Best Flooring Estimating Software for Contractors in 2026

Best Flooring Estimating Software for Contractors in 2026
For commercial flooring contractors and floor-covering subcontractors, ScopeTakeoff is the strongest flooring estimating software option on this list because it combines PDF takeoff, flooring-specific assemblies for VCT, LVT, LVP, hardwood, tile, polished concrete, and carpet, automatic waste-factor calculations by layout pattern, subfloor prep as a default line item, and SOV output formatted for GC submission at $100/person/month. Measure Square is the most credible alternative for commercial flooring, RFMS is the established option for retail flooring dealers, and Excel can work for low-volume estimating.
Why this comparison is different. This isn’t a generic software roundup written by a content team that hasn’t bid a flooring scope. From 2020 to 2024 I was the estimator and business development lead at Atlanta Concrete Company, where 100% of our roughly $20M in annual contracted revenue came from commercial remodel work for a national big-box retailer’s nationwide store remodel program. Flooring was a meaningful scope on every store — VCT and LVT across the sales floor and back-of-house, polished concrete in newer-prototype stores, ceramic and porcelain tile in restrooms and entries, plus subfloor prep and self-leveling on every project. I stayed on through the 2024 acquisition, running estimating across the combined operation through 2026. ScopeTakeoff is the tool I built and used internally to turn out flooring SOVs alongside concrete, drywall, paint, and the rest of the trades on every store bid.
Flooring estimating has different requirements than general construction takeoff. A flooring contractor needs to calculate room-by-room SF, apply the right waste factor by flooring type and layout pattern (5% for straight-lay LVT vs 15% for diagonal hardwood), separate subfloor prep from finished flooring, account for transitions and accessories, price commercial flooring differently than residential, and produce a clean SOV the GC can submit without reformatting.
Most general construction estimating tools treat flooring as a single line item per room. This comparison reflects what actually worked while estimating flooring alongside 14 other trades on hundreds of commercial remodel projects. Where ScopeTakeoff is the right answer I’ll say so. Where another tool genuinely fits better — including for retail flooring dealers selling to homeowners — I’ll say that too.
Quick comparison: best flooring estimating software 2026
| Feature | ScopeTakeoff | Measure Square | RFMS | Excel |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Best fit | Commercial flooring + multi-trade subs | Commercial flooring estimating | Retail flooring dealers | Simple manual estimates |
| Flooring-specific assemblies | VCT, LVT, LVP, hardwood, tile, polished, carpet | Included | Retail-focused | Manual |
| Auto waste factor by layout | Per type + pattern | Included | Partial | Manual formula |
| Subfloor prep as default line item | Auto-included | Partial | Manual | Easy to miss |
| Self-leveling & moisture mitigation | Native assemblies | Included | Limited | Manual |
| Polished concrete assemblies | Included | Limited | Not native | Manual |
| SOV output for GC submission | By room and type | Included | Retail invoice format | Manual |
| Multi-trade compatibility | Unified with other trades | Flooring-only | Flooring-only | No |
| PDF plan takeoff | Included | Core feature | Limited | No |
| Pricing style | $100/person/month | Quote-based / varies | Quote-based / varies | Free / Microsoft 365 |
Best flooring estimating software by use case
- Best for commercial flooring (multi-trade subs, GC submission): ScopeTakeoff
- Best dedicated commercial flooring estimator: Measure Square
- Best for retail flooring dealers: RFMS
- Best free option: Excel
1. ScopeTakeoff — Best for Commercial Flooring and Multi-Trade Subs
ScopeTakeoff is built for flooring contractors who bid from plans — commercial floor-covering subcontractors submitting to GCs, and multi-trade subs running flooring alongside concrete, drywall, paint, or tile on the same project.
For flooring estimators, ScopeTakeoff supports the major commercial flooring scopes — VCT (vinyl composition tile), LVT and LVP (luxury vinyl tile and plank), hardwood, ceramic and porcelain tile, polished concrete, carpet and carpet tile, epoxy and resinous coatings, plus all the prep work that goes underneath them. Each assembly automatically calculates SF, applies the right waste factor by layout pattern, and includes subfloor prep, self-leveling, moisture mitigation, transitions, and adhesive as default line items rather than as forgotten add-ons.
Where flooring estimating tends to break down in generic estimating software is the prep work and the layout-driven waste factor. A 30,000 SF VCT scope on a remodel often needs grinding, patching, self-leveling underlayment, and existing flooring removal before a single tile gets laid down. The prep work is frequently 30–50% of the labor cost on the scope. Most generic tools treat prep as a single optional line item; ScopeTakeoff bakes it into every flooring assembly so it can’t be forgotten on the bid. Same for waste — straight-lay LVT runs about 5%, diagonal LVT runs 10%, herringbone hardwood runs 15%, and large-format tile in a complex room can run 12–15%. The assembly knows the right waste factor by layout pattern instead of relying on the estimator to remember it.
For commercial flooring subcontractors, the SOV output is broken out by room and flooring type — exactly the format GCs request. When you’re submitting flooring as part of a multi-trade scope sheet that includes drywall, paint, concrete, and tile, having every trade’s SOV come out in matching format simplifies the bid package the GC sees.
