Floor height difference - how much is too much?
Discussion
Morning all,
Quick one for someone with experience of this.
We’re changing some flooring in our living room - laminate 12mm stuff coming up and click together lvt type stuff going down.
The new floor is only 4 or 5mm thick including underlay, whereas existing laminate is 12mm plus thickness of the underlay. We have tiles in the hallway (probably around 1mm lower than existing laminate).
My worry is the difference in height caused by 7/8mm between flooring types, plus the additional 3mm or whatever from underlay that will be present under the laminate and not the lvt will be too noticeable and annoying.
Has anyone dealt with this in practice and am I worrying about nothing? Concrete floor so could be raised with self levelling I guess but it’s fairly flat now so hesitant to do this if not needed.
Cheers
Quick one for someone with experience of this.
We’re changing some flooring in our living room - laminate 12mm stuff coming up and click together lvt type stuff going down.
The new floor is only 4 or 5mm thick including underlay, whereas existing laminate is 12mm plus thickness of the underlay. We have tiles in the hallway (probably around 1mm lower than existing laminate).
My worry is the difference in height caused by 7/8mm between flooring types, plus the additional 3mm or whatever from underlay that will be present under the laminate and not the lvt will be too noticeable and annoying.
Has anyone dealt with this in practice and am I worrying about nothing? Concrete floor so could be raised with self levelling I guess but it’s fairly flat now so hesitant to do this if not needed.
Cheers
We had the same issue. Although this was done around 8 years ago and you can see the flooring closest to the camera has dropped a bit now.
It's a little bit hard to see, but they angled the threshold, so that its a little ramp and it works well as you do not catch your foot on it. The height difference is about 1-2cm.
Edit, please excuse the dog hairs, the cleaner comes on Friday

It's a little bit hard to see, but they angled the threshold, so that its a little ramp and it works well as you do not catch your foot on it. The height difference is about 1-2cm.
Edit, please excuse the dog hairs, the cleaner comes on Friday


RizzoTheRat said:
paulrockliffe said:
Can you not just screw 10mm ply all over the floor to bring it up?
Or insulation boards, the stuff intended to go underneath underfloor heating is around that thicknessThanks folks, having been thinking about this today I realised one of our other rooms has a 6 or 7mm step down off tiles onto some crappy laminate (not sure on thickness other than not much).
We’ve been here 4 years and I had never noticed! We’re lifting the flooring in the living room this weekend, and I have a sample of the new flooring so I will try it and see how it looks. But good to know there are options either way with thresholds/ply etc.
We’ve been here 4 years and I had never noticed! We’re lifting the flooring in the living room this weekend, and I have a sample of the new flooring so I will try it and see how it looks. But good to know there are options either way with thresholds/ply etc.
TA14 said:
You simply need a sloped, hardwood threshold; usually the width of the door frame/portal opening.
I will need to do similar for the threshold from the bedroom to my new tiled bathroom floor.Does anyone have any good links to kick ass threshold products because the ones down at B&Q are s

Steve H said:
That’s about a 10mm lip and then another 10-15mm rise over the next 300mm (ish). There’s always a way of making it work.
Please excuse the dog, MrsH says it’s necessary.
Just to update my original post I have seen a few mixed reports on the click lvt stuff now regarding separation etc.
Current thoughts are leaning back towards laminate again, although hopefully a better quality one than the crap that is there at the minute - solves the height issue and a big rug will keep the dog from sliding and us from hearing him clattering about!)
jb2410 said:
Steve H said:
That’s about a 10mm lip and then another 10-15mm rise over the next 300mm (ish). There’s always a way of making it work.
Please excuse the dog, MrsH says it’s necessary.
Just to update my original post I have seen a few mixed reports on the click lvt stuff now regarding separation etc.
Current thoughts are leaning back towards laminate again, although hopefully a better quality one than the crap that is there at the minute - solves the height issue and a big rug will keep the dog from sliding and us from hearing him clattering about!)
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