Replacing the floors throughout your home is one of the most transformative projects you can take on. Done well, it makes a home feel larger, more cohesive, and completely refreshed. Done without a plan, it can lead to mismatched materials and awkward transitions.
This guide walks through how to plan a whole-home flooring replacement in Las Vegas room by room, from choosing materials and planning transitions to sequencing the work and budgeting, so the finished result feels intentional throughout.
Benefits of Doing the Whole Home
Replacing all your floors at once creates a consistent, flowing look that individual room projects cannot match. It also lets you plan transitions deliberately and often makes better use of a single material order and crew schedule.
For homeowners staying long term or preparing to sell, a cohesive whole-home floor is one of the highest-impact upgrades available.
One Material or Mix and Match
You can run one material throughout the home or mix materials by room. A single luxury vinyl plank, for example, works in both wet and dry rooms and creates seamless continuity.
Alternatively, many homeowners use wood or engineered wood in living areas and bedrooms and waterproof LVP in kitchens, baths, and laundry rooms, coordinating tones so the home still feels unified.
Planning Transitions
Transitions are where whole-home projects succeed or fail. Thoughtful planning of where materials meet, how thresholds are handled, and how the floor flows between rooms keeps the result looking intentional.
We map transitions during the estimate so changes in material or direction feel deliberate rather than accidental.
Room-by-Room Considerations
Each room has its own needs, and matching the material to the space is the heart of good planning.
Kitchens, Baths, and Entries
These moisture-prone rooms reward waterproof luxury vinyl plank, which handles spills and traffic while flowing visually with the rest of the home.
Living Areas and Bedrooms
These spaces suit hardwood, engineered wood, laminate, or LVP, so you can choose based on feel, budget, and the look you want.
Sequencing the Project
A whole-home project is usually done in a planned sequence so the work stays organized and part of the home remains livable. We map out which rooms are done in what order and how long each stage takes.
Good sequencing keeps dust contained, protects your routine, and keeps the project moving efficiently.
Living in the Home During Replacement
Most homeowners stay in the home during a whole-home replacement. We work room by room when possible, contain dust, and keep clear pathways so daily life can continue.
Planning for some noise and keeping pets and children away from active areas makes the experience smoother.
Budgeting a Whole-Home Project
A whole-home budget should account for material, removal of old flooring, subfloor prep and leveling, installation, stairs, and trim across every room. Tile removal and slab leveling are common cost drivers in the valley.
We provide a clear, itemized written estimate so you can see the full picture and adjust the scope if needed.
Financing Options
A whole-home project is a significant investment, and you do not always have to pay for it all at once. Financing may be available through third-party providers, which can make it easier to do more in a single project.
Vegas Wood Floor Pros is not a lender, and any financing is subject to the provider's approval and terms. Ask about options during your estimate.
Phasing the Work
If the whole home at once does not fit the budget or schedule, phasing is a smart alternative. Many homeowners start with the main living areas, then complete bedrooms and stairs later.
When phasing, choosing your product up front keeps the same material and color available for later phases and the transitions consistent.
Choosing Cohesive Colors
Neutral, natural tones tend to have the broadest appeal and tie a whole home together, especially in the open floor plans common in newer valley homes. Consistent color across the main level makes the space feel larger.
We help you preview tones in your own lighting, since desert sun can shift how a floor reads.
Getting Started
A whole-home replacement starts with an on-site walkthrough so we can measure every room, assess the subfloor, and plan materials and transitions together.
Request a free estimate or book an appointment, and we will help you plan a cohesive, beautiful floor throughout your home.
Coordinating With Other Remodel Work
A whole-home flooring replacement often overlaps with other projects like paint, baseboards, or a kitchen refresh. Sequencing flooring correctly within a larger remodel protects the new floor and avoids redoing work.
In general, flooring goes in after messy overhead work like painting ceilings, and baseboards or trim are coordinated with the floor for a clean, finished edge. We help plan the order so everything comes together.
Managing Dust Across the Whole Home
A whole-home project means removal and prep in multiple rooms, which creates dust, especially when tile is involved. We contain work areas, protect rooms that are finished or not yet started, and clean as we go.
Working room by room keeps the dust contained to active areas and lets you keep living in the parts of the home that are done or waiting.
Planning Around Furniture and Daily Life
Moving an entire home's worth of furniture takes planning. We discuss who moves what, handle standard furniture where possible, and sequence rooms so you always have usable space.
Clearing closets, small items, and breakables ahead of time keeps each room ready and helps the crew move efficiently from space to space.
Neighborhoods We Serve
We handle whole-home flooring replacements throughout Las Vegas, Henderson, Spring Valley, and the surrounding communities, in both established homes and newer builds.
Older homes often benefit most from replacing original carpet and tile across the whole house, while newer open-concept homes shine with a continuous run of wood-look flooring.
Your Whole-Home Flooring Roadmap
A successful whole-home project comes down to a clear plan: the right materials per room, deliberate transitions, a sensible sequence, and a realistic budget and timeline.
Request a free estimate or book an appointment, and we will build that roadmap with you so your whole home comes together as one cohesive, beautiful space.
Choosing a Whole-Home Color Palette
Color is what ties a whole-home project together, so it is worth planning deliberately. Neutral, natural tones tend to have the broadest appeal and pair well with the open floor plans common in valley homes, and they make rooms feel larger and brighter.
Desert sunlight can shift how a tone reads, so it helps to preview samples in your own rooms at different times of day before committing. A color that looks perfect in a showroom can feel different under bright Las Vegas light.
We help you choose a palette that works across every room and flows naturally from space to space, even where the material changes.
Why Whole-Home Projects Are More Efficient
Doing the whole home in one project is often more efficient than tackling it room by room over years. A single material order, one mobilization of the crew, and coordinated transitions reduce repeated setup and keep colors and lots consistent.
It also avoids the awkward mismatches that happen when products change or get discontinued between separate projects. Everything is planned and installed as one cohesive whole.
For homeowners who know they want new floors throughout, doing it together usually delivers a better result and a smoother experience than piecing it out.
Timeline Expectations for a Whole-Home Project
A whole-home replacement takes longer than a single room, and setting realistic expectations up front keeps the experience smooth. Depending on the size of the home, the materials, removal, and prep, these projects typically run several working days.
Tile removal and slab leveling add time, while a straightforward carpet-to-LVP conversion moves faster. We sequence the rooms so the project stays organized and part of the home remains usable throughout.
Before we begin, you receive a clear schedule that lays out the order of rooms and how long each stage will take, so there are no surprises along the way.
Frequently Asked Questions
You can. Luxury vinyl plank works in both wet and dry rooms for seamless continuity. Many homeowners also mix wood in living areas with waterproof LVP in wet rooms, coordinating tones for a unified look.
In most cases, yes. We work room by room when possible, contain dust, and keep pathways clear so daily life can continue. We share a schedule before we begin.
It depends on the size of the home, the materials, removal, and prep. Whole-home projects typically run several working days, and we provide a realistic timeline in your estimate.
Yes. Many homeowners start with the main living areas and complete bedrooms and stairs later. Choosing your product up front keeps materials and colors consistent across phases.
Thinking About New Floors?
Get a free, no-obligation estimate from a local Las Vegas flooring team that does the job right.



