NEPA Floor Care Guide

How to Clean Hardwood Floors in NEPA Homes (Without Damaging Them)

What's safe, what damages older NEPA hardwoods, and the daily / weekly / annual rhythm professional cleaners follow.

A lot of NEPA homes — especially in Scranton, Carbondale, Dunmore, and Old Forge — have original hardwood floors over 50 years old. They're beautiful, valuable, and surprisingly sensitive to the wrong cleaning method. Here's what's safe, what's not, and the rhythm professional cleaners follow to keep them looking new.

First: identify what kind of hardwood you have

The right cleaning method depends on the finish, not the wood species. Most NEPA hardwood floors fall into one of three categories:

Modern polyurethane finish

The most common in homes built or refinished in the last 30 years. Glossy or satin sheen, water-resistant for short exposure. Reasonably forgiving — most cleaners are safe.

Older oil-based finish (penetrating finish)

Common in NEPA homes built before the 1980s that haven't been refinished. Lower sheen, the wood feels more "alive" under your hand. Water-sensitive — prolonged moisture causes warping or cupping.

Wax finish

Rare but found in some 1900s-era Scranton and Carbondale homes that have been carefully maintained. Soft sheen, requires re-waxing every 1-2 years. Cannot be cleaned with water-based products at all.

Not sure? Drop a small bead of water in an inconspicuous spot. If it beads up = polyurethane. If it absorbs slowly = oil finish. If it leaves a white spot = wax finish.

Daily / weekly cleaning (all finishes)

  1. Sweep or dust mop daily in high-traffic areas. Loose grit acts like sandpaper underfoot — it's the #1 cause of premature finish wear.
  2. Vacuum weekly with a hard-floor setting (not the carpet brushroll, which can scratch). The crevice tool gets dust along baseboards.
  3. Damp mop monthly (or more often in mudroom areas) with a finish-appropriate cleaner.

Best cleaning products by finish

For polyurethane finishes

For oil-finished hardwoods

For wax finishes

Hardwood floors getting dull?

Floors are part of every Jemstone clean — and we use finish-appropriate products on every visit. Quote in 60 seconds.

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What NOT to use on ANY hardwood

The right mopping technique

  1. Sweep or vacuum first (always)
  2. Spray cleaner directly on the mop pad — NOT on the floor (prevents over-saturation)
  3. Mop in the direction of the wood grain
  4. Work in 4'x4' sections; don't let cleaner sit on the floor
  5. If the floor still looks wet 30 seconds after you mop, you used too much — dry it with a clean towel
  6. Rinse the mop pad in fresh water if doing more than one room

Annual / when-needed treatments

Common NEPA hardwood problems + fixes

"My floors are dull"

Likely cause: residue buildup from wrong cleaner, OR worn-out finish. Try a Bona Hardwood Floor Cleaner deep clean first; if still dull after a week, time for a professional buff and recoat.

"There's a haze on my floors"

Almost always: residue from a wax-additive or "shine-restorer" cleaner. Strip with a 1:1 mix of water and rubbing alcohol on a microfiber pad (test small area first). Work in small sections.

"My floors are warping near the dishwasher / bathroom"

Water damage. Stop the leak source first; warped boards typically need replacement. A NEPA flooring specialist can swap individual boards for under $100/board, or sand and refinish to blend.

"There are scratches"

Light scratches: rub with a wood-finish marker or a small amount of matching stain on a Q-tip. Deep scratches: sand the affected area and re-stain. Whole-floor refinishing is the only true fix for many scratches.

FAQ

Will Jemstone use the right products on my old hardwood?

Yes — tell us about your floors on the quote form. We use Bona on most polyurethane finishes by default and switch to gentler products for oil or wax finishes. Restoration-safe is our default for any floor older than 1980.

Can I just use water on my hardwood floors?

On polyurethane: barely-damp microfiber + plain water works for routine cleaning, but won't remove kitchen grease or heavy soiling. Use a proper hardwood cleaner monthly for a thorough clean.

How often should I refinish my hardwood?

Buff and recoat every 5-10 years; full sand and refinish every 20-40 years. NEPA homes with original 1900s hardwoods often go 50+ years between full refinishes if maintained well.

Can you clean my floors AND apply Bona polish?

Yes — we offer Bona polish as an add-on to deep cleans. Floors look noticeably brighter and last longer between refinishes.

What about engineered hardwood?

Engineered hardwood is essentially polyurethane-finished — same care rules apply. The veneer is thinner than solid hardwood, so be extra cautious about over-mopping.


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