The basics · answered directly

What is engineered timber flooring?

Engineered timber flooring is a real timber floor, not a printed photograph of timber on top of plastic. The surface you walk on is genuine hardwood. What makes it engineered is what sits beneath it.

A genuine hardwood wear layer is bonded over a cross-laminated structural core. In Lifewood's Stabilised Solid® technology, invented in Perth by founder and UWA scientist Mark Hutchison, that core uses the same Australian hardwood species top and bottom, not pine, MDF, or rubber wood as standard imported floors use. The cross-laminated layers run in alternating directions, which is what gives the board its dimensional stability in Perth's extreme humidity swings.

The practical result: the floor does not warp, cup, or gap the way conventional solid timber can when Perth's summer sends inland humidity below 35% RH and temperatures push past 40°C. This is not a small difference. It is the reason Lifewood's technology was invented here, specifically for this climate.

Why this matters in Perth

The ATFA confirms all timber shrinks when humidity is low and swells when high. Perth's seasonal extremes, hot dry summers and mild wet winters, are among the most demanding of any Australian capital for timber performance. Generic imported flooring is engineered for European or Asian conditions. Lifewood's Stabilised Solid® is engineered for WA.

Watch · Mark Hutchison, Founder

What is Stabilised Solid Technology?

Lifewood founder and University of Western Australia scientist Mark Hutchison explains the patented construction in plain terms: why it was invented, what problem it solves, and why it matters for Perth homes.

Read transcript

Interviewer: So in the simplest possible terms, what is Stabilised Solid Technology and what problem existed in the timber industry that made you feel like you just had to invent it?

Mark Hutchison: The timber industry was fraught with unstable products, narrow boards, and a very wasteful timber milling process. What Stabilised Solid set out to do was to completely eliminate the waste coming from the timber mill. Instead of only using 30% of the log, we use the entire log.

We are actually able to use the high quality product on the top, the low quality product on the back, and all the short pieces from the timber milling process in the centre. And what that does is create a wide, stable, flat floorboard that we can give you a lifetime guarantee on.

We utilise the whole log. We put the high grade timber on the top, the lower grade on the bottom, and in the middle we run cross-engineering barriers across the floor and that makes the floor extremely stable. That enables us to go nice and wide but not very thick.

So we made a beautiful wide board, but at the same time kept it very thin and very stable. And we give people a lifetime warranty for that.

How it's built · Stabilised Solid® vs standard

What separates Lifewood's construction from standard engineered floors

Most engineered floors on the Australian market use an MDF, pine, or rubber wood core, cheaper to produce, but dimensionally inferior to hardwood, and significantly less resistant to the termite risk that exists across Perth's outer suburbs. Lifewood's Stabilised Solid® uses the same Australian hardwood species cross-laminated top and bottom. This is not a marketing claim. It is a structural decision that affects stability, termite resistance, and how many times the floor can be sanded over its lifetime.

Stabilised Solid® board construction · cross-section

9 layers
German factory coating
Applied pre-factory. UV stabilised. No onsite finishing, no drying time, walkable within hours of installation.
4–6mm
Genuine hardwood wear layer
Same species as core: Blackbutt, Spotted Gum, Jarrah, Tallowwood, Grey Ironbark, Marri, or French Oak. 4x sandable.
Cross-lam
Cross-laminated hardwood core (patented)
Same species as the surface, not pine, MDF, or rubber wood. Alternating grain directions absorb movement without transmitting it to the surface. Termite resistant.
Backing
Hardwood backing layer + moisture barrier
Full moisture barrier coating. Balancing layer prevents cupping from subfloor moisture variation. Critical for Perth's slab-on-ground construction.

Total board thickness: 15mm. Board dimensions: 1800–2200mm lengths × 130mm or 180mm widths in Australian Timber Collection. Grandeur Range: 320mm × 4000mm. All boards are pre-finished, no site sanding required.

Standard imported engineered floor

  • MDF, pine, or rubber wood core
  • Engineered for European or Asian humidity
  • Factory warranty passed to overseas manufacturer
  • Often requires onsite finishing and drying time
  • No termite resistance in core layers

Lifewood Stabilised Solid®

  • Same hardwood species cross-laminated top and bottom
  • Invented in Perth, for Perth's climate extremes
  • Lifetime structural warranty held directly by Lifewood
  • Nine layers of German coating pre-factory, walkable same day
  • Termite resistant core throughout
Red flag: what to ask any supplier

Ask to see the cross-section of the board. Ask what the core material is, specifically species, density, and whether it carries an independent termite resistance rating. Any supplier who cannot answer these questions with a data sheet is selling you a product they do not fully understand.

Verified April 2026 · All prices inc GST

How much does engineered timber flooring cost in Perth in 2026?

