Caring for Your Newly Sanded Timber Floors: Brisbane Maintenance Guide

You’ve just had your timber floors sanded and refinished. Beautiful. Now what? The first 30 days determine whether your finish lasts 8 years or 18. Brisbane’s humidity, sun, and dust create challenges most generic floor-care guides ignore. Here’s the practical maintenance plan from Brisbane’s trusted floor sanders — get a free written quote from our Brisbane team if you haven’t sanded yet.

The first 30 days — cure time matters

Polyurethane “dries” in hours but doesn’t fully cure for weeks. During cure, the finish is technically solid but mechanically softer than fully cured. What you do — and don’t do — in the first 30 days affects long-term performance.

Day 0–1 (after final coat applied)

  • Stay off the floor for 24 hours minimum. Water-based polyurethane: 24 hours light foot traffic, 48 hours sock-only. Solvent-based: 48 hours.
  • Keep the room ventilated but avoid direct cross-breeze that picks up dust.
  • Don’t put rugs back yet. Rug latex backing reacts with uncured finish — leaves print marks that won’t come out.

Day 2–7

  • Light walking only — no shoes. Socks or bare feet. Gritty shoe soles will mark the soft finish.
  • Light furniture only. Lift and place — don’t drag anything across the floor.
  • No water cleaning. Dry sweep or vacuum (with hard-floor setting) only.
  • Pets: ideally kept off; if unavoidable, make sure their nails are trimmed short.

Day 8–30

  • Heavy furniture can return after day 7 — but use felt pads under all legs.
  • Rugs can return after day 14 — only with breathable backings (not latex). Wait the full 30 days for any rug with rubber/latex backing.
  • First wet clean after day 14. Use a damp (not wet) microfibre mop, plain water or pH-neutral floor cleaner.
  • Avoid steam mops permanently — they push hot moisture into board joins and finish edges. Sneaky finish-killer.

Brisbane climate considerations

Brisbane’s two extremes — high summer humidity and dry-warm winter — both stress polyurethane finishes:

  • Summer humidity (Oct–Mar): boards expand. Slight cupping is normal and reverses in winter. Don’t run dehumidifiers aggressively to “fix” it.
  • Winter low humidity: boards shrink. Small gaps appear at board joins. Normal. They close again in summer.
  • Storm season water: if water pools on the floor, dry it within minutes. Polyurethane is water-resistant, not waterproof. We’ve covered this in detail in our water damage guide.

If you have AC running constantly through summer, the indoor humidity stays moderate — easier on the floor than uncontrolled houses. If you don’t have AC, expect more visible expansion/contraction throughout the year.

Managing direct sunlight on your floor

Brisbane’s UV is the silent finish-killer. Direct sun on a polyurethane finish ages it 2–3× faster than shaded areas. You’ll see this as a colour difference — exposed floor goes amber/dull while furniture-shaded floor stays vibrant.

  • Sheers or blockout blinds on north and west-facing windows — even closed for the harshest 4 hours (10am–2pm summer) makes a measurable difference.
  • Rotate rugs and furniture every 6 months — prevents permanent ghost outlines from UV exposure.
  • Window UV film — invisible, blocks 99% UV, ~$60–120/m² installed. One-off cost, lasts 10+ years. Worth it for any room with big west-facing glass.
  • If you’ve already got UV-faded patches: a screen-and-recoat won’t fix the underlying timber discolouration; only a full sand will. Consider whether prevention now beats sanding later.

Daily care

Light, fast, no-fuss:

  • Sweep or vacuum daily in high-traffic areas — entries, kitchen, hallways. Grit is the #1 cause of finish wear. Walking grit into the floor scratches the polyurethane micro-by-micro.
  • Use a soft-bristle broom or a vacuum with hard-floor mode (no rotating beater bar — beats up the finish).
  • Mat at every external door — large enough that 3+ steps land on it before reaching timber. Outdoor mats AND indoor mats double-stops grit.
  • “No shoes inside” if possible. The single biggest finish-life extender.

Weekly care

  • Damp mop with microfibre. Spray bottle approach: spray a section, mop dry. Don’t pour water on the floor.
  • Use the right cleaner. pH-neutral floor cleaner specifically for sealed timber. Bona Hardwood Floor Cleaner, Loba Cleaner, or any “polyurethane-safe” product.
  • Avoid: vinegar (eats finish over time), Murphy’s Oil Soap (leaves residue that turns sticky), steam mops, abrasive scrub pads, bleach.
  • Spot-clean spills immediately. Even sealed finishes — the longer a spill sits, the more chance the finish edges absorb.

Monthly maintenance

  • Inspect for early scratches. Catch them early with a touch-up pen. Big scratches early = full recoat sooner.
  • Check furniture pads. Felt pads compress over time and need replacement every 6–12 months. Worn pads = dragging metal/wood across finish.
  • Lift area rugs to clean underneath. Trapped dust under rugs scratches the finish over time.
  • Check for cupping or buckling. Run your hand or a long straight-edge across boards. Slight unevenness near walls or appliances may indicate a slow leak — investigate.

Pet & kid considerations

Dogs

  • Trim nails fortnightly. Long nails are the #1 polyurethane scratcher.
  • Place runners on dog “highways” — between bed, water bowl, and outside door.
  • Wipe paws after rain or train to use an indoor mat.
  • Watch for accidents. Dog urine etches sealed finish within hours. Wipe immediately and follow with enzymatic cleaner.

