Every hardwood floor gets scratched. Kids drop things. Dog nails grow. Chair legs move. The question is not how to prevent it entirely — that is impossible — it is how to handle it when it happens without overpaying for a repair that you could have done yourself, or underestimating a scratch that actually needs a pro.

After 15+ years of floor repair work in Anne Arundel County and beyond, I can tell you that about half the scratches I get called about are DIY jobs, and the other half really do need professional intervention. Here is how to tell the difference.

First: Identify the Scratch Depth

Before buying anything or calling anyone, figure out exactly what you are dealing with. Clean the scratched area with a damp cloth to remove dust, then look at it from several angles under good lighting.

DepthTestFix Type
Surface scuffDisappears when wetDIY cleaner + wax
Light scratchFingernail does not catchDIY touch-up pen
Medium scratchFingernail catches slightlyDIY filler + stain + poly
Deep scratch / gougeVisible wood fiber, catches clearlyPro filler + spot refinish
Widespread wearMultiple areas, dull finishPro screen-and-recoat
Through-finish damageRaw wood visible, color lossPro refinish

DIY Fix #1: Light Surface Scratches

If your fingernail does not catch on the scratch, you are dealing with a surface-level finish scratch. The finish is scuffed but the wood beneath is untouched. These are genuinely easy to fix at home.

What You Need (Under $25)

Step-by-Step

  1. Clean the scratch and surrounding area with hardwood cleaner. Let it dry completely.
  2. Shake the touch-up marker well. Test on a hidden area (inside a closet or under a rug) to confirm color match.
  3. Draw the marker along the scratch, following the grain direction. Press just hard enough to deposit color without over-saturating.
  4. Wait 60 seconds, then wipe the surrounding area (not the scratch itself) with a clean microfiber cloth.
  5. If needed, add a thin coat of matching floor polish or refresher over the area after 24 hours.

Total time: 15 minutes. Works on 80% of light scratches. If the fix looks obvious, wipe it off immediately with a damp cloth and try a slightly different color marker.

DIY Fix #2: Medium Scratches

If your fingernail catches on the scratch, you have gone through the finish and into the wood itself. This needs filler, not just color.

What You Need (Under $45)

Step-by-Step

  1. Clean the scratched area thoroughly.
  2. Apply wood filler or press a wax fill stick into the scratch. Wipe excess immediately with a clean cloth so the filler sits flush with the surrounding surface.
  3. Let it dry per product instructions (typically 30 minutes for wax, 2–4 hours for water-based filler).
  4. Very lightly scuff the filled area with 220-grit sanding sponge — just enough to level, not enough to cut surrounding finish.
  5. Wipe clean with a slightly damp cloth, let dry.
  6. Apply color-matched stain pen along the grain, feathering out past the scratch.
  7. After stain dries (about 1 hour), apply a thin coat of water-based polyurethane over the repair with a foam brush. Feather the edges.
  8. Let cure 24 hours before normal foot traffic on that spot.

Total time: 2–3 hours including dry time. Cost: around $40. Works well for isolated scratches on stained floors. On natural or very light floors, even small color mismatches show up.

Got a Deep Scratch You Cannot Hide?

A single professional spot repair is usually $150–$300 in Maryland. We often fix it the same day and you cannot find where it was.

Call 443-690-9266 or Book Free Assessment

When to Call a Pro: Deep Gouges

Gouges — scratches so deep you can see raw wood and feel a channel when you run a coin edge across them — are tough to DIY invisibly. The filler sits in a hole, the color rarely matches, and the surrounding finish halos around the repair under side lighting.

A pro can:

Single spot repairs in Maryland typically run $150–$300. Compared to the risk of a botched DIY job that then needs professional correction, it is usually worth calling us.

Pet Scratches: A Special Case

Dog and cat claws damage hardwood in a specific way: many small parallel lines, often concentrated near doorways, food bowls, and favorite lounging spots. For more on choosing floors that handle pets better next time, read our guide on pet-friendly flooring in Maryland.

