Thoroughly clean the area and make sure you match the wax to your floor before you fill the scratch.
How to get scratches out of engineered wood floors.
Next buff out the scratches a second time.
Some waxes come in a stick shaped similar to a crayon or marker.
How to remove gouges from hardwood floors if you take a chunk out of the floor you ll have to fill the divot with wood putty then sand stain and finish with urethane making sure it blends with.
For light scratches lightly rub fine steel wool over the scratch.
Repair small scratches that have penetrated through the finish to the wood underneath with a piece of wire wool.
Use a soft cloth to buff the area and make it shine.
Clean the scratched area with a hardwood cleaner rinse and allow to dry.
Use a paste wax.
If you have an engineered wood floor with a real wood surface make sure the real wood surface is more than 1mm thick sanding usually takes at least this much wood off the surface so a thicker layer is required for a complete sanding.
A combo of baking soda and olive oil can help reduce and remove scratches from wood.
This only works on real wood floors not bamboo.
Almost all hardware stores and home improvement stores have this material in stock.
The best way to fix scratches on engineered hardwood floors is to use a wax repair kit.
The best way to fix a scratch or two in your floor is to purchase a wax based repair kit.
Make sure you get a type of wax with the correct color for your floor.
A complete sanding removes scratches but beware.
To fix scratches on engineered hardwood you ll need floor repair wax.
This will make the scratches even less noticeable.
Be sure to rub the steel wool along the grain of the wood or you ll have more scratches to repair.
Vacuum your floor thoroughly then apply baking soda moistened with several drops of olive oil to marred areas.
Cover the scratches with a wax stick then let it sit for ten minutes.
If you don t have glossy polyurethane on your floors use a paste wax after using the wax stick.
Slightly sand the floor using your sandpaper taking heed not to go too deep or to sand areas without scratches.