At a glance
Squeaky floors are one of those domestic irritations that range from mildly annoying to genuinely disruptive – particularly in older UK homes where the floorboards have had decades to loosen, dry out and start moving against each other. The good news is that a squeaky floor is almost never a sign of serious structural problems and the fix, in most cases, is well within the scope of straightforward DIY. Understanding what is causing the squeak is the essential first step because the right fix depends entirely on the cause.
The squeak itself is the sound of two surfaces rubbing together as the floor flexes under foot traffic. In most UK homes with suspended timber floors this is either a floorboard rubbing against another board, a floorboard rubbing against a nail or screw that has worked loose, or a floorboard rubbing against the joist beneath it. Each has a different fix.
Diagnosing the squeak
Walk slowly across the squeaky area and map exactly where the squeak occurs. Is it a single board or a wider area? Does it squeak only when walking in one direction? Is it worse in certain weather conditions (damp autumn weather causes timber to expand and contact points to change)?
The location of the squeak relative to the room structure is also useful – squeaks at regular intervals across a room often indicate nails that have worked loose from joists (joists typically span across the room at 400-600mm centres). A squeak localised to one area of a board usually indicates that board rubbing against an adjacent board or nail.
Common causes in UK homes
| Cause | Signs | Fix approach |
|---|---|---|
| Board rubbing against board | Squeak along the length of a board | Lubricate joint or fix with screws |
| Board loose on joist | Squeak directly above joist position | Screw board down into joist |
| Nail working loose | Squeak at nail position, slight movement visible | Drive nail down or replace with screws |
| Board shrinkage creating gaps | Board visibly separated from neighbours | Fill gap or relieve board |
| Subfloor movement | Wide area squeak, flexing underfoot | Screw subfloor to joists from above |
Fixes from above – no access to joists
Most UK homeowners need to fix squeaky floors from above without access to the joists below. These methods are effective for the most common causes:
- 1Try talcum powder or graphite first – immediate and non-invasiveWork talcum powder or powdered graphite into the joint between squeaking boards using a dry brush or piece of card. The powder lubricates the contact point and eliminates the squeak. This is a temporary fix that lasts weeks to months but requires no tools and no risk of damage. It is always worth trying first.
- 2Screw boards down into joistsIf the board is loose on the joist below, drill a pilot hole and drive a 50mm screw down through the board into the joist. Use a screw with a countersunk head and fill the hole with wood filler. The challenge is locating the joists accurately – a stud finder or the pattern of existing nail heads usually reveals their position.
- 3Use a specialist squeak kitProducts like Squeeeeek No More drive a breakaway screw through carpet or flooring into the joist below at exactly the right depth, then the exposed head snaps off flush. These work well for carpeted floors where screwing from above would be impractical.
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Always check for pipes and cables before drilling or screwing into floors. Electrical cables and water pipes run through floor voids in most UK homes. Before drilling or screwing into a floor, use a cable and pipe detector to check the area and confirm there are no services running through that section. This is particularly important in bathrooms and kitchens where pipes are more likely to run horizontally through floor voids.
Fixes from below – with joist access
If you have access to the floor void from below (a basement, crawl space or accessible ceiling in the room beneath), fixing from below is often cleaner and more effective:
- Glue a shim into a gap between joist and board – if a board has lifted slightly away from the joist, applying construction adhesive to a thin shim and tapping it into the gap fills the space and stops movement. Do not force it – the goal is to fill the gap, not lift the board further.
- Apply construction adhesive along the joist – where a board is consistently rubbing against the joist, a bead of construction adhesive along the joist face and allowing it to cure with the floor unloaded bonds the surfaces and eliminates the rub.
- Drive screws up from below – drive short screws up through the joist into the subfloor or floorboard from below, pulling the surfaces together. Measure the combined thickness of joist and board carefully to ensure screws do not break through the surface above.
Fixing squeaks under carpet
Squeaks under carpet are harder to fix because you cannot see or easily access the boards. The main options are the specialist screw-through-carpet kits mentioned above, or lifting the carpet at the edge, fixing the boards and relaying the carpet. The latter is worth doing properly if the squeak is in a high-traffic area – carpet can usually be lifted at the tack strip edge, the fix made to the boards, and the carpet stretched back and re-tacked without professional carpet fitting.
Preventing future squeaks
- When relaying floorboards use screws rather than nails – screws hold boards down permanently whereas nails work loose over time
- Allow floorboards to acclimatise before fitting by storing them in the room for 48-72 hours – boards fitted too dry will expand in service and create contact points
- Maintain consistent indoor humidity – wild swings between very dry and very damp cause timber to shrink and expand and loosen fixings
A squeaky floor is rarely serious and almost always fixable with a few hours of DIY attention. Start with the non-invasive lubricant approach, progress to screwing down if needed and only lift boards if the simpler fixes have not worked. For more home repair guides read our articles on how to plaster a wall UK and how to fix a dripping tap UK.
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