skip to main content
Sign In
Join as a Pro
History of Houzz
PHOTOS
KITCHEN & DININGKitchenModular Kitchen Dining RoomHome Bar
LIVINGLiving RoomHome TheaterHome Office Staircase
BED & BATHBedroomNurseryKid's RoomBathroom
OUTDOORGardenPatioTerrace & BalconyCourtyard
MORE ROOMSPuja Room Wardrobe ExteriorSwimming PoolView All
FIND PROFESSIONALS
DESIGN & RENOVATIONArchitects & Building Designers Interior Designers & Decorators Civil Engineers & Contractors Design-Build Firms Kitchen & Bath Designers Landscape Architects & Contractors Home Builders & Construction CompaniesPhotographersSpecialty Contractors
View All Pros
HOME IMPROVEMENT Furniture & AccessoriesFlooring & CarpetTile, Stone & CountertopBedding & Bath
View All Services
STORIES
LATEST FROM HOUZZ
Houzz ToursKitchen GuidesBathroom Guides Bedroom Guides
Decorating Guides Outdoors Architecture
HOUZZ TV
HOUZZ RESEARCH
ADVICE
HOUZZ DISCUSSIONS
Design DilemmaBefore & After PollsHome Decorating KitchensLiving Rooms
Bedrooms Dining RoomsExterior Lighting PaintBuilding a Home
Houzz Logo Print
More Room Guides
More Room Guides
35 Serene Puja Room Designs
Top Ideabooks
35 Serene Puja Room DesignsTurn One Room Into Two With These Genius Ideas7 Stylish Ways to Dry Your Laundry In a Small Apartment7 Types of Glass That Allow in Light & Privacy
Appears in
Recent Ideabooks
See also
Living RoomsKids SpacesHome OfficesDining Rooms
Decorating Guides
Decorating Guides
Busted! 5 Myths About Working With an Interior Designer
Top Ideabooks
Busted! 5 Myths About Working With an Interior DesignerCan Hiring an Interior Designer Save You Money?What Are the Benefits of Hiring an Interior Designer?Turn One Room Into Two With These Genius Ideas
Appears in
Recent Ideabooks
See also
Small SpacesDecorating IdeasFloorsColour GuidesLighting IdeasFestival Guides
Decorating Ideas
Decorating Ideas
35 Serene Puja Room Designs
Top Ideabooks
35 Serene Puja Room Designs30 Best Sofa Designs7 Types of Glass That Allow in Light & Privacy9 Ways to Make Minimalism Work in Indian Homes
Appears in
Decorating Guides

How to Make Different Floors Come Together In The Same House

Wood in one room, tile or stone in another? Here's how to make them work together

Pangaea
Pangaea17 February 2018
More
One problem my clients ask me about is how to decide where to start and stop flooring when you want to change the material. Especially in open plan homes this can be a real puzzler. Challenges can also arise when you want to replace flooring in part of the home, but aren’t ready to put new flooring throughout the entire home. Handle it wrong and your home looks like a patchwork quilt – and not in a good way!

Here are some great examples showing how several designers successfully handled transitions in flooring.
Mark English Architects, AIA
There isn't always a logical or obvious place to change from one flooring material to the next. Using some imagination can give you interesting results. The inspiration for this ideabook came from this photo. I thought that following the wood's live edge as it undulates created such an interesting look. It reminds me of an ocean wave as it runs up on the sand. An appropriate water theme for a bathroom!
Battle Associates, Architects
Entryways are a common area where we find ourselves wanting to change flooring. Stone or tile can stand up to moisture and mud tracked in from outside, but hardwood is still the most popular flooring material for the rest of the house.

This entryway has two logical transition points at the openings to the hallways. The colours in the stone also pick up the tones in the wood which makes the two materials look good right next to each other.

Here’s how to create an illusion of an entry hall when there isn’t one
mark pinkerton - vi360 photography
In open-plan homes, the entryway may not have any logical starting and stopping point for a flooring change. In this home a tile rectangle large enough for a handful of people to stand on defines the entry area. The tiles form a path leading to the hallway. Hardwood is used for the remaining areas.

