Flood damage flooring in Sidcup
A Sidcup flood — burst pipe, dishwasher failure, upstairs bath overflow — ruins whatever's on the floor and often the subfloor beneath it. We uplift, dispose, moisture-test the substrate and only re-fit when the subfloor is genuinely dry.
What flood damage flooring in Sidcup actually involves
A Sidcup flood — burst pipe, dishwasher failure, upstairs bath overflow — ruins whatever's on the floor and often the subfloor beneath it. We uplift, dispose, moisture-test the substrate and only re-fit when the subfloor is genuinely dry.
1930s pine boards over joists — usually need a 6mm ply overlay before LVT or vinyl.
- Old flooring uplifted and disposed as part of the claim
- Subfloor moisture-tested before re-fit
- Insurance claim direct-invoicing accepted
- Waterproof replacement flooring specified
Three things that decide a vinyl fit in Sidcup
- Sheet seams
Sheet vinyl in a typical Sidcup kitchen is usually a single drop — no seam, no water-ingress risk.
- Subfloor
On older 1930s bay-fronted semis we overlay with ply before laying vinyl so the boards underneath don't telegraph through.
- Coving
For bathrooms we can cove the vinyl up the wall 100mm to seal the floor properly.
"Loss adjuster direct-invoiced, homeowner didn't lift a finger." — DA14/DA15 claim
Recap — flood recovery flooring across DA14/DA15, direct-invoiced to insurers.
Postcodes: DA14/DA15 · Routes: the A20 · Common build: 1930s bay-fronted semis.
Covering Sidcup Hill, Halfway Street, New Eltham border.
Flood Damage Flooring jobs we've finished nearby



Flood Damage Flooring in Sidcup — common questions
Yes — direct communication with the assessor, photos, itemised quotes, replacement spec sheets. Standard on DA14/DA15 insurance work.
Yes — ruined flooring goes as part of the claim. We photograph, itemise and dispose as part of the Sidcup Hill recovery work.
Depends on flood depth and subfloor type. A screed floor after a burst pipe often needs 2–3 weeks with dehumidifiers. We won't re-fit until moisture readings are safe — 4% for wood subfloors, 75% RH for screed.
Standard cover is like-for-like. Upgrade to waterproof (SPC over laminate, say) is often the difference the homeowner pays. We quote both on the Sidcup visit for the claim.
