Can you put peel and stick tile over laminate flooring

Is vinyl flooring an easy, affordable update—or just a temporary solution?

Updated on March 31, 2022

No matter how much you love your home, there are always a few aspects that require an update (or worse, a complete remodel). While many projects can be completed over a weekend and with a humble budget, others require more time and financial commitment. Installing new flooring is a perfect example of the latter.

Given that flooring is traditionally such a major commitment, it makes sense that a handful of alternatives have sprouted up that offer a fresh look for less money and less hassle. Peel and stick flooring, which is applied over your existing floors in a manner similar to wallpaper, is one such option. But is it the quick fix of your dreams or just a temporary improvement?

Ultimately, the answer depends on your overall budget, space, and personal preferences. To help you make the decision, it'll help to know exactly what you're dealing with and what you can expect from peel and stick flooring.

Peel and Stick Flooring Facts

Most peel and stick flooring is made from vinyl.

Peel and stick flooring is made from a vinyl material that's roughly 0.3 to 0.5 millimeters thick (much thicker than wallpaper). It is also sometimes referred to as vinyl plank flooring, vinyl tiles, or peel and stick tiles.

"While you might think of the laminate flooring from decades ago—and maybe cringe a bit—peel and stick flooring comes in a huge variety of patterns and styles, and can be an affordable alternative to engineered or more luxury products," says Tamara Day, an interior designer and the host of HGTV's Bargain Mansions.

This flooring can cost between $1 to $5 per square foot.

Depending on the quality and style of the flooring, you can expect to pay between $1 and $5 per square foot, which means that a 200-square foot room costs between $200 to $1000 to have peel and stick floors installed. You can save on the cost by installing the floors yourself, which Day says is surprisingly easy to do.

It's best to use this flooring as a temporary solution.

Peel and stick flooring is particularly ideal for spaces where you're looking for a short-term solution, or for areas where you don't want to invest a ton of money just yet.

"The material is actually very durable and somewhat water-resistant," says Day. "For instance, I consider them a great solution for a kids' space or a multi-purpose room. Because these vinyl tiles are easy to install yourself and pretty easy to remove later on, you can use them while the kids are young and upgrade the space to something more sophisticated when they've outgrown a playroom."

Peel and stick flooring could also work in a guest bedroom, the laundry room, or even in a walk-in closet. On the other hand, Day recommends avoiding super high-traffic areas, such as the living room or an entryway, or major "splash zones," including bathrooms and kitchens. That said, some people opt to install vinyl plank flooring throughout their house and have had a positive experience doing so.

Peel and stick flooring can last between five and 25 years.

On average you can expect peel and stick floors to last between five and 25 years. However, their life span ultimately comes down to how well they're installed, how much traffic they receive, and whether they're repeatedly exposed to water. (Note that while some products are approved for heavier water areas, you may find that the flooring lasts longer if such areas are avoided.)

Excellent installation means that the subfloor is in good shape and completely even before you apply the peel and stick planks. "In a space that is rarely used you will get a lot more life out of it than you would from a high traffic area, but even in your high traffic area, you will have years of use if the flooring installed well," Day says.

There are a variety of styles to suit any home.

This type of vinyl flooring has come a long way from the eclectic sheet vinyl found in outdated kitchens and baths. Instead, today's peel and stick flooring can look like wood planks or stone tile, and options are available for every design style.

Summary

Peel and stick flooring can be a cost-effective, low-hassle way to add an updated look to your space. It's particularly ideal for areas that don't receive a ton of traffic, and can even serve as a temporary solution while you save up for more expensive options. When installed properly and maintained well, it can last for 25 years and beyond, and it comes in a variety of styles to suit a variety of tastes.

Vinyl tile and other types of vinyl flooring such as sheet or plank are excellent choices for remodeling a kitchen or a bathroom.

Vinyl flooring is economical and durable. Its resistance to moisture is unparalleled by other types of flooring. It is easy to install by yourself, and you can generally have a small room completed within a day or two.

The standard application is to install vinyl flooring on plywood underlayment. What if you already have a flooring covering in place and you don't want to remove it? Can you put vinyl flooring over tile or other kinds of floor coverings?

Install Vinyl Tile Over These Floors

With the proper substrate, you can install vinyl flooring over:

  • Concrete flooring
  • Laminate flooring
  • Vinyl flooring
  • Solid hardwood flooring
  • Engineered wood flooring
  • Ceramic or stone tile

As with many other remodeling projects, preparation is a major part of the job. With flooring installation, preparing the correct base—or substrate—is critical for a long-lasting, beautiful floor. It is even more important with thin floor coverings such as vinyl flooring.

When considering whether to refloor, your current floor covering is now the de facto substrate. So, the same conditions that apply to traditional plywood subfloor apply to this floor covering substrate.

Vinyl Flooring Over Wood Flooring

Solid hardwood or engineered wood flooring may serve as bases for vinyl flooring. If the wood is heavily gapped, these gaps must first be fixed. Old solid hardwood can cup or swell over time, too. This condition would make direct installation over the wood difficult. Wood flooring of this type would need an intervening underlayment.

