Laminate Care Guide

How to Clean Laminate Flooring

Laminate cleaning should stay low-moisture, because swollen joins and edge damage are usually harder to reverse.

Cleaning Routine

The safest general approach is light cleaning, not heavy water

For most laminate floors, the simplest routine is also the safest.

What To Avoid

Excess water is the most common avoidable problem

Laminate floors often run into trouble because of repeated wet mopping or spills left sitting near joins and edges.

Daily care

Vacuum or sweep grit regularly so it does not scratch the wear surface under foot traffic.

Moisture response

Wipe spills quickly and avoid leaving wet mats, damp towels or standing water on the floor.

Scratch prevention

Use felt pads, avoid dragging furniture and keep pet nails and entry grit under control.

Warning Signs

What laminate damage can look like

Watch for swelling, whitening, lifting edges or soft spots where moisture may have reached the board.

Prevention

Simple prevention usually works better than strong cleaning products

Clean spills quickly, protect furniture feet and avoid steam mops or wet mopping unless the product allows it.

When To Call A Professional

Get advice when the issue is no longer just surface cleaning

Get advice when swelling, lifting or repeated moisture marks suggest the issue is beyond surface cleaning.

Quote Ready

Check replacement cost before committing to repeated fixes

Yes. If measuring manually is inconvenient, a floor plan is often the easiest way to confirm the area before you quote. It gives you a better starting number without forcing you to measure every room first.

FAQ

Laminate cleaning questions

Can I use a steam mop on laminate flooring?

That depends on the product and manufacturer instructions.

What is the safest way to clean laminate flooring?

Vacuum grit first, then use a slightly damp mop and dry the surface quickly. Avoid steam, flooding and harsh products.

Why is my laminate floor swelling?

Swelling usually means moisture has reached the joins or board core, or the floor has been exposed to repeated wet cleaning.

When should I replace laminate flooring instead of repairing it?

Yes. When damage is broad, repeated, moisture-related or spread across multiple boards, a replacement estimate is often the more practical comparison. It helps you judge whether repair work is still worth pursuing or whether full replacement makes more sense.