At $100 per person per month with a 14-day free trial, ScopeTakeoff is priced for flooring subcontractors and small-to-mid commercial flooring companies — a fraction of what enterprise flooring estimating tools or retail flooring suites charge.
- Flooring-specific assemblies for VCT, LVT, LVP, hardwood, tile, polished concrete, carpet
- Automatic waste factor by layout pattern
- Subfloor prep, self-leveling, moisture mitigation as default line items
- Polished concrete and epoxy assemblies native
- PDF plan takeoff included
- SOV output broken out by room and flooring type for GC submission
- Multi-trade compatibility — flooring sits alongside other trades in one tool
- $100/person/month with no annual contract
- 14-day free trial, self-serve onboarding
- Not designed for retail flooring dealer workflows (showroom invoicing, customer financing, store inventory)
- Newer publicly available product with less name recognition than Measure Square or RFMS
- No CRM, scheduling, or customer portal
- Some teams may still need to customize labor production rates by region or crew
2. Measure Square — Best Dedicated Commercial Flooring Estimator
Measure Square is one of the most established commercial flooring estimating platforms and has been the default choice for many flooring-only commercial subcontractors for over a decade. It’s strong specifically in flooring-trade depth — pattern recognition, seam diagrams, room layouts with rolled goods minimization for carpet, and detailed flooring-specific waste calculations.
For flooring-only commercial subcontractors who want maximum flooring-trade depth and don’t bid other trades alongside flooring, Measure Square is a credible alternative to ScopeTakeoff. The tradeoff is that Measure Square only covers flooring, so multi-trade subcontractors who also bid drywall, concrete, paint, or other scopes will need additional tools alongside it — and the SOV format won’t match across trades when submitting multi-trade bids.
- Long-running dedicated commercial flooring platform
- Deep flooring-trade workflow including seam diagrams and rolled goods optimization
- Strong pattern and layout recognition
- Familiar to many commercial flooring estimators
- Cloud-based version available
- Flooring only — multi-trade subs need additional tools alongside
- Pricing typically requires a sales call
- SOV format may not match other trade tools when submitting multi-trade bids
- Less optimized for new users compared to focused subcontractor tools
3. RFMS — Best for Retail Flooring Dealers
RFMS is built for retail flooring dealers — flooring stores selling to homeowners through a showroom with measure-and-quote workflows, customer financing, store inventory, and product catalogs from manufacturers. It’s a fundamentally different business model from commercial flooring subcontracting.
If your business is a retail flooring dealer — a storefront where customers walk in, pick out flooring from samples, get an in-home measure, and you sell with installation — RFMS is the established option for that workflow. Customer management, financing options, manufacturer product catalogs, and store inventory are RFMS’s strengths, not commercial bid submission.
If your business is commercial flooring subcontracting — bidding from plans for a GC on retail rollouts, office TI, or multifamily — RFMS isn’t built for that workflow. The two products solve different problems.
- Built specifically for retail flooring dealers
- Customer management and financing tools
- Store inventory and product catalog management
- Manufacturer integrations for retail product data
- Strong fit for showroom-based businesses
- Not built for plan-based commercial flooring estimating
- SOV output for GC submission is not the focus
- Multi-trade bid workflows are not supported
- Less useful for commercial subs bidding TI work
4. Excel — Best Free Option
Excel is still common in flooring estimating because it’s flexible and familiar. A flooring estimator can build templates with room-by-room SF, waste factor lookups, material pricing per SF, labor production rates, and subfloor prep line items.
For low-volume estimating — a few small jobs per month — Excel can work. The challenge is consistency. Waste factor lookups by layout pattern, subfloor prep that has to be remembered manually, self-leveling and moisture mitigation that vary by substrate condition, and SOV formatting all depend on formulas that have to be maintained as your scopes change. We ran on Excel for the first stage of growth and outgrew it the moment flooring became one of 15 trades on every store bid — at that volume, the spreadsheet errors compound faster than you can catch them, and forgetting subfloor prep on a 30,000 SF VCT scope is the kind of mistake that costs five figures.
- Low cost and familiar
- Fully customizable for your specific production rates
- Useful for simple low-volume estimates
- Works as a backup estimating tool
- No built-in PDF plan takeoff
- No flooring assembly library
- Waste factor lookups by layout pattern have to be maintained manually
- Subfloor prep is one of the most-forgotten line items in flooring estimating
- SOV output usually requires extra formatting per GC
- More error-prone as bid volume increases
Commercial flooring vs retail flooring: how the estimating differs
The biggest mistake flooring contractors make when shopping for software is treating “flooring estimating” as one workflow. It isn’t. Two distinct businesses live under that label and they need different tools:
Commercial flooring subcontracting typically involves:
- Submitting to a GC who is running the project for the end client
- Bidding from PDF plans rather than walking the space
- Multi-room takeoffs across large square footage (10,000–100,000 SF projects)
- Heavy subfloor prep — grinding, patching, self-leveling, moisture mitigation, existing flooring removal
- SOV output formatted to the GC’s submission template, broken out by room and flooring type
- Tight bid windows from drawings to submitted bid (often 5–10 business days)
- Often part of a multi-trade scope sheet alongside drywall, concrete, paint, tile
Retail flooring dealing typically involves:
- Selling directly to a homeowner who walks into a storefront
- In-home measure and quote, often with the homeowner present
- Customer financing and credit application workflows
- Manufacturer product catalogs and showroom samples
- Store inventory and stocking decisions
- Customer-facing invoicing rather than GC submission
- Single-room or whole-house projects rather than 50,000 SF jobs
The first workflow — commercial flooring subcontracting — is plan-based and is what ScopeTakeoff is built for. The second workflow — retail flooring dealing — is what RFMS is built for. There is no single tool that does both well, and any post that pretends one tool fits both is selling you something.