Light Pet Scratching (Finish Only)

If the scratches are surface-level across many boards, a screen-and-recoat is your best friend. This is a professional service where we lightly buff the existing finish with an abrasive screen, clean, then apply one fresh coat of polyurethane over the whole area. Cost: $1.50–$2.50 per sq ft. Timeline: 1 day on-site, 24 hours before walking.

Screen-and-recoat works only if the original finish is intact (no bare wood showing anywhere). It will not fix color loss, deep gouges, or water stains.

Deep Pet Gouges

Large dog claws, or extended scratching at doorways, sometimes create trenches deep enough that screen-and-recoat cannot hide them. These areas need filler and spot refinishing at minimum, or a full refinish if they are visible and widespread.

Pet Urine Stains

Not technically a scratch, but often asked about. Surface urine stains that have not penetrated can sometimes be sanded out during a full refinish. Deep, black urine stains that have soaked into the wood (tannin reaction) often require replacing the affected boards. We can integrate replacement boards during a refinish so the result looks seamless.

Screen-and-Recoat vs Full Refinish: Which Fits?

FactorScreen-and-RecoatFull Refinish
Cost per sq ft$1.50 – $2.50$3 – $5
Time on-site1 day4 – 5 days
Fixes surface scratchesYesYes
Fixes deep gougesNoYes
Fixes raw-wood exposureNoYes
Change stain colorNoYes
Dust levelMinimalLow (with our low-dust equipment)

As a rule: if the finish is intact but dull, screen-and-recoat. If the finish is broken through anywhere, full refinish. For the full comparison with replacement, see refinishing vs replacement.

Cost Comparison: DIY vs Pro

Damage LevelDIY CostPro Cost (MD)Typical Best Choice
Light scuff (1 spot)$15 – $25$150 minDIY
Medium scratch (1 spot)$35 – $45$150 – $250DIY if comfortable
Deep gouge (1 spot)N/A reliably$200 – $400Pro
Widespread light scratches (room)N/A reliably$400 – $800 screen-and-recoatPro
Pet damage throughout (whole floor)N/A$3,000 – $5,000 refinishPro refinish

Prevention: Keep Your Next Fix Cheaper

After fixing the current damage, simple habits dramatically slow future scratches:

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I fix a light scratch on my hardwood floor?
For light surface scratches that have not gone through the finish, clean the area, rub a matching wax-based touch-up stick along the scratch, then buff with a soft cloth. For slightly deeper scratches, use a color-matched stain pen, let it dry, then apply a thin coat of matching polyurethane. Total DIY cost is under $30 and the fix takes 15 minutes.
Can you fix deep scratches in hardwood without refinishing the whole floor?
Yes, deep scratches can sometimes be spot-repaired using wood filler, color-matched stain, and clear polyurethane, then blended in with careful buffing. However, the repair will usually be visible under side lighting. For deep gouges in a prominent area, screen-and-recoat or a full refinish produces a seamless result. Spot repair is best used in hidden or low-visibility areas.
What is a screen-and-recoat and when should I get one?
Screen-and-recoat is a light buffing of the existing finish followed by one fresh coat of polyurethane. It hides surface scratches and restores shine without full sanding to bare wood. Cost is $1.50–$2.50 per sq ft versus $3–$5 per sq ft for full refinishing. It works if the finish is intact but dull. It does not fix scratches that have gone through the finish into raw wood.
How do I fix pet scratches on hardwood floors?
Light pet scratches that affect only the finish can be fixed with a screen-and-recoat for $1.50–$2.50 per sq ft. Deep claw gouges that have dug into the wood require filler, sanding, and refinishing of the affected area. Widespread pet scratches across multiple rooms are usually most cost-effective to handle with a full refinish at $3–$5 per sq ft. A harder finish like aluminum-oxide water-based poly helps prevent future scratches.
When should I just refinish the whole floor instead of spot-repairing?
Refinish the whole floor instead of spot-repairing when: scratches cover more than 20% of the visible floor, the finish has lost its uniform sheen, multiple rooms are affected, the original stain color no longer matches available stains for touch-up, or you want a color change anyway. At that point the cost difference between spot repair and full refinish is small and the result is dramatically better.