If you’re searching for flooring in Denver, you’re probably looking at your floor right now thinking, “Yeah, we can’t keep pretending this is fine.”
Maybe it’s hardwood that’s worn down to the point it looks gray in the traffic lanes. Maybe it’s tile that cracked and keeps getting worse. Maybe it’s vinyl that’s curling at the edges. Or maybe you just bought a place and the floors are the first thing you want handled before you move furniture in.
That’s what we do.
New Horizons Flooring is a family-owned flooring company serving Denver and the surrounding metro. We install new floors, we refinish hardwood, we repair what can be saved, and we help you pick materials that make sense for Colorado homes, not whatever looks best under showroom lights.
You’ll get straight answers, clean work, and a floor that still looks right after the first winter.
Most people don’t need new hardwood. They need their hardwood brought back to life. Refinishing is how you get rid of the dull lanes, scratches, and worn finish without tearing the house apart. We sand, we repair, we stain if you want a change, and we seal it properly.
And because it always comes up, we use dust containment. Not “dustless,” nobody honest says that, but contained enough that you’re not cleaning your vents and cabinets for weeks.
Here’s the part nobody talks about until something goes wrong.
A floor is only as good as what it’s sitting on.
We take time on subfloor prep. We check moisture when it matters. We plan transitions so you don’t end up with weird height changes. We leave the right expansion gaps. We keep lines straight. We don’t rush finish coats just to say we’re done.
It’s not glamorous work. It’s just what prevents the callbacks.
Denver homes are all over the place. Old bungalows, new builds, split levels, basements, slab sections, additions, you name it.
So we don’t push one product for every job. We match the floor to the space.
Hardwood upstairs and living areas is a classic for a reason.
Engineered wood makes sense in basements and slab areas.
Tile is the right move for wet rooms and entries.
LVP is a smart choice for basements and high-traffic areas where you want durability.
If you tell us how you live in the home, we’ll tell you what makes sense. If something is a bad idea, we’ll say that too.
Refinishing is usually 3–5 days depending on repairs and cure time. Installs vary by size and material. We give you a real schedule before we start.
If your floor has enough thickness left and the damage isn’t severe, yes. It’s one of the best upgrades you can do without replacing everything.
Most of the time, yes. Matching is part art, part experience. If the whole floor is getting refinished, matching is even easier because we can blend everything together.
Usually engineered hardwood, LVP, or tile, depending on moisture and how you use the space. Solid hardwood in a basement is rarely the right call.