"Couch looked dead. Now it looks new. They explained the process, didn't oversell, dried fast. Family business — feels like it."
We've been driving into Stockton from our Galt base for years — long enough to know which floors are likely engineered hardwood, which neighborhoods skew loop-pile, and which builders left the grout under-sealed.
Hardwood is finish-specific. Spiker inspects every floor and quotes the right service — clean, screen-and-recoat, or strip-and-rewax. We don't sand and refinish. Spiker arrives from our Lodi base typically within 25 minutes — the same crew, the same hardwood standard, every time.
Identify finish type (polyurethane, wax, oil, factory pre-finish), wear pattern, and prior maintenance.
Clean, screen-and-recoat, or strip-and-rewax — whichever the floor actually needs. We tell you straight.
Execute the recommended service with finish-safe, low-moisture chemistry. No over-wetting, no warping.
Final walk-through with the customer. Care guide for the right products to use day-to-day.
"Couch looked dead. Now it looks new. They explained the process, didn't oversell, dried fast. Family business — feels like it."
Final pricing depends on home size, soil level and access. Free quote in 60 seconds.
Stockton is 25 minutes from our Lodi base. Same-day and next-day scheduling are often available.
Coverage within Stockton depends on neighborhood and ZIP. Call (916) 919-7642 before booking to confirm we cover your address.
Hardwood floors vary by finish type (polyurethane, wax, oil, factory pre-finish), wear pattern, and prior maintenance. Quoting blind risks quoting the wrong service — which can damage the floor. We inspect first, then quote the work that actually fits your floor.
No. Sand-and-refinish is a different trade with different equipment and dust containment. If your floor needs it, we'll tell you during inspection and refer you to a finish specialist.
Screen-and-recoat restores the topcoat on polyurethane finishes without sanding to bare wood. Strip-and-rewax is for waxed floors — we remove the old wax layer and apply fresh. We tell you which one your floor needs after we look at it.
Not if it's done right. Hardwood damage comes from over-wetting, wrong cleaning agent, or wrong process for the finish. That's exactly why we inspect first.