Lifewood publishes its prices in full. The table below shows supply-only and installed pricing for every collection in the range. All prices are current April 2026 and include GST.

Collection Specification Supply only Supply + install Wear layer
Natures Steel® - Aus Timber 180mm · Blackbutt or Spotted Gum · Bamboo core · ATFA Product of Year 2023 from $179/m² from $299/m² 3mm · 4x sand
Natures Steel® - French Oak 220mm · 4 colourways · Bamboo core from $179/m² from $299/m² 3mm · 4x sand
Australian Timber Collection 7 species · 130mm semi-gloss or 180mm satin · 1800–2200mm lengths from $209/m² from $329/m² 5mm · 4x sand
Marri · Jarrah 130mm or 180mm · additional $30/m² on above from $239/m² from $359/m² 5mm · 4x sand
French Oak Premium 2200 × 220 × 15mm · 9 colours · Matte lacquer · Light brush from $209/m² from $329/m² 4mm · 4x sand
French Oak Vintage 2500 × 260 × 18mm · 8 colours · Shrunken or 3D brushed surface from $239/m² from $359/m² 4mm · 4x sand
American Black Walnut 2200 × 220 × 15mm · Smooth satin · Stabilised Solid® from $249/m² from $369/m² 5mm · 4x sand
Parquetry - Chevron 120 × 600 × 15mm · 4mm wear · Minimum 100m² - $339/m² installed 4mm · 4x sand
Grandeur Range 320 × 4000mm · French Oak · Colour made to order from $399/m² Supply only 6mm · 4x sand

All prices include GST and are verified April 2026. A full itemised quote with room-by-room measurements is available from Lifewood's Osborne Park showroom. Call (08) 9445 9011 or visit 18 Hector Street West. Parquetry and Versailles panels require a minimum order of 100m².

How to read a flooring quote

Measure your rooms yourself before requesting a quote. A transparent quote shows net area, wastage (5–10%), supply cost, and installation cost as separate line items. If any supplier's area figure is more than 8% above yours, ask for written justification. Under Australian Consumer Law, the maximum deposit a flooring company can request is 6.5% of the total job value.

Perth Showroom · Osborne Park · Free · No pressure

Walk the floors. See every species in full-length boards. Leave with a written, itemised quote.

In 45 minutes, Lifewood's team will measure your space and hand you a full quote. Coffee's on. Parking's free. No appointment necessary, though calling ahead means we can have the right boards ready for you.

ATFA-verified · Species data

Which species is right for your home?

Lifewood's engineered range covers seven Australian hardwood species plus French Oak and American Black Walnut. The right species is a function of your traffic load, lifestyle, and aesthetic preference, not just colour. Here is the data.

ATFA-VERIFIED JANKA HARDNESS · ALL SPECIES IN LIFEWOOD'S ENGINEERED RANGE

Grey Ironbark
14.0 kNClass 1
Spotted Gum
11.0 kNClass 1
Marri
9.8 kNClass 2–3
Blackbutt
9.1 kNClass 1–2
Tallowwood
8.6 kNClass 2
Jarrah
8.5 kNClass 1
American Black Walnut
6.7 kNClass 3–4
French Oak
6.5 kNClass 2

Janka hardness ratings ATFA-verified. AS 5604 durability class shown. A minimum of 8.0 kN is recommended for homes with dogs or high domestic traffic.

Grey Ironbark
14.0 kN
Class 1 durability

The hardest species Lifewood supplies. Suited to the heaviest domestic traffic and homes with large dogs. Tight, consistent grain.

from $329/m² installed

Spotted Gum
11.0 kN
Class 1 durability

Most popular choice for Perth families with pets. Strong natural figure with pronounced fiddle-back grain movement.

from $329/m² installed

Blackbutt
9.1 kN
Class 1–2 durability

The most commonly specified species in WA. Clean, even grain, warm honey tone, strong enough for family homes.

from $329/m² installed

Jarrah
8.5 kN
Class 1 durability

Iconic WA hardwood. Rich deep red tones, distinct character grain, and the highest AS 5604 durability rating. Adds $30/m².

from $359/m² installed

French Oak
6.5 kN
Class 2 durability

Finer, more refined European grain with 9 colour treatments including contemporary limed and smoked finishes. Best for lower-traffic rooms.

from $329/m² installed

American Black Walnut
6.7 kN
Class 3–4 durability

Dark, distinctive luxury. Stabilised Solid® construction, 5mm wear layer. Better suited to bedrooms and formal living areas than heavy traffic zones.

from $369/m² installed

Lifespan · Refinishing capacity

How many times can it be sanded?