What flooring estimating software actually needs to do
Most “best of” software lists treat flooring as a generic takeoff scope. It isn’t. Here’s what flooring-specific software needs to handle that general construction tools usually don’t:
- Waste factor by flooring type AND layout pattern: Straight-lay LVT runs about 5%. Diagonal LVT runs 10%. Herringbone hardwood runs 15%. Large-format tile in a complex room with lots of cuts can run 12–15%. The software should know the right factor by type and pattern, not require manual override every time.
- Subfloor prep as a default line item, not an add-on: Subfloor prep — grinding, patching, self-leveling, moisture mitigation, existing flooring removal — is one of the most-forgotten line items in flooring estimating. On a remodel it’s frequently 30–50% of the labor on the scope. The software should bake prep into every flooring assembly so it can’t be left off.
- Self-leveling and moisture mitigation by SF: Both are commonly required on commercial slab work, both have specific material costs (self-leveling underlayment is $1.50–$3+ per SF in materials alone), and both are easy to miss if the assembly doesn’t include them.
- VCT and LVT separation: They look similar but estimate differently — VCT is by the carton with simpler waste, LVT is by the box with layout-driven waste. The software should handle them as distinct assemblies, not one combined line item.
- Polished concrete as its own assembly: Polished concrete isn’t really “flooring” in the floor-covering sense — it’s grinding, densifying, and polishing the existing slab. Different labor, different equipment, different production rates. Most generic flooring tools don’t handle it. Commercial estimators bidding retail rollouts, big-box, and warehouse work need it.
- Carpet by SY for broadloom, SF for carpet tile: Broadloom carpet is sold by the square yard with seam-placement waste. Carpet tile is sold by the SF with much lower waste. Mixing units is a common error source.
- Tile mortar, grout, and setting bed: Tile assemblies need to include the right mortar coverage by tile size, grout joint width, and setting bed where structural slab is uneven. These are easy to miss.
- Transitions, reducers, and accessories: The accessories between flooring types (transition strips, reducers, T-moldings, stair nosings) are easy to forget but show up on the takeoff and the labor.
- Removal and disposal of existing flooring: Tear-out is its own line item with its own labor rate and disposal cost. On a remodel, the demo scope is often as much labor as the install.
- SOV output by room and flooring type: Commercial flooring subs almost always submit through a GC. The SOV needs to break out the work by room and flooring type, not roll into one flooring line item.
If a tool requires you to manually build all of the above, it isn’t really flooring estimating software — it’s a general takeoff tool that you’ve configured for flooring. There’s a meaningful difference in setup time and ongoing accuracy.
How to choose flooring estimating software
Start by identifying which business you run: commercial flooring subcontracting (bidding from plans for a GC) or retail flooring dealing (selling to homeowners from a showroom). That single decision narrows the field faster than any feature comparison.
- Commercial flooring subcontracting: ScopeTakeoff or Measure Square. Pick ScopeTakeoff if you also bid other trades; Measure Square if you’re flooring-only and want maximum flooring-trade depth.
- Retail flooring dealer: RFMS. Storefront-based selling to homeowners is a different problem than plan-based commercial bidding.
- Low volume across either workflow: Excel still works.
Beyond that, look for features that match flooring estimating specifically:
- Flooring-specific assemblies out of the box: VCT, LVT, LVP, hardwood, tile, polished concrete, carpet, epoxy.
- Auto waste factor by type AND layout pattern.
- Subfloor prep as a default line item: Not optional, not an add-on, baked into every assembly.
- Self-leveling and moisture mitigation: Native assemblies for commercial slab work.
- Transitions and accessories: Auto-included where applicable.
- Removal and disposal: Separate line item with its own labor rate.
- SOV output by room and flooring type: For GC submission.
- Multi-trade compatibility: If you bid flooring alongside drywall, concrete, paint, or tile, the SOV output should match across trades.
- Pricing fit: Avoid paying enterprise prices when you only need estimating and SOV output.
Recommendation: If you bid commercial flooring from plans — retail rollouts, office TI, multifamily, big-box — start with ScopeTakeoff at $100/person/month. If you run a retail flooring storefront selling to homeowners, start with RFMS. The two tools solve different problems and there’s no shame in using the right one for your workflow rather than forcing a fit.
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