Luxury vinyl plank flooring (LVP) is one of the most popular flooring choices for homes and rentals in Lexington, KY and throughout Central Kentucky because it offers durability, waterproof performance, and lower installation costs than many traditional floors.Â
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Q: Luxury Vinyl Plank vs Laminate: Which Flooring Is Better?
Luxury vinyl plank (LVP) is usually the better option for most homes because it’s waterproof, more stable over concrete, and more forgiving in kitchens, basements, and high-traffic areas. Laminate can still work well in dry, low-risk spaces, but it’s far less tolerant of moisture and humidity.Â
The biggest practical difference between luxury vinyl plank and laminate is how each material responds to moisture. LVP is made from vinyl-based materials and is designed to tolerate spills, pet accidents, and everyday moisture without swelling or structural damage. Laminate uses a wood-fiber core, which can absorb moisture if water reaches the seams or edges, leading to permanent swelling even when the surface initially looks unaffected.
Stability is another major separator, especially in homes built on concrete slabs or in climates with seasonal humidity changes. Many modern LVP products are engineered to remain dimensionally stable under those conditions. Laminate can feel solid underfoot and may offer good scratch resistance, but it generally requires tighter moisture control and faster cleanup to avoid long-term problems. For that reason, laminate is usually best suited for dry, well-controlled spaces, while LVP is more forgiving in kitchens, basements, entryways, and busy households.
We see this decision play out almost weekly. One customer in Lexington was set on laminate for a finished basement because they liked the feel and price point. After talking through the slab conditions and hearing from their installer about past water-related callbacks, they switched to LVP before ordering. A few months later, they stopped back in and mentioned a small water issue from a sump pump discharge that would have destroyed laminate but left the LVP untouched.
Installers we work with often tell us the same thing: laminate failures usually aren’t about wear, they’re about moisture. On jobs where customers choose LVP instead, especially over concrete, there tend to be fewer surprises down the road. That real-world pattern is why LVP usually makes more sense unless the space is very dry and tightly controlled.