Everest

Other colors in this collection:

Admiral OakAdobe Red OakAgate OakAglow OakAlcott MapleAlhambra OakAllegro OakAlverstone Red Oak

Specifications

Everest Engineered Hardwood starts at $8.99/sq ft installed in Fort Myers — a wide-plank caramel oak floor from LW Flooring’s Montclair collection with an embossed-in-register texture that reads as genuinely wood-grained underfoot. At 9-3/8″ wide and 72″ long, each plank makes rooms feel open without fussiness. The warm caramel tone pairs well with both coastal-neutral and earthy interior palettes common throughout Southwest Florida.

What Everest Engineered Hardwood is built for

At 14mm thick with a click-lock floating installation, Everest is built to move slightly with the seasonal humidity swings that are routine in Southwest Florida — without gapping or buckling the way solid hardwood can on a concrete slab. The AC4 wear rating means it handles steady foot traffic, pet claws, and the kind of sandy grit that gets tracked in from the beach or the lanai.

It fits naturally in living rooms, dining rooms, bedrooms, and hallways. The aluminum oxide finish resists scuffs from daily use, and the painted beveled edge keeps grout-line-style shadows looking clean even as the floor wears in. Snowbird owners and landlords appreciate the lifetime residential warranty for long-term peace of mind.

Product Specifications

Plank Width 9-3/8″
Plank Length 72”
Thickness 14mm
Wear Layer AC4
Finish Aluminum Oxide
Species Oak

Installed pricing in Fort Myers & Southwest Florida

Flooring Queen installs Everest at $8.99 per square foot, covering material, delivery to your home, removal of your old flooring, standard subfloor prep for level surfaces, installation, base molding, and transition strips at doorways. Debris is hauled off the job site when the crew wraps up — no piles left in the driveway.

Jobs that involve significant floor leveling, out-of-plane concrete slabs, stair nosing, or custom border work are priced separately — those costs vary by scope and we won’t guess at them in advance. Schedule a free in-home measure and you’ll receive a written line-item quote before any commitment is made.

How Everest Engineered Hardwood compares

Solid hardwood and engineered hardwood are both real oak, and visually they can be nearly identical. The difference is structural. Solid planks are milled from a single piece of wood, which means they expand and contract more dramatically with humidity changes — a real liability on concrete slabs in Southwest Florida, where moisture vapor migrates upward year-round. Engineered hardwood like Everest uses a layered core that resists that movement without sacrificing the authentic look or the oak surface you’re actually walking on.

Where solid hardwood wins: it can be sanded and refinished more times over its life, which matters if you’re planning a 40-year stay. Where Everest wins: stability over concrete, lower installed cost, and a click-lock system that doesn’t require glue or nail guns — making future repairs significantly easier.

Everest Solid Hardwood
Water resistance Surface-resistant; not waterproof core Surface-resistant; not waterproof core
Scratch resistance / wear layer AC4 aluminum oxide finish Varies by finish; no standard rating
Comfort underfoot Solid wood feel; 14mm thick Solid feel; typically 3/4″ thick
Installed price $8.99/sq ft installed Often $10–$14/sq ft installed
Best room Living areas, bedrooms, over slab Above-grade rooms with wood subfloor

Care & maintenance

Sweep or vacuum with a soft-bristle attachment weekly — avoid beater-bar settings that can scuff the aluminum oxide finish over time. For damp mopping, use a hardwood-specific cleaner like Bona Hardwood Floor Cleaner or a pH-neutral product; wring the mop nearly dry before it touches the floor, as standing water on seams can work into the core. Never use steam mops, ammonia-based cleaners, or oil-based soaps — they degrade the finish and can swell the wood layer. Wipe spills promptly. Area rugs at entry points help keep grit off the surface between cleanings. For technical guidance, see the National Wood Flooring Association consumer hardwood information.

Frequently asked questions

How long does Everest need to sit in the house before it gets installed?

LW Flooring recommends acclimating Everest for at least 48–72 hours in the room where it will be installed. In Southwest Florida’s high-humidity climate, this step matters — the planks need to reach equilibrium with your home’s interior conditions before the click-lock joints are set, or you risk gaps or pressure after install.

Can the oak surface on this floor be sanded and refinished down the road?

Everest can be lightly refinished, though the number of times is limited by the thickness of the oak wear layer above the core — it is not as deep as a solid hardwood plank. For most homeowners, one careful refinish is realistic. Check with LW Flooring for the specific millable depth before committing to any sanding work.

Can this go directly over my old tile, or does it have to come up first?

In many cases, Everest’s click-lock floating system can be installed over existing tile or vinyl as long as the surface is flat, firmly bonded, and within acceptable height tolerances. Loose tiles, heavily textured surfaces, or floors that put the finished height out of range at transitions will need to be addressed first — something we assess at the measure.

Will standing water damage this floor, or is it truly waterproof?

Everest is not a waterproof floor — it is a wood-core engineered hardwood with a surface finish that resists light moisture and everyday spills when wiped up promptly. Prolonged standing water, flooding, or consistent moisture at seams can work into the wood layer and cause swelling or cupping. It is not the right choice for bathrooms or laundry rooms.

Why do flooring pros in SWFL recommend engineered hardwood over solid for homes built on slabs?

Engineered hardwood is the standard recommendation over concrete slabs in Southwest Florida because its cross-ply core resists the moisture vapor that migrates through slab foundations year-round. Solid hardwood expands and contracts aggressively with humidity swings, leading to cupping, gapping, and squeaking on slabs — problems that are far less common with a dimensionally stable engineered plank like Everest.

What’s a realistic timeframe for getting Everest installed — one room versus the whole house?

A single room typically takes one day once the crew is on site. A whole-home project covering 1,000–1,500 square feet usually runs two to three days, depending on layout complexity, the number of transitions, and how much subfloor work is needed. Click-lock installation moves efficiently, but intricate room shapes or lots of cut-ins slow the pace.

Why buy from Flooring Queen

When you invest in hardwood, the install matters as much as the wood. Flooring Queen is licensed, insured, and family-run from a single Fort Myers showroom — no franchise, no national-chain shuffle. Free in-home measure: (239) 763-0770.

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Reviewed by Jack Maya, Lead Installer at Flooring Queen — 20+ years installing flooring in Southwest Florida.

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