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Finished living room remodel with neutral flooring and natural light in a St. George home

Choosing Flooring for Your Next Remodel

If you are planning flooring projects as part of a remodel, the right choice should fit how you live, how each room functions, and how the rest of the renovation comes together.

Sunstar Construction, LLC is a licensed general contractor based in St. George, UT. We serve homeowners throughout Southern Utah, Southern Nevada, and Northern Arizona with full remodeling, renovations, and coordinated flooring installation.

  • 15+ years experience
  • Free consultation
  • Assigned project manager
  • Licensed in UT, NV, and AZ

Intro

Quick answer

Choosing flooring for a remodel starts with function first, then finish. You want a floor that matches the room’s moisture level, traffic, maintenance needs, comfort expectations, and budget, while also fitting the larger remodel plan.

Sunstar Construction, LLC helps homeowners plan and complete remodeling projects in St. George, UT and throughout the surrounding region. This includes coordinated flooring installation, kitchen remodels, bathroom remodels, home additions, and full rebuilds. This guide walks through how to choose the right flooring for each space and what to consider before installation begins.

A smart home flooring update should feel coordinated, not pieced together. That matters even more when flooring connects to cabinets, baseboards, tile work, trim, or room-to-room transitions.

Common flooring goals

Quick answer

Most homeowners comparing flooring projects are balancing seven things at once: durability, comfort, maintenance, style, moisture resistance, resale appeal, and budget. Before you compare samples, get clear on what matters most in your space.

Durability

High-traffic rooms need tougher surfaces. If you have kids, pets, or an active household, durability often comes first. Entries, kitchens, stairs, and main living areas usually take more wear than bedrooms or formal spaces.

Comfort

Some rooms call for a warmer, softer feel underfoot. Bedrooms and playrooms often benefit from carpet or added padding. If you prefer hard surfaces, rugs and room layout can still improve overall comfort.

Maintenance

Choose materials based on your real-life housekeeping routine. Resilient surfaces are straightforward to sweep, wipe down, and keep clean, while natural wood, grout lines, or stone may require more routine care.

Style

Flooring should support the design scheme rather than compete with it. Lighting, cabinet tones, paint colors, millwork, and countertops all influence how the final floor will read in the space.

Moisture resistance

Direct water exposure changes which materials make sense. Bathrooms, laundry spaces, kitchens, and lower-level rooms usually benefit from moisture-conscious surfaces such as tile or luxury vinyl instead of solid wood.

Resale appeal

Consistent flooring can visually connect adjacent rooms and help a home feel more updated. If you may sell in the next few years, neutral, broadly appealing finishes often support resale.

Budget alignment

The best flooring choice fits both the room and the overall remodel scope. Not every room needs the same material. A thoughtful whole-home flooring plan lets you invest wisely where it matters most.

Material considerations for flooring projects

Quick answer

The right flooring material depends on traffic, moisture exposure, comfort needs, maintenance tolerance, and how it integrates with the rest of your remodel. Here’s a practical comparison most St. George homeowners use:

Finished kitchen remodel with hard-surface flooring, dark cabinets, and large windows

Finished kitchen remodel with coordinated hard-surface flooring

If you are stuck between two materials, it helps to work with a contractor who looks beyond the sample board. The right decision often depends on trim details, transitions, subfloor condition, and remodel sequencing.

Explore flooring installation services

LVP and other resilient flooring

  • Best for: busy households, kitchens, living areas, and many whole-home updates
  • Moisture resistance: strong
  • Comfort: moderate
  • Maintenance: easy
  • Watch for: subfloor prep still matters, and product quality can vary.

Tile

  • Best for: bathrooms, entries, laundry spaces, and some kitchens
  • Moisture resistance: very strong
  • Comfort: firmer underfoot
  • Maintenance: easy surface care, but grout needs attention
  • Watch for: hardness, grout upkeep, and transition planning.

Carpet

  • Best for: bedrooms and spaces where warmth and softness matter
  • Moisture resistance: low
  • Comfort: high
  • Maintenance: moderate to higher, depending on household use
  • Watch for: stains, traffic wear, and cleaning expectations.

Hardwood or wood-look options

  • Best for: living spaces, bedrooms, and homeowners who want warmth and character
  • Moisture resistance: varies by product
  • Comfort: moderate
  • Maintenance: moderate
  • Watch for: moisture sensitivity with some materials and compatibility with adjacent rooms.

Room-by-room planning

Quick answer

The best answer to how to choose flooring for each room is usually not one product for every space. Main living areas often benefit from continuity, while bathrooms, bedrooms, and stairs may need different priorities.

