Fitting Parquet: DIY vs Professional Installation
Parquet installation has a reputation for being difficult, and that reputation is partly justified. It is more technically demanding than fitting a click-together plank floor, and errors in layout become visible across the whole floor area in a way that errors in a plank floor often do not. But professional installation is not the only option: a careful, methodical person with the right tools and adequate preparation time can produce a good result on a manageable-sized project.
What DIY Parquet Requires
Successfully fitting parquet yourself requires accurate measurement and set-out skills, experience with a mitre saw for precise angled cuts, confidence with adhesive application and working within its open time, and enough time to work slowly and check alignment as you go. You cannot rush parquet installation; blocks that are slightly misaligned need to be corrected before the adhesive sets, and catching drift early is easier than correcting it after fifteen rows.
The tools needed include a compound mitre saw (or a good quality handsaw and mitre box for a smaller project), a notched trowel matched to the adhesive, a chalk line for the reference lines, spacer wedges, a long straightedge for alignment checks, and basic safety equipment. A pull bar and rubber mallet are useful for fitting edge blocks without damaging them.
Realistic Assessment
A standard rectangular room of 15 to 20 square metres with minimal obstacles is a manageable DIY parquet project for someone with carpentry experience. Rooms with bay windows, alcoves, doorways, columns or other features that require complex cutting are considerably more demanding and warrant professional consideration. Any room where precision matters greatly, such as a period hallway that will be a focal point for the life of the house, deserves professional installation.
Time is the other honest consideration. A professional parquet fitter working efficiently might lay a 20 square metre herringbone floor in a day to a day and a half. A careful DIYer doing the same room for the first time should expect two to three days of active work, plus time for adhesive curing and finishing.
Where Professional Fitting Is Worth the Cost
Complex layouts, large areas, period properties where the floor is a significant feature, and any situation where getting it right the first time is essential are all cases where professional fitting is worth the additional cost. A professional floor fitter with herringbone experience will produce a more precise result in less time, with better management of adhesive timing, alignment drift and perimeter cuts.
- DIY appropriate: simple rectangular rooms, 15-20 square metres, carpentry experience
- Professional recommended: complex room geometry, large areas, period properties
- Tools needed: mitre saw, notched trowel, chalk line, long straightedge
- Time estimate: 2-3 days for a 20 square metre room as a first project
- Critical skills: accurate set-out and maintaining alignment throughout
The decision between DIY and professional fitting is an honest one about skills, tools, time and the importance of the result. Parquet fitting is achievable as a DIY project, but it is not the easiest floor to start with if you have no previous floor fitting experience.