Cats

Generally easier than dogs — softer pads, lighter weight. Watch for litter tracking onto timber (granular, scratchy). Mat the litter exit zone.

Kids

  • Toy bins on rugs, not bare timber. Toys dragged across floor = scratches.
  • No skateboards or scooters indoors. Obvious but happens.
  • Chairs on felt pads or chair mats in high-use rooms (homework desks, dining).

When to recoat (without full sanding)

Polyurethane finishes show their age before they fail. Signs that a screen-and-recoat is due:

  • Surface looks dull and unlively, especially in traffic paths
  • Light scratches visible under angled light (not deep gouges)
  • Finish feels “thin” or worn rather than substantial when you run a hand across it
  • Spot tests with finish polish bring shine back temporarily — that means the finish is failing

A screen-and-recoat costs ~$10–18/m² and adds 5–7 years before a full sand is needed. Doing this every 5–7 years means you may never need a full re-sand again.

When you need a full re-sand

  • Deep scratches you can feel with a fingernail — through finish into timber
  • Multiple staining or dark spots that screen-and-recoat won’t address
  • Cupping or buckling boards that need flattening
  • You want to change the floor colour (stain or finish change)
  • The floor was last sanded 15+ years ago and the finish is worn through in spots

Rule of thumb in Brisbane: water-based polyurethane = 12–15 years between full sands; solvent-based = 15–20 years; hard-wax oil = no full re-sand needed if maintained, just periodic re-oiling.

Hard-wax oil maintenance is different

If you have hard-wax oil instead of polyurethane, the rules change:

  • Re-oil annually in high-traffic areas (hallways, kitchen). Every 2–3 years in low-traffic rooms.
  • Spot repairs are easy — light sand of the affected spot, re-oil. No need to do the whole room.
  • Use oil-specific cleaner — Osmo Wash & Care, Loba ProCare, or similar. Soap-based cleaners damage oil finish.
  • Never use water-based polyurethane cleaner on oil floors — wrong chemistry.

Hard-wax oil floors actually look better with age if maintained — the patina deepens, scratches blend into the natural matte look. Worst-case repair is just oil refresh, never a full re-sand.

Brisbane-specific maintenance schedule

Task Frequency Notes
Sweep / vacuum high-traffic Daily Soft-bristle or hard-floor vac mode
Damp microfibre mop Weekly pH-neutral cleaner, never wet pour
Inspect for scratches Monthly Touch-up pen for fresh ones
Replace furniture felt pads Every 6–12 months Compressed pads = no protection
Lift and clean under rugs Every 3 months Trapped dust scratches
Re-oil hard-wax oil traffic areas Annually Polyurethane: skip this
Screen-and-recoat polyurethane Every 5–7 years Extends life by ~5 years per recoat
Full sand-and-refinish Every 12–20 years If maintained, may not be needed

Common Brisbane maintenance mistakes

  • Vinegar in cleaning water. Eats polyurethane over years. Old advice that needs to die.
  • Steam mopping. Pushes moisture into board joins. Damages finish edges.
  • Wet mopping with too much water. Water seeps to board edges, expands timber unevenly.
  • Wax-based polishes on polyurethane. Builds residue that eventually has to be sanded off.
  • Heavy furniture without pads. Permanent dent marks, eventually through-finish damage.
  • Air freshener sprays directly above floor. Aerosol residue dulls finish over time.
  • Letting pet accidents sit. Even sealed floors absorb after a few hours.

Frequently asked questions

What’s the best cleaner for Brisbane timber floors?

For polyurethane: Bona Hardwood Floor Cleaner, Loba Cleaner, or generic pH-neutral floor cleaner. For hard-wax oil: oil-specific cleaner like Osmo or Loba ProCare. Avoid vinegar, soap-based cleaners, and steam mops.

How often should I recoat polyurethane?

Screen-and-recoat every 5–7 years extends life dramatically. Full sand-and-refinish every 12–20 years if you’ve kept up with maintenance.

Can I use a robot vacuum on timber floors?

Yes — most robot vacuums have hard-floor mode and don’t damage polyurethane. Avoid models with aggressive rotating brushes. Check that the wheels are rubber, not hard plastic.

Can I use a Swiffer or similar dust mop on my floors?

Yes — Swiffers and similar dry dust mops are safe on sealed timber. They’re actually better than brooms for fine dust. Avoid the wet-jet versions; they apply too much liquid for sealed timber. Stick to the dry pads, or use a microfibre damp mop instead for wet cleaning.

Do I need to oil polyurethane finishes?

No. Polyurethane is a sealed film finish — oil-based products won’t penetrate and just sit on the surface as residue. Oil maintenance is for hard-wax oil floors only.

What’s a screen-and-recoat?

A light surface refresh that abrades the existing finish and applies new poly coats. No deep sanding, no removing board thickness. Typically 1 day on site, ~$10–18/m². Read more in our cost guide or call Max on (07) 3345 2097.


About the author: Max Francis is a third-generation timber flooring specialist with 25+ years’ experience, ATFA Member #98 and QBCC Licence #64691. He founded Quality Floors Brisbane in 2000 and works with his son Kyle to restore Brisbane’s timber floors using the latest dust-controlled sanding equipment. Read more about our team and credentials.