Lifewood's Stabilised Solid® floors are rated four times sandable. The number of sands your floor will tolerate over its lifetime is determined by the wear layer thickness. Each professional sand removes approximately 0.5–1mm. In a Perth home with normal care, Lifewood recommends refreshing the floor every 15–20 years.

Watch · Mark Hutchison, Founder

Which product is right for you?

Mark Hutchison, founder of Lifewood and inventor of Stabilised Solid® technology, explains the difference between Stabilised Solid and standard engineered flooring, why the construction matters for long-term value, and how to think about sanding life when choosing a floor you intend to keep for decades.

Read transcript

I think every part has its place. We tend to find that the clients building beautiful homes that they want to stay in, that represent the life journey they have had and the choices they have made, want an aspirational product. Solid timber all the way through that sounds very solid, performs very well, is resistant to moisture, is easy to clean, and carries a lifetime warranty.

I see a lot of our clients prefer to go with Stabilised Solid because they want that peace of mind. They want that waterboard construction, they want that more attractive look, and they want the floor to sound very solid when they walk on it. They do not want it to sound plastic. They do not want it to sound cheap.

The durability, the sustainability, and the long-term nature of Stabilised Solid sets it apart from standard engineered flooring. We see customers come back after 10 or 15 years for a full resurface and it looks beautiful.

SAND CAPACITY BY COLLECTION - WEAR LAYER DEPTH

Grandeur Range (French Oak) 6mm
4 sands possible
Australian Timber · American Walnut 5mm
4 sands possible
French Oak Premium · Vintage 4mm
4 sands possible
Natures Steel® (Bamboo core) 3mm
3 sands practical
Floating laminate (competitor product) 0mm
Cannot be sanded
The practical implication

A Lifewood Stabilised Solid® floor installed today at $329/m² and refreshed at 15-year intervals costs roughly $22/m² per year over its usable lifetime. A laminate floor replaced every 12–15 years costs more per decade and cannot be renewed, only replaced.

Perth-specific · WA climate performance

Does engineered timber flooring work in Perth's climate?

Perth presents one of the hardest tests a timber floor will face in Australia. Hot, dry summers, where inland areas regularly drop below 35% relative humidity, paired with mild, wetter winters create humidity swings that break floors designed for European or Asian conditions.

Lifewood's Stabilised Solid® technology was invented specifically for this. The cross-laminated hardwood core absorbs movement from seasonal humidity change without transmitting it to the surface. The result is a floor that does not warp, cup, or develop seasonal gaps in the way conventional timber and generic imported engineered boards can in WA.

What can go wrong with the wrong floor

  • Cupping, boards curve upward at edges in high humidity
  • Gapping, boards shrink apart in dry summer months
  • Warping, boards lift or bow on slabs without moisture barriers
  • Surface finish cracking from thermal expansion cycles
  • Hollow sound from floating installation on concrete

Lifewood's approach to Perth's conditions

  • Patented cross-laminated hardwood core absorbs movement
  • Full moisture barrier coating on every board
  • Written moisture testing of every slab before installation begins
  • Direct-stick to slab, preferred method in WA per ATFA
  • Lifetime structural warranty held by Lifewood, not an overseas factory
On UV colour change in Perth

All timber changes colour with UV exposure. Australian hardwoods generally darken and enrich; French Oak is comparatively stable. Perth's sun intensity is among the highest of any Australian capital. Lifewood's nine-layer German coating significantly slows UV colour change. Rotate rugs seasonally for the first two years to ensure even ageing across the full floor surface.

Underfloor heating · ATFA guidelines

Can engineered timber flooring be used with underfloor heating?

Yes. Lifewood's Stabilised Solid® and Natures Steel® floors are compatible with underfloor heating and comply with ATFA underfloor heating installation guidelines. Solid timber is not recommended over active UFH systems, as the heat cycling causes unacceptable board movement over time. Engineered construction is the correct format for heated slabs.

ATFA parameters for timber over UFH

  • Maximum surface temperature: 27°C
  • Relative humidity maintained at 35–65% RH
  • Gradual heating schedule during commissioning
  • System run at low temp 2–3 weeks before installation
  • Floor acclimatised onsite 5–7 days before laying
  • Floor probe thermostat, not air probe only
  • Compatibility confirmed in writing in your contract

What to watch for in Perth specifically

  • Summer ambient temps already 38–42°C inland
  • Confirm system caps output at 27°C in all seasons
  • Electric mat systems can spike above 35°C at element surface
  • Verbal compatibility assurances are not enough
  • Solid timber: not compatible with active UFH systems
  • Hydronic is preferred over electric resistive for timber
Full underfloor heating compatibility guide
Watch · Mark Hutchison, Founder

Does timber flooring work with underfloor heating?

Mark Hutchison, founder of Lifewood, explains how Stabilised Solid® Technology is engineered to withstand Australia's most extreme climatic conditions — and why this makes it the correct choice for underfloor heating applications in Perth homes.