Vinyl Flooring Over Laminate Flooring

Laminate floor may act as a substrate for vinyl flooring. Like solid wood flooring, laminate can swell when subjected to water. As vinyl should only be installed over a smooth, well-adhered substrate, it is necessary to fix high-moisture areas first and make sure it is as even as possible. Check around the dishwasher, sink, and refrigerator for such areas.

Floating laminate flooring is not attached to the subfloor, so it's easy to pull up. If yours is a floating floor (not glued down), you'll probably get better results if you remove the laminate flooring instead of laying vinyl on top of it.

Vinyl Flooring Over Tile

Vinyl flooring can be installed directly over ceramic and porcelain tile flooring if the grout lines are very thin. Cracked or missing tiles should be fixed or filled in. Wide seams between the tiles will likely create slight depressions in the vinyl flooring. If the tile floor has wide or deep seams, use an underlayment rather than installing the vinyl directly on the tile.

Click Play to Learn How to Install Vinyl Plank Flooring Over Tile

6 Criteria for Putting Vinyl Over Other Floor Coverings

In most cases, you can install vinyl flooring on top of existing flooring. Generally, there is nothing inherent about the lower floor covering's material that precludes it from acting as a substrate for the upper vinyl flooring. As long as that lower floor covering has all of the attributes of a proper substrate, it can be used.

Keep in mind that vinyl flooring is thin, soft, and flexible. Vinyl flooring cannot effectively bridge over or smooth out substrate imperfections in the way that thicker, inflexible floor coverings can. Solid hardwood or engineered wood, for example, can bridge gaps, holes, and seams, as well as smooth over surface embossing.

With vinyl flooring, any one of those imperfections could transfer, or telegraph, to the vinyl flooring above. Even worse, large holes could cause parts of the vinyl flooring to form craters over time.

Often, a substrate of large-format boards, such as 1/4-inch thick, 4-foot by 8-foot plywood or MDF particle board sheets, is used as an underlayment before the vinyl flooring is installed. This substrate is an addition to the subfloor. Large-format underlayment sheets work well for vinyl flooring because they add some strength, have few seams, and bridge over small holes and surface embossing.

Sturdy and Solid

Removing floor coverings helps the installer assess the condition of the subfloor. By not removing the existing floor covering, it is difficult to see if the subfloor is cracked, rotted, or otherwise is not in good condition. Make sure that the existing floor covering and the subfloor and any possible underlayment are sturdy enough for the installation of the vinyl flooring.

Seamless or Tightly Seamed Flooring

Large-format boards provide an installation surface that has few seams. In a kitchen floor that is 16 feet long by 12 feet wide, for example, six underlayment boards would be used, resulting in only a few seams.

By contrast, a solid hardwood floor used as a substrate may have hundreds of seams. If that hardwood floor has other problems, such as wide gaps between the floorboards (often the result of water damage), it would be unsuitable as a substrate for the vinyl flooring.

No Holes or Other Imperfections

High spots in the substrate should be sanded down and low spots should be filled. While small imperfections might not immediately transfer to the vinyl flooring surface, over time they may expose themselves in the form of low craters or hills that gradually form on the surface.

Little or No Embossing

One of the desired visual qualities of some tile, laminate, and vinyl is surface embossing. Embossing provides slight highs and lows that help make the floor covering look more realistic (like the material they are emulating, such as wood) or simply to aid their appearance.

Pronounced embossing can eventually telegraph to the surface of the vinyl flooring. While this usually does not apply to thicker (6.5 mm) vinyl flooring, this may be the case with thinner boards in the 3.5 mm or less range. Thin vinyl will quickly pick up on the lower texture and telegraph it to the surface.

Dry Underneath

Trapping moisture between vinyl flooring and its substrate may create mold and mildew since the moisture has no avenue of escape. Newly poured concrete flooring must fully cure and dry out before vinyl flooring is laid on top.

Acceptable Height

Whenever adding one flooring on top of another flooring, height becomes an issue. If the previous version was presumably an acceptable height, will the higher version be too high? Using vinyl flooring as a top layer is one of the better choices in this respect since it adds less height than other types of flooring.

Can you put vinyl tiles on top of laminate flooring?

With the proper substrate, you can install vinyl flooring over: Concrete flooring. Laminate flooring.

Can you put stick on tiles on laminate flooring?

The tiles will also stick to laminate flooring, providing it is in good condition, sealed and has a very fine grain or better still – no grain. The tiles will also stick to sheet vinyl flooring, again if it is smooth, sealed & in good condition. The tiles will also stick to ceramic tiles if they are untextured.

Can you put peel

Condition Is Everything. Stick-on vinyl tiles can be laid directly over an existing vinyl floor as long as the floor is in good condition. The existing vinyl must be securely attached to the subfloor and not bubbling, lifting or curling at the edges.

What can you put over laminate flooring?

Some of the best options for laying flooring over laminate include:.
Foam interlocking mats..
Foam rolls..
Rubber interlocking tiles..
Rubber rolls..
Vinyl plank floors..
Vinyl rolls..
Cork rolls..
Ceramic tiles..