Flooring guide
Why Is My Laminate Floor Separating?
Troubleshoot laminate flooring gaps and separation caused by subfloor movement, humidity, damaged locking joints, and installation details.
Useful calculators for this guide
What issue are you seeing?
Jump straight to the symptom that most closely matches the floor problem.
Quick answer
Laminate floors usually separate when the locking joints are stressed, unsupported, damaged, or trapped by movement the floating floor cannot handle. Common causes include uneven subfloors, humidity changes, moisture, damaged locking edges, wrong underlayment, heavy fixed objects, long runs, or tight expansion gaps.
The repair depends on the cause. Tapping planks back together may only be temporary if the floor is still flexing, pinned, wet, or damaged.
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.
Uneven subfloor
- Likely symptom
- Gap returns in one traffic path
- What to check
- Check for bounce, low spots, or humps.
Moisture or humidity
- Likely symptom
- Seasonal gaps or swollen edges
- What to check
- Look for leaks, wet cleaning, or humidity swings.
Pinned floating floor
- Likely symptom
- Gaps away from tight trim
- What to check
- Inspect expansion space and fixed objects.
Damaged locking joint
- Likely symptom
- Joint will not stay closed
- What to check
- Inspect plank edges before forcing repair.
| Possible cause | Likely symptom | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| Uneven subfloor | Gap returns in one traffic path | Check for bounce, low spots, or humps. |
| Moisture or humidity | Seasonal gaps or swollen edges | Look for leaks, wet cleaning, or humidity swings. |
| Pinned floating floor | Gaps away from tight trim | Inspect expansion space and fixed objects. |
| Damaged locking joint | Joint will not stay closed | Inspect plank edges before forcing repair. |
What to check first
- Mark every gap and note whether it returns after closing.
- Check expansion space around walls, door frames, and transitions.
- Look for low spots, bounce, or hollow movement near the gap.
- Inspect for swollen edges, moisture, or damaged locking tabs.
When to call a professional
- The same gaps keep reopening.
- The floor is lifting, buckling, or spreading across a large area.
- Moisture or broken locking joints are suspected.
- Repair may require lifting planks or replacing damaged boards.
Floating floor movement visual
Floating floor movement concept
Visual example only. Final layout depends on product requirements, field conditions, and installer judgment.
Movement and unsupported joints
Laminate planks lock together, but they still need support below the joints. Low spots can let the floor flex under foot traffic, and repeated flexing can open gaps.
High spots can create pressure and pivot points. If the floor rocks or feels hollow in the same places where gaps appear, subfloor flatness should be checked.
What the gap pattern can tell you
A single open end joint may be a damaged locking edge or a plank that was not fully engaged. Repeated gaps in the same traffic path often point to subfloor movement, underlayment compression, or a long run that needs better expansion planning.
If gaps appear with clicking or a hollow feel, compare this page with the floor clicking troubleshooting guide before forcing the planks together.
- Gaps near doorways can point to tight trim, transitions, or expansion restrictions.
- Gaps in a hallway can point to subfloor flatness, direction, or long-run movement.
- Gaps near kitchens, baths, or exterior doors should trigger a moisture check.
- Gaps that will not stay closed may mean the locking joint is damaged.
Symptom comparisons: gap, buckle, click, or swell
A laminate gap by itself can be a joint or movement issue. A gap with another symptom gives a better clue. Clicking often points to support or locking stress. Buckling points toward pressure or moisture. Swollen edges point toward water exposure or humidity beyond the product limits.
Compare the visible symptom with where it appears. Doorways, hallways, kitchens, exterior doors, and long connected rooms often reveal expansion, moisture, and support problems before the rest of the floor.
- Gap plus clicking: check subfloor support and locking stress.
- Gap plus buckling: check expansion space, fixed objects, and moisture.
- Gap plus swollen edges: check water exposure and room humidity.
- Gap plus hollow sound: check underlayment, low spots, or loose support.
- Gap that changes seasonally: monitor humidity and acclimation conditions.
What to check before trying a repair
Before tapping a laminate joint closed, check the reason it opened. If the floor is pinned by trim, moving over a low spot, swelling from moisture, or squeaking over an unsupported area, the gap can return quickly.
If separation shows up with buckling, peaking, squeaking, or hollow movement, treat it as a system clue rather than an isolated joint problem.
- Check whether the same joint reopens after being closed.
- Look for squeaks, hollow sound, or bounce near the gap.
- Inspect nearby transitions and fixed objects for blocked expansion.
- Check moisture before using glue, filler, or force.
What homeowners should expect from a repair
A laminate separation repair should not start with a promise that every gap can be closed permanently. If the locking edge is cracked, the subfloor flexes, or the floor is pinned, the visible joint may return even after a careful tap-back.
Expect the installer to look for the reason the joint opened. That may mean removing base trim, checking transitions, lifting a few rows, replacing damaged planks, or correcting a low spot before the surface repair makes sense.
- A one-time gap with intact edges may be repairable without major work.
- Recurring gaps usually need a subfloor, expansion, moisture, or locking-joint diagnosis.
- Swollen edges usually point to moisture exposure and may not close cleanly.
- A hallway with repeated end gaps may need both layout and support review.
Humidity and moisture changes
Laminate can respond to room humidity. Very dry conditions can shrink materials, while moisture exposure can swell edges or damage the core.
Water-resistant laminate does not remove the need for moisture control. Leaks, wet mopping, pet accidents, or damp subfloors can all contribute to joint problems.
- Look for gaps near exterior doors, kitchens, and bathrooms.
- Check whether the room humidity has changed sharply.
- Inspect for leaks or wet subfloor conditions.
- Review cleaning methods if edges look swollen.
Installation details that lead to separation
Damaged locking joints, planks installed out of alignment, underlayment that is too soft, or missing expansion gaps can all create separation later.
Heavy furniture or fixed objects can also restrict floating floor movement. If the floor is trapped in one area, pressure may show up as gaps somewhere else.
What to check next after finding the gap
After the gap is mapped, choose the next guide based on the strongest clue. If the floor also moves or clicks, use the movement hub. If the edges look swollen or the room had a leak, use the moisture hub. If multiple materials or doorways are involved, use the transition guidance before forcing joints closed.
A simple tap-back can make sense only when the locking edges are intact and the cause has been addressed. Otherwise the gap often returns.
- Movement clue: review flooring movement problems.
- Moisture clue: review flooring moisture problems.
- Transition clue: review transition strip movement and expansion space.
- Planning clue: use the installation checklist before reinstalling rows.
Example scenario
A laminate hallway develops end gaps after a dry winter, and the same joints open again after being tapped closed. The homeowner also notices a slight bounce near the middle of the hallway.
That pattern suggests the visible gap may not be the only issue. Seasonal movement can make the gap noticeable, but a low spot or unsupported joint may be the reason the floor keeps separating. A lasting repair may require lifting part of the floor and correcting the subfloor rather than just closing the gap.
Common mistakes
Most problems come from treating the flooring as a generic product instead of checking the specific material, room conditions, and installation method.
- Forcing gaps closed without finding the cause.
- Ignoring subfloor flatness below repeated separation.
- Wet mopping laminate beyond product recommendations.
- Using unapproved underlayment.
- Blocking expansion with tight trim or fixed objects.
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.