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I have a tv room that's carpet on top of a concrete slab. The carpet needs to go!

This slab itself is an 8" step up from my entryway (not counting the existing carpet), which limits how thick of a floor I can put down without creating a tripping hazard. Because it's a concrete slab, anything I put down will need to include either a moisture barrier or tolerant of what little moisture floats up through any concrete slab.

I'm considering my options, but I'm out of the loop on new flooring options from this century. Let me know your thoughts and what I'm missing:

Carpet: Tearing carpet out of the rest of my house has done wonders for my allergies. I'm not putting in new carpet.

Tile: Looks nice, I can lay it myself, no need for moisture barrier, less of a step than the existing carpet. I'm concerned it'd be chilly in winter and make the tv echo, but maybe that's not a big deal when it's just a tile floor and the walls are drywalled.

Hardwood: Most of the house is hardwood on top a normal subfloor over a basement, but my gut check is that moisture barrier + plywood + hardwood is going to create a heck of a step up into the room.

*Engineered Wood: I've never worked with this. Isn't this just poor man's hardwood with the same need for moisture barriers and a plywood subfloor?

Laminate: Isn't this just even cheaper Engineered Wood with plastic on top?

Linoleum: Unless you routinely dismember guests while watching a movie, nobody needs linoleum in their tv room.

LVT: I've never worked with this stuff before. How does it hold up to moving furniture around/dog claws/etc?

I have a tv room that's carpet on top of a concrete slab. The carpet needs to go! This slab itself is an 8" step up from my entryway (not counting the existing carpet), which limits how thick of a floor I can put down without creating a tripping hazard. Because it's a concrete slab, anything I put down will need to include either a moisture barrier or tolerant of what little moisture floats up through any concrete slab. I'm considering my options, but I'm out of the loop on new flooring options from this century. Let me know your thoughts and what I'm missing: **Carpet**: Tearing carpet out of the rest of my house has done wonders for my allergies. I'm not putting in new carpet. **Tile**: Looks nice, I can lay it myself, no need for moisture barrier, less of a step than the existing carpet. I'm concerned it'd be chilly in winter and make the tv echo, but maybe that's not a big deal when it's just a tile floor and the walls are drywalled. **Hardwood**: Most of the house is hardwood on top a normal subfloor over a basement, but my gut check is that moisture barrier + plywood + hardwood is going to create a heck of a step up into the room. **Engineered Wood*: I've never worked with this. Isn't this just poor man's hardwood with the same need for moisture barriers and a plywood subfloor? **Laminate**: Isn't this just even cheaper Engineered Wood with plastic on top? **Linoleum**: Unless you routinely dismember guests while watching a movie, nobody needs linoleum in their tv room. **LVT**: I've never worked with this stuff before. How does it hold up to moving furniture around/dog claws/etc?

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[–] 0 pt

I'm looking at replacing flooring in my kitchen due to damage from water heater leak. Most of my house laminate or LVT. The stuff is fairly thin.. maybe a 1/8th inch. It does need a moisture pad, but thats also thin.

Stone tile will be cool in the winter and will sit a little higher than the engineered wood.

I'm not sure what the difference is between LVT and laminate.