Laminate Damage Guide

Laminate Floor Water Damage

Laminate water damage usually shows up where moisture has reached joins, edges or the subfloor below. Once swelling or lifting appears, the useful question is not only how to dry it, but whether the affected section can stay stable.

What It Looks Like

Swelling, lifting and soft joins are common warning signs

Look for raised edges, swelling at joins, soft spots, bubbling, colour change or boards that no longer sit flat. These signs often mean moisture has reached the part of the board that does not recover like a sealed surface.

What Causes It

The source is not always obvious at first

The cause may be obvious, like a leak or spill, or less obvious, like repeated wet mopping, a damp mat, pet accidents or moisture from below. Finding the source matters because replacing boards without fixing the cause can repeat the same damage.

Leaks

Appliance, plumbing or wall leaks can create localised or broader laminate swelling very quickly.

Wet cleaning

Repeated over-wet mopping can allow moisture to work into the joins over time.

Hidden moisture

Subfloor dampness or recurring room moisture can keep damaging replacement boards if the underlying condition is not fixed first.

Repair Or Replace

The extent of the damage usually decides the answer

A small isolated issue may be manageable, but swelling across several boards often changes the economics. Compare repair and replacement when the damaged area is spreading, returning or tied to a moisture source that may have reached below the surface.

Scope Check

Water damage quotes should clarify more than the product

For laminate water damage, check whether the quote includes removal, disposal, subfloor drying or preparation, trims, moisture checks and site details. The total is easier to compare once those items are written clearly.

Prevention

Fast spill response and low-moisture cleaning matter most

Clean spills quickly, avoid soaking the floor, keep wet mats off laminate, and use trays under pet bowls or plant pots. Low-moisture habits matter because laminate is most vulnerable when water gets into joins and edges.

When To Call A Professional

Get help when swelling and lifting are no longer isolated

Call for help when swelling is no longer isolated, the same area keeps lifting, or a leak/subfloor issue may be involved. That is when a replacement estimate can prevent spending on short-term fixes that may not hold.

Quote Ready

Check replacement cost before spending more on repeated moisture fixes

If measuring manually is inconvenient, a floor plan can help confirm the affected area before you quote. The estimate is more useful when replacement area, removal, preparation and finishing items are checked together.

FAQ

Laminate water damage questions

What does laminate floor water damage look like?

Laminate water damage often shows as swollen joins, raised edges, soft sections, bubbling, surface change or boards that start to lift after moisture exposure. The damage may appear after a leak, repeated wet mopping, pet accident or moisture trapped under a mat. Once swelling is visible, the affected board edges usually need closer review rather than more cleaning.

Can swollen laminate flooring be repaired?

Sometimes a small isolated issue can be managed, especially if the moisture source is fixed quickly and the surrounding boards are stable. Broader swelling, raised joins or movement across several boards often makes replacement more practical. The key question is whether the moisture problem has stopped or is still active.

What usually causes laminate water damage?

Common causes include plumbing or appliance leaks, standing water, over-wet cleaning, wet mats, pet accidents and moisture coming from the room or subfloor. Laminate is most vulnerable when water reaches joins and edges. If the cause is hidden, new boards can be damaged again after replacement.

When should I compare replacement cost?

Compare replacement cost when damage affects multiple boards, keeps returning, or includes swelling and lifting across a wider area. A replacement estimate helps you decide whether temporary repair work is still worth it. Include removal, disposal and floor preparation if the damaged floor needs to come out.