A couple of things I like about this example: The darker shade in the diamond pattern is very close to the colour of the wood flooring, so they work well next to each other with regard to colour. The diamond pattern is also a nice contrast to the linear pattern of the wood.
Modus Design Studio
In this entryway, stone tiles run right down the middle of the hall with wood on either side, almost like a carpet. I love the tone-on-tone look of the dark espresso colour for both materials.


Take a look at the stone floors perfect for Indian floors
Birdseye Design
This designer made a similar decision but reversed the materials, with wood chosen as the walkway and stone leading off into the adjoining rooms. I like that the direction of the wood runs across the hall so it doesn't look like a bowling alley. I also like that the direction of the wood and the stone tiles are perpendicular to each other.
Mandy Brown Architects, PC
If you want to set the entry floor apart but don't want to use a different material, here's a nice idea. The wood is set in a herringbone pattern in the entry and then switches to a straight pattern at the hallway.
Merzbau Design Collective
Kitchens are another place where flooring may change. This bright apple green looks spectacular next to the light natural colour of the wood. The same wood tones are found in the cabinetry in the kitchen, creating a nice tie-in.
Planet Fur
Sometimes you just have to pick a spot and run a line. This transition lines up with the wall, but not the island. The white moulding covering the line between the wood and the grey kitchen flooring material ties in the colour of the island and feels better to me than if the moulding had matched either the grey flooring or the wood.

These kitchen floor tiles rule the roost
Intercub Interiors
Here stone wraps around the island to protect the floor from kitchen spills during prep work. It continues on past cabinetry and the stairway, creating a durable walkway.
Harrell Design + Build
In this kitchen, stone tiles are laid in the center, but not all the way to the cabinets, with the wood surrounding its perimeter. It gives the effect of an area rug.
Slightly Quirky Ltd
This bathroom combines wood and stone tile by creating a square to contain the splash zone. The wood colour matches the exterior of the tub making it feel visually connected.

Check out these tiles perfect for bathroom flooring
Lili Fleming-Nieri, ASID
The main living areas of an open-plan home can have flooring changes handled in a number of ways as long as they make sense and don’t make the room feel chopped up. In this home, there is an angle in the room with carpeting for the living area and stone for the dining area. The stone and carpet being very close in colour minimises the visual impact of the flooring change so the room still flows uninterrupted.
Vanguard Studio Inc.
All wood in one area flows into a wood-and-stone pattern in the living room creating even better flow than if all wood changed to all stone.
Arthur Dyson Architects
Elevation changes are great places to change the flooring and define areas without dividing them. The light wood flooring contrasts sharply with the grey tile, giving clear definition to the two levels.
MusaDesign Interior Design
These two levels are much closer in colour, but the blocks of wood on the upper level create an interesting pattern against the polished concrete.
Schnarr Craftsmen Inc
Even when your level changes are farther apart, you still want to keep in mind how the flooring choices look if they can be seen together. The view from this upper level takes in both floors.
frankovitchjm
It can be tricky to use two kinds of wood flooring in the same house. If they are too similar in grain and colour, it can look like an unsuccessful attempt to match them. This home shows a beautiful use of two kinds of wood flooring. They work together beautifully for a few reasons:

1. They are strikingly different in colour, yet the lighter flooring has a variety of colours pulling in some of the deep colour of the darker wood flooring.
2. They are on different levels, so there is a clear place to stop one and start the other.
3. They define different areas of the home.
Elad Gonen
If you want to feature a flooring choice in a small area, keep the surrounding flooring to one material. Here, using the same flooring upstairs and downstairs makes these stair treads stand out.
One of the reasons these examples are successful is because they have restricted their choices to just two types of flooring within view at any time. Too many types of flooring all seen at the same time makes spaces feel smaller. Letting flooring flow from room to room when possible tends to make a space feel larger.

So, although you don’t have to use the same flooring throughout your entire home to make it feel larger, coordinating their look and making good transitions will assure that your flooring flows gracefully from space to space.

