The difference is usually the stair noses.
Installing wood laminate on stairs.
Hardwood stair uses the tongue and groove system making the stair nose flush with the hardwood on each stair.
Laminate stair noses are mostly the lapping type.
The international building code specifies a maximum riser height of 7 inches so a single laminate plank usually suffices but you may prefer to use pine poplar or some other stainable wood instead.
Laminate flooring installation on stairs.
Slide the first two rows into their final position and repeat steps 5 and 6 above using the same alternating plank technique to complete the process.
You need to take care of the treads risers and stair noses which can get a bit complicated at times.
However installing laminate flooring on your stairs is a completely different matter.
Installing hardwood flooring is basically the same as installing laminate flooring on stairs.
To install laminate flooring on stairs start by removing the overhang or the underside of the stairs with a jigsaw.
When installing a floating laminate floor you don t need to use any adhesive nails or staples.
For our tutorial we will explain installing laminate on both the tread and the riser for boxed stairs and we ll start the installation from the bottom.
Alternatively you could cover the overhang with plywood to make it level.
The riser must come flush with the surface of the tread and the stair nose which goes on last curls around the top of the riser and either fits flush against the laminate.
The risers go on next.
Step 1 remove carpet and tackstrip most often you will have carpet on your stairs and you need to remove it first.
Attach the plank to the front of the riser.
Once this is done measure and cut out your pieces of laminate to make tread pieces riser pieces and stair nosing.