Old, worn kitchen floors drag down your whole home. We replace them fast and right.

Cracked tiles, peeling vinyl, and warped boards are more than eyesores. Las Vegas caliche soil causes foundation shifting. This cracks kitchen floors faster than most homeowners expect. Heat makes it worse. Grout dries out, tiles loosen, and old vinyl gets brittle. It starts lifting at the seams. Sheet vinyl was a common builder-grade choice in 1990s and 2000s homes. It breaks down faster in desert climates.[1] We've pulled up Summerlin floors where the subfloor was already soft. The longer you wait, the worse it gets.
Cracked tiles are a sign of movement underneath. In Las Vegas, soil shifting is a real and common cause.
Old vinyl lifts at the edges and bubbles in the middle. Heat and age speed this up fast in desert homes.
A slow leak under the sink can rot the subfloor before you notice. We check the base layer before anything goes down.
Many Las Vegas homes from the early 2000s still have the original floors. They've done their job. It's time for an upgrade.
Soft or bouncy spots mean the subfloor has a problem. We fix the base first so the new floor lasts.
New cabinets and countertops look odd with old floors. Replacing the floor ties the whole kitchen together.
A bad floor install costs more to fix than to do right. We're a family-owned business. We treat your home the way we'd treat our own. Our crew is trained hands-on by the owner. They're OSHA certified and don't cut corners on prep work. That matters more than most people realize.
We handle kitchen flooring replacement as part of our full kitchen remodeling work. Call us and we'll set up a time to take a look.
The process is straightforward. We keep you in the loop at every step.
We come out, look at your kitchen, and talk through your options. You pick the material that fits your style and budget. We don't push you toward anything. We show you what works.
We pull up the old floor and check what's underneath. If the subfloor needs repair or leveling, we handle it first. This is where most installers cut corners. We don't.
We install your new floor and clean up the space. Then we walk through it with you. You check the work and ask questions. We don't call it done until you're satisfied.
Pricing depends on kitchen size, material choice, and what we find under the old floor. Luxury vinyl plank, porcelain tile, and hardwood all land at different price points. Subfloor repairs add to the total if needed. Las Vegas homes from the 1990s and 2000s often have subfloor issues from hard water and soil movement. We give you a clear number before work starts. No hidden fees, no surprise invoices.
Here are the questions we hear most from Las Vegas homeowners before they book.
Most kitchen flooring jobs in Las Vegas run between $1,500 and $8,000 or more. Kitchen size matters most. Material choice is the second biggest factor. Porcelain tile costs more than luxury vinyl plank. Subfloor work adds to the total if needed.
Most kitchen flooring replacements take one to three days. Smaller kitchens with no subfloor issues can finish in a day. Larger kitchens or jobs needing subfloor repair take longer. We give you a realistic timeline before we start.
You can, but most homeowners underestimate the prep work. Getting the subfloor flat and level is the hardest part. Las Vegas soil movement leaves many homes with uneven subfloors. A bad install leads to cracked tiles or warped planks within a year. It's one of the more common calls we get.
Porcelain tile and luxury vinyl plank are the most popular choices here. Both handle heat well and hold up against hard water. Hardwood looks great but needs more care in a dry climate. Luxury vinyl plank is the best value for most Las Vegas kitchens.
It depends on the cause. A cracked tile from a dropped pan is low urgency. Cracking across multiple tiles usually means the subfloor or soil is moving. That gets worse over time. Small cracks can turn into full subfloor replacements when homeowners wait too long.
Cracked tiles, peeling vinyl, soft spots, and water stains are the main signs. Grout that keeps cracking or coming loose is another. Las Vegas homes from the 1990s and 2000s often show these signs around the 15 to 20 year mark. An uneven floor underfoot is worth a look.
Yes, we do. We check the subfloor every time before installing anything new. If we find soft spots, rot, or unevenness, we fix it first. Skipping that step is a common mistake. A new floor over a bad subfloor won't last. One customer called us after another contractor tiled over a soft subfloor. The tiles started cracking within weeks.