Ohio Humidity & Your Hardwood: Gaps, Cupping & Seasonal Movement
Wood is hygroscopic — it gains and loses moisture with the seasons. In Ohio's humid-continental climate, that movement is normal; here's what's harmless and what isn't.
Ohio Humidity & Your Hardwood: Gaps, Cupping & Seasonal MovementWhy Columbus floors move with the seasons
Columbus summers are humid and winters are dry, and hardwood responds: boards take on moisture and expand in summer, then give it up and shrink in winter. The result — thin gaps between boards in January that close up by July — is normal seasonal movement, not a defect or a bad install.
Normal winter gapping vs. a real problem
Hairline gaps that appear in the dry months and close in summer are expected, especially in older homes and with wider boards. Gaps that are large, permanent, or accompanied by cupping or movement underfoot are a different story and worth a look — they can signal a moisture imbalance or subfloor issue.
Cupping: what it means
When boards are higher at the edges than the center, that's cupping — almost always a sign of moisture coming from below (a damp basement or crawlspace, a leak, or a slab without a barrier). Sanding a cupped floor flat before the moisture is corrected just leaves it dished once it dries. The fix starts with the moisture source, then the floor.
Managing indoor humidity
Keeping indoor relative humidity in a moderate band year-round — running a humidifier in winter and AC/dehumidification in summer — minimizes seasonal movement and protects both the wood and the finish. It's the single most effective thing a Columbus homeowner can do for their floors.
Basements and below-grade rooms
Columbus's clay soils and damp basements are why solid hardwood isn't recommended below grade — engineered hardwood or luxury vinyl handles that moisture far better. If you want wood in a basement, choose the product for the conditions.
What this means before refinishing
We meter moisture before sanding for exactly these reasons. Refinishing a floor that's actively moving or cupping from an unresolved moisture source won't hold. Sorting the moisture first is what makes a refinish last — and it's why a careful contractor checks before grabbing a sander.
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