Flooring guide
Why Are My LVP Seams Showing?
Troubleshoot visible LVP seams caused by locking system damage, uneven subfloors, expansion movement, lighting, debris, plank end joints, or product tolerance.
Useful calculators for this guide
What issue are you seeing?
Jump straight to the symptom that most closely matches the floor problem.
Quick answer
LVP seams may show because of normal bevels or lighting, but they can also point to joint movement, uneven subfloor support, damaged locking tabs, debris in the joint, expansion pressure, or product tolerance issues.
The key question is whether the seam is only visible or whether it is opening, lifting, clicking, collecting dirt, or moving underfoot.
Troubleshooting flow
Diagnose the problem before choosing a repair
Start with the pattern, check the most likely causes, then decide whether the repair is simple or needs an installer.
Normal bevel or lighting
- Likely symptom
- Even seams visible in low-angle light
- What to check
- View from multiple angles and compare across the room.
Joint movement
- Likely symptom
- Seam opens, clicks, or collects dirt
- What to check
- Check support, expansion pressure, and locking edges.
Uneven subfloor
- Likely symptom
- Seams show in one traffic path
- What to check
- Look for bounce, hollow feel, or low spots.
Damaged or dirty locking joint
- Likely symptom
- One seam sits unevenly
- What to check
- Inspect for debris, chipped corners, or damaged tabs.
| Possible cause | Likely symptom | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| Normal bevel or lighting | Even seams visible in low-angle light | View from multiple angles and compare across the room. |
| Joint movement | Seam opens, clicks, or collects dirt | Check support, expansion pressure, and locking edges. |
| Uneven subfloor | Seams show in one traffic path | Look for bounce, hollow feel, or low spots. |
| Damaged or dirty locking joint | One seam sits unevenly | Inspect for debris, chipped corners, or damaged tabs. |
What to check first
- Decide whether the seam is only visible or actually open, lifted, or moving.
- Look for clicking, hollow sound, dirt collection, or height differences.
- Check whether sunlight or long sight lines are making normal bevels more obvious.
- Review subfloor support and expansion space if multiple seams are changing.
When to call a professional
- Seams are widening, lifting, clicking, or collecting dirt.
- Visible seams follow low spots, moisture areas, or long connected runs.
- Locking edges may be damaged.
- Repair requires lifting planks to inspect the subfloor or joint.
Floating floor movement concept
Floating floor movement concept
Visual example only. Final layout depends on product requirements, field conditions, and installer judgment.
Normal vs concerning LVP seams
A consistent bevel line across the floor is usually part of the product appearance. A random wide seam, raised edge, dark dirt line, or seam that clicks can be a sign of movement or damage.
Lighting can make seams look more obvious without indicating failure. View the floor from multiple angles before deciding whether the joint is actually changing.
Example scenario
A homeowner notices LVP seams near a patio door look darker in afternoon light. The joints are not open and do not move, so the issue may be lighting and bevel visibility.
In another room, seams in a traffic path click and collect dirt. That pattern points more toward movement, damaged locking edges, or subfloor support.
Common mistakes
The biggest mistake is treating the visible symptom as the whole problem. Noise, gaps, peaking, crowning, and moisture concerns usually start with movement, moisture, substrate support, or product-specific installation requirements.
- Assuming every visible seam is a failure.
- Ignoring seams that are widening, lifting, or moving.
- Cleaning dirt lines without checking for actual gaps.
- Missing subfloor low spots under repeated seam movement.
- Forcing planks together when locking edges are damaged.
Industry References & Further Reading
These resources are useful starting points for checking industry-aligned installation principles. Product instructions and installer field judgment still control the final project details.
People with this problem also investigate
Compare nearby symptoms and jobsite conditions before deciding whether the issue is material, moisture, movement, subfloor, or layout related.