Both sit in the mid-price range, both imitate solid hardwood, and both are popular β but engineered hardwood is real wood while laminate is a photograph of wood. That difference matters.






Choose engineered hardwood if you want real wood and resale value matters. Choose laminate if budget is the priority and you don't mind that it's not real wood.
π²Pick Engineered Hardwood if
Mid-range home builds and renovations where buyers will notice the difference between real wood and a photo.
πPick Laminate if
Budget renovations, rental properties, kids' rooms, and homes where scratch resistance matters more than authenticity.
Get an instant estimate for Engineered Hardwood or Laminate in your exact room size.
Yes, usually. Engineered hardwood feels, sounds, and ages like real wood. Laminate has a slightly artificial sheen and repeating grain patterns. Home inspectors and real estate agents can tell immediately.
For homes you plan to sell, yes β buyers and appraisers value real wood over laminate. For rental properties or short-term living situations, laminate's lower cost and scratch resistance may be the better call.
Laminate is more scratch-resistant day-to-day. But engineered hardwood can be refinished to remove scratches, while laminate cannot. For large dogs, laminate is the safer budget choice.
Engineered hardwood can go below grade (unlike solid hardwood). Laminate can also go in basements if moisture levels are controlled. Neither is ideal for damp basements β vinyl plank is the better choice there.
Pricing data from HomeGuide, Homewyse, HomeAdvisor, Angi, and FlooringClarity (2026 national averages).