Read transcript

Underfloor heating actually does not reach very high temperatures. Our floorboard has been designed to withstand Australian conditions, which are some of the toughest in the world. We get very cold, very wet conditions in some capital cities.

We also get very humid conditions in Queensland, but we also get very hot and dry conditions here in Western Australia, from Broome down to Esperance. We have very varied degrees of moisture and humidity, and Stabilised Solid Technology has now proven itself over many years to be extremely valuable in being able to withstand these various different climatic conditions.

All questions · direct answers

Every question Perth homeowners ask about engineered timber flooring

Is engineered timber flooring the same as hybrid or laminate flooring?

No. They are three different products and the distinction matters. Engineered timber has a genuine hardwood wear layer that can be sanded and refinished. Hybrid flooring uses a rigid core with a photographic print layer — no real timber, no sanding. Laminate is a printed image of timber on a fibreboard core. Ask any supplier to show you a cross-section and it will be immediately obvious what the product actually is.

Lifewood Technical Reference · ATFA Product Classifications
Can engineered timber flooring be installed on a concrete slab?

Yes, and in Perth, direct-stick to concrete slab is the correct and most common installation method for Lifewood's products. Before any board goes down, the slab must be tested. If an installer begins without a moisture meter, stop the job immediately. Slab moisture is the single biggest cause of timber floor failure in Perth.

ATFA · AS 1884 · Lifewood Installation Standard
Does engineered timber flooring add value to a Perth home?

Yes. Real timber flooring consistently increases property value and buyer appeal in Perth. Because the floor can be sanded and refreshed rather than replaced, the cost per year of ownership is significantly lower than replacing cheaper flooring every 10 to 15 years.

Lifewood · 24 years Perth market experience · 8,500+ homes installed
Do I need to move out during installation?

No. Lifewood's pre-finished floors are ready to walk on within hours of the last board being laid. All nine coating layers are applied pre-factory — no onsite sanding, no staining, no coating drying time. Furniture can be moved back in the same evening the floor is completed.

Lifewood installation standard · 2026
Can a single damaged board be replaced without replacing the whole floor?

Yes. With Lifewood's direct-stick method and trained craftsmen, individual boards can be replaced cleanly. Lifewood maintains ongoing stock so replacement boards match the original colour, species and finish. Ask any supplier for photo evidence of a past board replacement before committing.

Lifewood · 2026 Buyer's Guide
Is engineered timber flooring waterproof?

No. Engineered timber is moisture-resistant, not waterproof. It cannot tolerate sustained pooled water or flooding. Wipe spills immediately. Do not use steam mops — the pressurised steam forces moisture into board joints regardless of any claims on the packaging. Do not install in shower recesses or wet areas.

ATFA Maintenance Guidelines · Lifewood product specification · 2026
What is the maximum deposit a Perth flooring company can legally charge?

Under Australian Consumer Law, the maximum deposit a flooring company can request before work commences is 6.5% of the total job value. Lifewood's deposits typically start from $1,000. A transparent quote shows net area, wastage percentage, supply cost, and installation cost as separate line items.

Australian Consumer Law · Lifewood 2026 Buyer's Guide · ATFA Code of Practice

ATFA recognition · 2014–2025

More ATFA awards than any other Perth flooring company

Lifewood has won four ATFA awards over 11 years. The Australasian Timber Flooring Association awards are judged by independent industry peers and cannot be purchased or self-nominated. Verify at atfa.com.au.

2014
ATFA Showroom of the Year
Perth showroom recognised as best in Australasia
2018
ATFA Retailer of the Year
First national retailer award
2023
ATFA Innovative Product of the Year
Natures Steel® cross-engineered bamboo core technology
2025
ATFA Retailer of the Year
Most recent award. Perth's most awarded flooring company

Perth-wide · WA coverage

Lifewood installs across all Perth suburbs and greater WA

Every installation is carried out by Lifewood's own trained craftsmen from our Osborne Park showroom, Perth's largest timber flooring showroom at over 400m².

North Perth

Joondalup, Wanneroo, Clarkson, Butler, Mindarie, Ellenbrook

Inner Perth

Subiaco, Nedlands, Claremont, Cottesloe, Leederville, Mount Lawley, Victoria Park

Western suburbs

Dalkeith, Peppermint Grove, Mosman Park, City Beach, Swanbourne, Crawley

South Perth

Applecross, Canning Vale, Fremantle, Hamilton Hill, Mandurah, Rockingham

East Perth

Midland, Swan Valley, Kalamunda, Bayswater, Bassendean, Mundaring

Greater WA

Regional Western Australia serviced. Call (08) 9445 9011 to discuss your location.