Medford Engineered Hardwood starts at $8.99 per square foot installed in Fort Myers — a warm honey-toned oak floor from LW Flooring’s Uptown Avenue collection. The wide 9-inch planks carry an embossed-in-register finish that puts realistic grain texture right where you’d expect it on real oak. Micro-beveled edges give each plank a clean, defined look without making the floor feel busy.
The glue-down installation method makes Medford a natural fit for Southwest Florida homes built on concrete slab — one of the most common foundations across Fort Myers, Cape Coral, and the surrounding coastal communities. Gluing directly to the slab keeps the floor stable when humidity swings between the dry season and the thick summer air off the Gulf.
The 12 mil polyurethane wear layer and lifetime residential warranty suggest this floor is built for real daily use — not just a light-traffic guest room. It holds up reasonably well in snowbird homes that sit closed for months, and the 9-inch plank width suits open-concept living areas where narrow strips tend to look undersized.
| Plank Width | 9” |
|---|---|
| Plank Length | 60” |
| Thickness | 2.0mm |
| Wear Layer | 12 mil |
| Finish | Polyurethane |
| Species | Oak |
Flooring Queen installs Medford Engineered Hardwood at $8.99 per square foot, and that price covers more than just the material being laid. It includes removal of your existing flooring, standard subfloor preparation, the installation itself, new baseboards, transition strips between rooms, and cleanup and disposal of the old material once the job is done.
Some situations add to that base price — significant subfloor leveling beyond normal prep, stair nosing on multi-story homes, or decorative borders and inlays. Call us or schedule a free in-home measurement and we’ll put together a written quote scoped to your actual floor plan before any work begins.
Shoppers who want real oak often compare engineered hardwood against solid hardwood. The core difference in Southwest Florida is moisture response. Solid oak expands and contracts significantly with humidity swings — the kind that happen here every summer — and it cannot be glued directly to a concrete slab, which rules it out for most SWFL homes without a raised wood subfloor. Medford’s engineered construction handles slab installs cleanly and stays more dimensionally stable in humid conditions.
Where solid hardwood wins: if you refinish floors repeatedly over decades, solid planks give you more material to sand down. Medford’s 12 mil wear layer supports light refinishing, but solid oak has a larger margin. If longevity through multiple refinishes is the priority, solid hardwood is worth the added cost and installation complexity.
| Medford | Solid Hardwood | |
|---|---|---|
| Water resistance | Better — stable on slabs, handles humidity | Poor — warps without vapor barriers, no slab glue |
| Scratch resistance / wear layer | 12 mil polyurethane wear layer | Full-thickness oak, refinishable more times |
| Comfort underfoot | Solid feel, slight give from engineered core | Firm, dense, classic hardwood feel |
| Installed price | $8.99/sq ft installed | Typically $12–$16/sq ft installed |
| Best room | Main living areas, bedrooms on slab | Above-grade rooms with wood subfloor |
Sweep or vacuum with a soft-bristle attachment regularly — fine sand and grit tracked in from outside are the main culprit for surface scratches on any oak floor. For mopping, use a hardwood-specific cleaner like Bona Hardwood Floor Cleaner or a comparable pH-balanced product applied with a barely damp mop. Avoid steam mops entirely; the heat and moisture can compromise both the polyurethane finish and the engineered core over time. Do not use oil soaps, wax-based products, or anything marketed as a “refresher” coat — those leave residue that dulls the finish and makes professional recoating harder down the road. For technical guidance, see the National Wood Flooring Association consumer hardwood information.
In Southwest Florida’s humidity, plan for at least 48 to 72 hours of acclimation inside the room where the floor will be installed. Keep the HVAC running at normal living conditions during that window — not on a vacation setback. Skipping this step risks minor gapping or buckling after the floor is down.
Medford can be lightly refinished, but the 12 mil wear layer limits how many times that’s realistic — typically once, maybe twice with a very light screen-and-recoat rather than a full sand. It’s not the right floor if your long-term plan involves multiple heavy refinishes over 30-plus years.
For a single room, installation usually wraps in one day once materials are on site. A whole-home project of 1,000 to 1,500 square feet typically runs two to three days. The glue-down method adds dry time, so plan to stay off the floor for 24 hours after the crew finishes.
Real oak flooring — engineered or solid — is a recognized positive in SWFL resale, especially in mid-range to higher-price-point homes where buyers compare finishes closely. It reads as a quality upgrade over vinyl or laminate. That said, it’s not a guarantee of a higher sale price; condition and layout matter more than the floor category alone.
Day-to-day care costs very little — a bottle of hardwood cleaner like Bona runs under $15 and lasts for months. No sealing or waxing is needed on the polyurethane finish. If the finish eventually dulls after years of use, a professional recoat is an option, typically in the $1.50–$2.50 per square foot range depending on scope.
Medford is well-suited for main living areas, dining rooms, hallways, and bedrooms — anywhere on a concrete slab where a glue-down install is practical. Avoid wet areas: bathrooms and laundry rooms are not appropriate for engineered hardwood regardless of wear layer. Below-grade installations (true basement slabs with active moisture intrusion) are also not recommended for this product.
Engineered hardwood is the only wood we recommend over SWFL slabs, and we install it every week. Our team handles substrate moisture testing, layout, install, and trim from one source. Written installed quote: (239) 763-0770.
Continue exploring:
Considering a different material?
Reviewed by Jack Maya, Lead Installer at Flooring Queen — 20+ years installing flooring in Southwest Florida.
Let’s Discuss Your Flooring Project Today