to know is a free on-site assessment — the difference between a recoat and a refinish often isn’t obvious until the coating is checked in person.

How this tool works: the recommendation is based on the problem you describe, the condition and thickness of the timber, and what matters most to you. Damaged or very thin boards point toward replacement; scratches, greying or stains point toward a full sand and refinish; a dull but sound finish points toward a recoat. It is a guide to help you plan, not a substitute for an on-site inspection.

At-a-glance comparison


Buff & RecoatSand & RefinishReplace
Best forDull or lightly worn finish, timber soundScratches, greying, stains, worn-through coatingRotten, cupped or damaged boards
What’s involvedLight buff + 1 fresh coatFull sand to bare timber + 2–3 coatsRip out + supply & lay new floor
Typical Auckland cost$35–$55/m²$65–$85/m²$150–$400/m² all-up
Time~1 day2–4 days1–2+ weeks
Keeps your timber?YesYesNo
Lifespan added2–3 years7–10 yearsNew floor
DisruptionLowMediumHigh
Common Auckland scenariosRental turnovers, a tidy-up before sellingHeritage villas, scratched living areas, sun-faded boardsWater-damaged or borer-affected floors

Real Auckland results


Before and after timber floor sanding in Auckland
Worn, marked boards restored to a rich, glossy finish.
Before and after floor sanding and polishing in Auckland
A tired floor sanded and polished to a smooth, even finish.

Option 1 — Buff & Recoat


Buffing and recoating (a maintenance coat) is the lightest, cheapest option. The existing finish is lightly abraded and a fresh protective coat applied over the top — no sanding back to bare timber.

Best for

  • Floors that look dull or have lost their shine
  • Light scuffs with the coating still intact
  • Protecting a good floor before wear reaches the timber

Advantages

  • Cheapest option (around $35–$55/m²)
  • Fast — usually done in a day
  • Low disruption and low dust
  • Extends the life of your existing finish

Limits

  • Won’t remove scratches, stains or grey patches
  • Not possible once the coating has worn to bare timber
  • Adds 2–3 years, not a full refresh

When to choose it

When the floor is sound and you just want to refresh and protect the finish before it wears down to the timber.

Option 2 — Sand & Refinish


Sanding and refinishing takes the floor back to bare timber, removing scratches, stains, greying and old coatings, then rebuilds the surface with 2–3 fresh coats. This is the right option for most tired timber floors.

Best for

  • Visible scratches, dents or stains
  • Grey, weathered or patchy timber
  • Coating that’s peeling or worn through
  • Floors you want looking like new again

Advantages

  • Restores the floor to near-new condition
  • Removes most scratches, stains and wear
  • Lets you change colour or sheen (matt, satin, gloss; stain or natural)
  • A quality finish lasts 7–10 years
  • Far cheaper than replacement — keeps your original timber

Limits

  • Takes 2–4 days
  • Some dust (modern extraction captures ~95%)
  • Needs enough board thickness left to sand

When to choose it

When the timber is sound but the surface is worn, scratched or dated. For most Auckland villas and homes, this delivers the biggest transformation for the money. See our wood floor refinishing and timber floor restoration pages.

Option 3 — Replace


Replacement means removing the old floor and laying a new one. It’s the most expensive and disruptive option, and only necessary when the existing timber can’t be saved.

Best for

  • Rotten, water-damaged or borer-affected boards
  • Severe cupping, warping or structural movement
  • Floors already sanded to the limit (boards too thin)
  • Switching to a different floor type entirely

Advantages

  • A brand-new floor with full lifespan
  • Chance to change timber, colour or layout
  • Fixes problems no refinish can

Limits

  • Most expensive (typically $150–$400/m² all-up)
  • Longest job — often 1–2+ weeks
  • High disruption; the old floor is lost

When to choose it

When the boards are genuinely beyond saving. A good specialist will always check whether refinishing is still possible first. See our wood floor installation page.

How to tell which your floor needs


  • Finish looks dull, no scratches? → Recoat
  • Scratches, grey patches or stains? → Sand & refinish
  • Bare timber showing through? → Sand & refinish
  • Gaps to close, or a colour change? → Sand & refinish (with gap filling / stain)
  • Boards rotten, springy or badly cupped? → Likely replacement
  • Sanded many times, boards feel thin? → Possibly replacement

Cost comparison (Auckland)


OptionTypical Auckland costWhy it costs what it does
Buff & recoat$35–$55/m²No sanding; one coat; fast, low labour
Sand & refinish$65–$85/m²Full sanding + 2–3 coats; more labour and materials
Replace (supply & lay)$150–$400/m² all-upNew timber + removal + installation + finishing

Prices vary with floor size, timber type, condition and finish. Larger areas usually cost less per m². All figures are indicative — get a free quote for your exact floor.

Most timber floors do not need replacing. If your boards are sound, sanding and refinishing will usually bring them back to life at a fraction of the cost of a new floor.

Frequently asked questions


Is it cheaper to refinish or replace timber floors?

Refinishing is far cheaper — usually a fraction of replacement cost — because it reuses your existing timber. A solid timber floor can be sanded and refinished 5–10 times over its life, so replacement is rarely needed.

How do I know if I need a recoat or a full sand?

If the coating is intact and the floor is just dull, a recoat is enough. If there are scratches, stains or bare timber showing, you need a full sand and refinish.

Can every timber floor be refinished instead of replaced?

Most can. Solid timber can be sanded many times. Replacement is only needed when boards are rotten, structurally damaged or too thin to sand.

How long does each option take?

A recoat is usually one day, a full sand and refinish 2–4 days, and a replacement 1–2 weeks or more.

Which option lasts longest?

A full sand and refinish lasts 7–10 years; a recoat adds 2–3 years; a new floor starts the lifespan over.

Not sure which your floor needs?
Get a free, no-obligation on-site assessment. We’ll tell you honestly whether a recoat, refinish or replacement is the right call — and quote your exact floor.

Get a Free Quote — Call 09 888 0793



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