Premium white oak floating stair treads installed in a Nassau County home

Premium Hardwood Floating Stairs in Hempstead, NY

White oak, walnut, and ipe treads acclimated on-site to handle Long Island's seasonal humidity swings without warping or gapping.

At Hempstead Floating Stairs , hardwood tread selection for Long Island floating stairs starts with an understanding of how much wood moves across the seasons here — and planning around it before the first cut.

Nassau County's climate creates a humidity range that most hardwood suppliers don't account for. Outdoor relative humidity in August can run 75 to 85 percent along the coast. By February, forced-air heating drops interior humidity down to 20 to 30 percent. That 50-point swing is what causes gapping between treads and stringers, squeaking at anchor points, and surface checking in species that weren't properly prepared. Kiln-drying to 6 to 8 percent moisture content before shipping gets us partway there — but on-site acclimation to your home's interior conditions is what closes the gap.

We require a minimum 72-hour acclimation period for all hardwood treads before final attachment. Treads are delivered to the interior space, stacked with spacers for airflow, and left to reach equilibrium with your home's actual humidity level. This step adds time to the schedule, but it's the difference between a stair that stays tight through year two and one that develops a 1/8-inch gap at every tread by the following winter.

White oak is the most common choice in Nassau County for its Janka hardness rating (1360 lbf), straight grain character, and compatibility with the muted, natural palettes common in renovated colonials and new construction. Walnut reads warmer and darker — popular in contemporary interiors with lighter walls and concrete or tile floors. Ipe is specified when the stair extends outdoors or runs through a sunroom with heavy UV exposure — its natural oil content and density of 3680 lbf make it one of the few domestic species that performs well in partially conditioned spaces.

Attachment method matters for both performance and appearance. We use concealed side-mount clips or hidden threaded inserts — never face-screwed attachment that leaves visible fasteners across the tread surface. The mounting method is chosen based on the stringer profile and tread thickness to ensure the connection is rigid without creating stress points that accelerate seasonal movement.

Finish selection affects both maintenance and moisture response. A penetrating oil finish allows the wood to breathe with humidity changes; a hard film finish like polyurethane creates a vapor barrier that locks in a moisture content level. We discuss the trade-offs with every client and apply the finish specified — not defaulting to whatever is easiest to spray.

Close-up of white oak floating stair tread with natural grain and concealed mounting hardware

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We'll review your Nassau County project and provide a detailed proposal within 48 hours.

  • ✓ Licensed & Insured in New York
  • ✓ Nassau County Permit-Ready Documentation
  • ✓ On-Time Completion Guarantee
  • ✓ Site Assessment

How We Deliver Premium Hardwood Floating Stairs

Hardwood floating stair treads acclimating on-site in a Long Island home before installation
01
Species Selection & Moisture Baseline
We discuss species options in the context of your home's humidity control, interior finish palette, and whether any portion of the stair is near an exterior opening or unheated space.
02
Kiln-Dried Sourcing & Moisture Verification
All treads are sourced kiln-dried to 6–8% moisture content. We verify with a pin moisture meter on delivery — any tread reading above 9% is rejected before it enters the project.
03
On-Site Acclimation
Treads are stacked with airflow spacers inside your home for a minimum 72 hours. This lets the wood reach equilibrium with your interior before any cuts are made or hardware is attached.
04
Precision Cutting & Concealed Mounting
Treads are cut to final dimension on-site and attached using concealed side-mount clips or threaded inserts — no face screws, no visible fasteners on the finished tread surface.
05
Finish Application & Final Inspection
Finish is applied per the specified product — penetrating oil or film finish — with appropriate drying time between coats. Final inspection checks for flush seams, consistent sheen, and tight connections at every anchor point.

Premium Hardwood Floating Stairs — FAQ

Why do hardwood floating stair treads gap in Long Island winters?
Forced-air heating reduces interior humidity to 20–30% in winter. If wood treads were installed at a higher moisture content, they shrink as they dry — pulling away from the stringer or neighboring tread. Proper kiln-drying and on-site acclimation before installation prevents most seasonal movement by starting the wood close to its equilibrium moisture level for your home's conditions.
What wood species hold up best for floating stairs in Nassau County?
White oak is the most durable and stable option for Long Island's climate. Its ray fleck grain pattern also resists surface checking better than flat-sawn cuts of other species. Walnut is a popular second choice for warmer interiors. Ipe is reserved for exterior or semi-exposed applications because of its density and natural resistance to moisture — but it requires carbide tooling and more prep time.
Can I match my existing hardwood floor species to the stair treads?
In most cases yes, though an exact stain match after the stair treads age and receive more foot traffic than the floor is unlikely. We can match the species and apply the same stain formula. We're transparent with clients that the finish will diverge slightly over time and discuss whether a contrasting species might be a better design choice in some situations.
How thick should floating stair treads be?
For cantilevered floating stairs, 1-3/4-inch (net) solid hardwood treads are standard. Thinner treads deflect perceptibly under load and can develop stress cracks at the anchor connection over time. We don't install 1-1/2-inch treads on cantilevered systems regardless of species — the deflection risk isn't worth the minor material savings.
Do hardwood floating stairs squeak and how do you prevent it?
Squeaking comes from wood moving against metal hardware as load is applied and released. We prevent it by applying silicone or felt isolators between the tread underside and any steel contact surface, and by torquing all fasteners to specification so there's no micro-movement at the connection. Proper acclimation before install also reduces the seasonal wood movement that works fasteners loose over time.

Start Your Hardwood Floating Stair Project Today

Contact Hempstead Floating Stairs for a site assessment and detailed quote tailored to your Nassau County property.