Not every staircase needs a full renovation — and not every stair tread needs replacement. After 18 years replacing stair treads across Chicago bungalows, greystones, and North Shore homes, here's exactly when replacement is the right call, what the process involves, and what it costs.
Refinish vs. Replace — How to Decide
This is the first question we answer on every stair project. Refinishing is faster and less expensive — but it only works when the tread is structurally sound and has enough wood left for sanding. When the tread is too damaged, replacement is the only path to a result that lasts.
Signs a Stair Tread Needs Replacement
After 18 years assessing staircases across Chicago, these are the clear indicators that a tread has reached the end of its refinishable life:
- Permanent staining — dark stains from water damage, pet accidents, or grease that have penetrated deep into the wood fiber. These won't sand out — or would require sanding so deep that the tread becomes too thin to be structurally sound.
- Large cracks or splits — cracks that run across the width or depth of the tread indicate structural compromise. A cracked tread can be sanded smooth but the crack will remain and worsen over time.
- Visually too damaged — sometimes a tread has been through so much use, so many refinishes, or so much abuse that even perfect sanding and finishing can't make it look right. We know this when we see it.
- Too thin for sanding — hardwood treads have a finite number of sanding passes in them. When the wood is too thin, sanding risks compromising the structural integrity of the tread itself.
- Pine treads — not a damage issue but a material issue. Pine is too soft for exposed stair use. It dents immediately with normal foot traffic and no amount of finishing changes that.
- Severe cupping or warping — treads that have absorbed moisture and warped significantly can sometimes be flattened with aggressive sanding, but in severe cases replacement is cleaner and more reliable.
Replacing Just a Few Treads — Is It Possible?
Yes — and we do partial tread replacements regularly. If 3 out of 14 treads are damaged beyond refinishing, we replace those 3 and refinish the remaining 11. The result looks seamless when done correctly.
The color matching challenge
The biggest challenge with partial replacements is color matching. New oak treads don't have the same patina and grain character as old treads that have been refinished once or twice. When we replace individual treads, we:
- Sand all treads to bare wood — both new and existing — so everything starts from the same baseline
- Apply the same stain to all treads simultaneously — new and existing together, so the color develops uniformly
- Apply the same finish coats to the full staircase — Bona Traffic HD applied consistently across all treads
- Match to the main floor stain — if the main floor is being refinished at the same time, we match all together for a seamless transition
Why Red Oak Is Always the Right Choice for Replacement
When we replace stair treads, we use red oak — the same species that was originally used in most Chicago bungalows and two-flats. Here's why it's the right material every time:
- Hardness — red oak has a Janka hardness rating of 1290, making it highly resistant to dents and scratches from everyday stair use. Compare this to pine at 870 — significantly softer and prone to permanent damage.
- Stain compatibility — red oak takes stain beautifully and consistently. It's the species our most popular stain colors — Bona NaturalSeal, DuraSeal Weathered Oak, Provincial — are designed to work with.
- Chicago standard — the overwhelming majority of original Chicago hardwood floors and staircases are red oak. Replacing with red oak keeps the home authentic and consistent.
- Resale value — buyers and appraisers recognize real hardwood. Oak stair treads add measurable value to Chicago homes in a way that pine or engineered alternatives don't.
- Longevity — properly finished red oak stair treads last 15-20 years before needing refinishing. Pine needs replacement within a few years of exposed use.
The Replacement Process — Step by Step
Stair Tread Replacement Costs in Chicago 2026
| Service | Price |
|---|---|
| New red oak tread (material + installation) | $250–$400 per tread |
| Stair tread refinishing (existing sound treads) | $55–$70 per tread |
| Cove molding replacement | $30 per tread |
| White painted risers | Quoted per project |
| Stringer support (prefab staircases) | Quoted per project |
| Partial replacement (1-3 treads) + refinish remaining | Quoted per project |
| Full staircase replacement (all treads) | Quoted per project — day rate + material |
Not Sure If Your Treads Need Replacing?
Send us a photo — we'll tell you honestly whether refinishing or replacement is the right call. Or schedule a free on-site assessment.
Get Instant Quote → Or text a photo: 773-790-3887 · Same-day responseRecent FLOORecki Stair Tread Replacement Projects
1920s bungalow with 14 treads — 4 had permanent water staining from an old leak that couldn't be sanded out. We replaced the 4 damaged treads with new red oak, sanded all 14 to bare wood simultaneously, applied DuraSeal Weathered Oak to match the main floor, and finished with Bona Traffic HD. The result was seamless — no visible difference between new and existing treads. Client was relieved not to have to replace the entire staircase.
North Shore home with significant foundation settling — multiple treads had large cracks from decades of movement. Assessment showed that refinishing would temporarily improve appearance but the cracks would remain and worsen. Full replacement recommended. All 12 treads replaced with new red oak, structural repairs made to the stringer connections, white risers painted, and finished with Bona Traffic HD matching the main floor. A staircase that was a safety concern is now solid and beautiful.
1980s home with pine treads under carpet — discovered at estimate when we lifted the carpet corner. Client initially wanted refinishing but agreed with our recommendation after we showed them how easily pine dents compared to oak. All 14 treads replaced with new red oak. White painted risers, cove molding, and square black iron spindles added. Stained to match the main floor refinishing done at the same visit. Complete transformation in 3 days.
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Ready to Fix Your Stair Treads?
We assess every tread individually — refinish or replace — and give you honest recommendations with clear pricing. Partial or full replacement, we make it look seamless.
Get Your Instant Quote → Call or text: 773-790-3887 · Same-day response