Timber Floor Finishes, Explained
A timber floor’s finish decides three things: how it looks, how it feels underfoot, and how you clean it. The two families are lacquered, a sealed surface that wipes clean, and oiled, which soaks in for a natural, matt look. Brushing and texture then shape the character. Here is how to choose.
Finish and texture are two decisions, not one
Every timber floor makes two calls. First, the finish: the coating that protects the wood and sets its sheen, either a lacquer that seals the surface or an oil that soaks in. Second, the texture: how the board is worked, from dead-smooth to heavily brushed. Most textures pair with either finish, which is why two European oak floors can look and feel completely different. Our floors are engineered European oak, and across the range you will find matt UV-lacquered, natural-oiled and ultra-matt raw-look options.
Below: the main finishes explained, an oiled-versus-lacquered comparison, and a simple way to choose. Then order samples to see each one in your own light.
Lacquered and oiled: the two finish families
Matt and UV-lacquered
A lacquer sits on top of the timber as a fine, sealed layer. Modern lacquers, including ultra-matt options, keep a natural look while giving you an easy-wipe surface. Several of our ranges use a German UV lacquer.
- Look: clean and even, from ultra-matt through to a soft sheen
- Feel: smooth, sealed surface underfoot
- Everyday care: a pH-neutral wood-floor cleaner; skip household detergents that can dull it
- Tends to suit: busy homes wanting low-fuss, wipe-clean floors
Natural and hardwax-oiled
An oil soaks into the wood rather than forming a film, so the grain and texture stay open and the floor reads warm and natural. Hardwax oil adds wax for a little more surface protection. Oiled floors are maintained by re-oiling in place, not sanding back.
- Look: natural and matt, grain and character on show
- Feel: tactile, close to raw timber
- Everyday care: a compatible oiled-floor cleaner, plus a periodic re-oil to feed the surface
- Tends to suit: a natural look, owners happy with a care rhythm
Brushed and textured floors
Texture is worked into the board before it is finished, and it changes the whole feel of a floor. Brushing drags out the soft grain and leaves the harder grain slightly raised, giving the surface a subtle, tactile relief. A light brush stays refined; a heavy brush reads rustic and hides everyday marks well. For the most natural, barely-there look, ultra-matt and raw-effect finishes keep the timber looking almost unfinished while still sealing it. Texture pairs with either finish, so you can have a brushed and oiled floor or a brushed matt-lacquered one.
Browse floors by finish: oiled, lacquered and ultra-matt / raw.
Oiled vs lacquered: the comparison
Same European oak board, two different finishes, two different floors to live with. This is the honest trade-off, not a winner. The right call depends on your traffic, your household and how you like to look after a floor.
| What matters | Oiled | Lacquered |
|---|---|---|
| Look | Natural and matt, grain and texture open | Clean and even, ultra-matt to a soft sheen |
| Feel underfoot | Warm and tactile, close to raw timber | Smooth, sealed surface |
| Everyday cleaning | Compatible oiled-floor cleaner, no harsh detergents | pH-neutral wood-floor cleaner, no household detergents |
| How wear tends to show | Wear sits in the timber surface, so scratches tend to blend in | Wear sits on the sealed layer, so scuffs and scratches tend to show on the surface |
| Repairing marks | Worn areas can usually be cleaned and re-oiled in place, without a full sand | Spot repairs are harder; a worn area often means re-coating a larger section |
| Upkeep rhythm | A little more routine: re-oil periodically to feed the surface | Lower-touch day to day; re-coat occasionally |
| Tends to suit | A natural look, owners happy with a care rhythm | Busy households wanting an easy-wipe surface |
Wear and repair behaviour is general to each finish type and varies with the product, the texture, and how a floor is used and maintained. It is not a performance guarantee.
Choosing the finish for your project
Match it to your traffic
Hallways, kitchens and homes with kids and pets take more knocks. Think about how a floor shows wear and how easily you can put marks right.
Decide on the look and feel
Want the grain open and a natural, matt hand-feel? Lean oiled. Want a clean, uniform, wipe-clean surface? Lean lacquered. Texture then dials the character up or down.
Be honest about upkeep
Oiled floors reward a light care rhythm; lacquered floors are lower-touch day to day. Neither is hard, but pick the one that fits how you live. See care by finish.
See it in your own light
Finish and texture change completely between showroom lighting and your home. Order free samples and view them morning and night before you commit.
Caring for your finish
Every finish looks its best on the right care system. Start with our timber floor maintenance and cleaning guide, then follow the routine for your finish: care for oiled floors or care for lacquered floors. Matching the cleaner to the finish is the single biggest thing you can do to keep a floor looking new.
Common questions about floor finishes
What’s the difference between oiled and lacquered timber floors?
Lacquered floors carry a fine sealed layer on top of the timber; oiled floors are finished with an oil that soaks into the wood rather than forming a surface film. Lacquered reads as a clean, even surface that wipes clean. Oiled reads more natural and matt, with the grain and texture open to touch. It changes the look, the feel underfoot and how you care for the floor.
Which is more durable, oiled or lacquered?
Neither is simply tougher; they wear differently. On a lacquered floor the sealed layer takes the knocks, so scuffs and scratches tend to show on the surface and are harder to fix invisibly in one spot. On an oiled floor wear sits in the top of the timber, which usually means worn patches can be cleaned and re-oiled in place without sanding the whole floor. The best choice depends on your traffic, household and how you like to maintain a floor.
Which needs more maintenance?
Oiled floors ask for a little more routine care: a compatible cleaner and a periodic re-oil to feed the surface, done in place rather than sanded back. Lacquered floors are lower-touch day to day: sweep, then clean with a pH-neutral wood-floor cleaner and avoid household detergents that can dull the finish.
Can I change the finish later?
Usually yes, but it is a job for a professional. Re-coating, or switching between oiled and lacquered, means the existing finish has to be removed or prepared first, and the two systems are not interchangeable without that step. It is easier to choose the finish you want up front, which is why we send free samples so you can see and feel each one.
Next steps
Order free samples
See and feel each finish and texture in your own light before you decide. Free, and the fastest way to choose.
Browse a collection
See how finish and texture come together across a full European oak range, from matt-lacquered to natural-oiled.
What it costs
Finish, format and grade all move the price. See how timber flooring is priced in New Zealand.
Order samples to see the finish in your light
Finish and texture change completely between a showroom and your own home. Order free European oak samples and view them where the floor will actually live.