Kitchens

Best for: spill resistance, daily traffic, easy cleanup

Kitchens need flooring that handles repeated use and occasional messes. If cabinets, appliances, trim, or layout changes are part of the project, flooring should be planned with the remodel, not after it. For broader project planning, see kitchen remodel planning in St. George.

Bathrooms

Best for: moisture resistance, clean transitions, durable finish

Bathrooms usually need stronger water resistance and careful doorway and fixture planning. Many homeowners prefer hard-surface bathroom flooring options for that reason. If your floor is part of a larger bath update, explore bathroom remodel flooring options.

Finished bathroom remodel with tile flooring, wood cabinetry, and glass shower

Bathroom remodel with moisture-conscious flooring selection

Living areas

Best for: continuity, everyday durability, visual flow

Living rooms, family rooms, and open-concept spaces often benefit from one consistent material. This can make the home feel larger and more connected.

Bedrooms

Best for: comfort, warmth, quiet

Bedrooms are often where homeowners choose softness first. Carpet remains common, but hard-surface floors with area rugs are also popular in a modern home flooring update.

Finished interior stair remodel with carpeted stairs and clean white walls

Stair and hallway remodel with coordinated flooring transitions

Stairs and entry areas

Best for: wear resistance, safe transitions, clean finish work

These areas show wear quickly and also highlight installation quality. Every cut, edge, and transition is easier to notice here, so careful planning matters.

If you are comparing St. George flooring options for more than one room, it helps to work with a contractor who sees the full path through the home, not just one isolated space. Sunstar provides St. George flooring and remodeling services with a whole-project mindset.

Confidence and coordination matter

Flooring choices often touch more than one trade. Baseboards, tile, cabinets, appliance resets, paint touch-ups, and trim details all affect the finished result.

That is why clear communication and quality finishing work matter as much as material choice during a remodel.

Kitchen remodel in progress showing cabinets, rough electrical work, and preparation for finish installation

Remodel in progress where flooring decisions must align with cabinetry and finish work

Installation considerations

Quick answer

Before flooring installation starts, the biggest issues to address are subfloor condition, room-to-room transitions, scheduling, and how the work will happen in an occupied home.

  • Subfloor condition

    Checklist item: Check the surface below before choosing finish details. Even the right flooring can fail or look uneven if the subfloor is damaged, out of level, or not ready.

  • Transitions between rooms

    Checklist item: Plan height changes and edge details early. Doorways, stair edges, and material changes affect both appearance and daily use. Good transitions help the remodel feel intentional instead of patched together.

  • Timeline planning

    Checklist item: Coordinate flooring with cabinets, paint, fixtures, and trim. When should you replace flooring during a remodel? Usually when it best supports the larger project sequence. In many remodels, timing matters just as much as material.

  • Occupied-home logistics

    Checklist item: Talk early about access, dust, staging, and room use. Many homeowners stay in the home during the remodel. Sunstar Construction, LLC regularly coordinates projects with communication and timeline awareness in mind, and each project has an assigned project manager.

When to involve a contractor early

Bring in help early if:

  • your flooring update overlaps with cabinets, countertops, tile, or layout changes
  • you are remodeling more than one room
  • you want transparent bids before buying material
  • you need help sequencing work in an occupied home

Sunstar Construction, LLC brings together in-house employees, estimators, support staff, and a reliable subcontractor network to keep project coordination practical and clear.

FAQ

Are you licensed for projects outside Utah?
Yes. Sunstar Construction, LLC is licensed in Utah, Nevada, and Arizona.
Can flooring installation be done as part of a kitchen or bathroom remodel?
Yes. Flooring is often coordinated with cabinet work, tile, trim, and other finish work during kitchen remodels and bathroom remodels.
Do you work in occupied homes?
Yes. Sunstar coordinates remodeling work with communication and scheduling in mind. If you are living in the home during the project, that should be part of the planning conversation early.
What should you know before flooring installation?
You should know the condition of the subfloor, the transition points between rooms, the project schedule, and whether the flooring needs to coordinate with cabinets, trim, or tile work.
What happens during the consultation process?
The consultation is a chance to talk through your goals, room conditions, material direction, and overall remodel scope so you can get a clear next step.
Where is Sunstar Construction, LLC based?
Sunstar Construction, LLC is located at 1136 E 200 S Unit 3, St. George, UT 84790 and can be reached at (435) 681-2771.

Ready to plan your flooring project?

Whether you are replacing floors in one room or coordinating larger flooring projects as part of a remodel, Sunstar Construction, LLC can help you make practical choices that fit your space, schedule, and budget.

+1 435-681-2771
1136 E 200 S Unit 3, St. George, UT 84790