Read more:
10 Unique Options for Your Floors

Tell us:
Have you experimented with transition in floor tiles at home? Share images and your ideas in the Comments below.
Explore Related Topics
More Room GuidesDecorating GuidesDecorating Ideas
Read Related Stories
35 Serene Puja Room Designs35 Serene Puja Room Designs
By Aditi Sharma Maheshwari·7
Decorating Ideas
Turn One Room Into Two With These Genius IdeasTurn One Room Into Two With These Genius Ideas
By Vaishnavi Nayel Talawadekar·0
Decorating Guides
7 Stylish Ways to Dry Your Laundry In a Small Apartment7 Stylish Ways to Dry Your Laundry In a Small Apartment
By Vaishnavi Nayel Talawadekar·5
Small Spaces
7 Types of Glass That Allow in Light & Privacy7 Types of Glass That Allow in Light & Privacy
By Rebecca Gross·8
Decorating Guides
Which False Ceiling Material is Better: Gypsum or POP?Which False Ceiling Material is Better: Gypsum or POP?
By Pooja Khanna Tyagi·8
Most Popular
No Space for a Walk-In Wardrobe? Think AgainNo Space for a Walk-In Wardrobe? Think Again
By Laura Wheat·14
More Room Guides
12 Breakfast Nooks Cool Enough for a Dinner Party12 Breakfast Nooks Cool Enough for a Dinner Party
By Susan Redman·56
Dining Rooms
Indoor Plants You Just Can't KillIndoor Plants You Just Can't Kill
By Shristi Nangalia·5
Decorating Ideas
10 Must-Have Elements in an Inspiring Home Gym10 Must-Have Elements in an Inspiring Home Gym
By Laura Gaskill·47
Decorating Ideas
False Ceiling: Yes or No?False Ceiling: Yes or No?
By Vinita Kunnath·4
Decorating Guides
40 Incredible Hallways To Take You From One World To Another40 Incredible Hallways To Take You From One World To Another
By Aditi Sharma Maheshwari·0
Small Spaces
How to Clean Tiles: Daily Cleaning TipsHow to Clean Tiles: Daily Cleaning Tips
By Vinita Kunnath·8
Kitchen Guides
Designed to Impress: Must-Have Elements in Home BarsDesigned to Impress: Must-Have Elements in Home Bars
By Pooja Khanna Tyagi·0
Decorating Ideas
What to Do With a Brick Wall Inside Your HomeWhat to Do With a Brick Wall Inside Your Home
By tidgboutique·111
Decorating Guides
Key Measurements: How to Design the Perfect Recreation RoomKey Measurements: How to Design the Perfect Recreation Room
By Steven Randel·25
Decorating Guides
People who liked this story also liked
35 Serene Puja Room Designs
35 Serene Puja Room DesignsFull Story
Turn One Room Into Two With These Genius Ideas
Turn One Room Into Two With These Genius IdeasFull Story
7 Stylish Ways to Dry Your Laundry In a Small Apartment
7 Stylish Ways to Dry Your Laundry In a Small ApartmentFull Story
7 Types of Glass That Allow in Light & Privacy
7 Types of Glass That Allow in Light & PrivacyFull Story
Which False Ceiling Material is Better: Gypsum or POP?
Which False Ceiling Material is Better: Gypsum or POP?Full Story
No Space for a Walk-In Wardrobe? Think Again
No Space for a Walk-In Wardrobe? Think AgainFull Story
12 Breakfast Nooks Cool Enough for a Dinner Party
12 Breakfast Nooks Cool Enough for a Dinner PartyFull Story
Indoor Plants You Just Can't Kill
Indoor Plants You Just Can't KillFull Story
10 Must-Have Elements in an Inspiring Home Gym
10 Must-Have Elements in an Inspiring Home GymFull Story
False Ceiling: Yes or No?
False Ceiling: Yes or No?Full Story
  • India
  • ABOUT
  • MOBILE APPS
  • PROFESSIONALS
  • BUTTONS
  • FAQs
  • CAREERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • Terms
  • © 2023 Houzz Inc.