Cork is warm, soft, and eco-friendly. Hardwood is classic, durable, and valuable. Both are natural products β but they feel completely different underfoot and serve different needs.






Choose cork for kitchens, playrooms, and spaces where comfort and quiet matter. Choose hardwood for living areas where classic style, refinancing potential, and resale value are the priority.
πͺ΅Pick Cork if
Kitchens (standing comfort), children's playrooms, music rooms, home offices, and upper-floor rooms where sound insulation matters.
πͺ΅Pick Hardwood if
Living rooms, dining rooms, hallways, and any space where traditional beauty and long-term home value are the goals.
Get an instant estimate for Cork or Hardwood in your exact room size.
Cork has 'memory' β minor dents from chair legs and dropped items often recover over 24β48 hours as the cork cells expand back. However, sustained heavy weight (piano, pool table) will leave permanent dents. Use furniture pads.
No. Cork is naturally moisture-resistant (it's used in wine bottle stoppers) but it's not waterproof. Sealed cork handles spills fine, but standing water will damage it. It's suitable for kitchens but not bathrooms.
Properly maintained cork lasts 20β30 years. It requires resealing every 3β5 years to protect the surface. Hardwood still wins for lifespan at 50β100+ years.
Yes. Cork is gaining popularity among eco-conscious homeowners and those seeking comfort flooring. Modern cork comes in click-lock planks with updated colors and patterns that look more contemporary than the cork floors of the 1970s.
Pricing data from HomeGuide, Homewyse, HomeAdvisor, Angi, and FlooringClarity (2026 national averages).