BUYER'S GUIDE · STAR · KY7
Solid vs Engineered Oak for Star homes.
Solid Oak vs Engineered Oak Flooring compared, with a verdict specific to Star's rural cottage housing. Written by fitters who install both across central Fife every week.
LOCAL VERDICT
For most Star homes: Solid Oak
Solid Oak is the right call for most Star (KY7) homes. Your housing — rural cottage stock with damp ground floors in stone cottages — favours solid oak on subfloor, fitting time and long-term cost.
National verdict: Solid oak for stable upstairs joists and ground-floor sleeper subfloors; engineered oak for concrete subfloors, underfloor heating, and the vast majority of modern Fife homes.
Solid Oak vs Engineered Oak Flooring — head-to-head
- Period upstairs joists
- Houses you'll re-sand multiple times
- Period restorations
- Concrete subfloors
- Underfloor heating
- Open-plan kitchens
Why Solid Oak suits Star
Tiny rural settlement north of Markinch with stone cottages.
- Period upstairs joists
- Houses you'll re-sand multiple times
- Period restorations
Star customers — solid vs engineered oak
"Went with solid oak after their honest advice. Best decision."
— Recent customer, Star
"No upsell, just laid out both options. Easy to decide."
— Recent customer, Star
"Two years on, solid oak still looks brand new. Star kitchen."
— Recent customer, Star
Solid vs Engineered Oak — common questions
Other comparisons for Star
For kitchens, hallways and open-plan family rooms in Fife, LVT wins outright. Laminate is fine in bedrooms or rentals where waterproofing isn't decisive.
Carpet in bedrooms, living rooms and stairs; LVT in kitchens, halls, utility rooms and bathrooms. Most Fife homes do best with both, planned together.
Wool (or 80/20 wool-rich blend) for lounges and bedrooms you'll keep 15+ years; polypropylene or polyamide for rentals, kid/pet rooms and tighter budgets.
Decide it on a free Star survey.
KY7 · we'll bring samples of both, talk you through your subfloor, and quote either fix in writing.