Underlayment sits between the subfloor and the flooring. It can help with sound, cushioning, and moisture management, but it only works when it matches the floor system above it and the subfloor below it.
This is where DIY projects often get messy. People buy a generic underlayment roll before they choose the floor, then discover the flooring already has an attached pad or requires a different moisture-control approach.
Check the flooring product first
Some flooring includes an attached pad and does not allow extra underlayment. Adding the wrong layer can make click-lock joints flex too much or fall outside the install guidance.
Before buying anything, check whether the floor:
- already has an attached pad
- requires a specific underlayment
- requires a moisture barrier over concrete
- prohibits extra cushion layers
That one step prevents a lot of wasted money.
What underlayment is supposed to do
Depending on the product, underlayment may help with:
- sound reduction
- mild comfort underfoot
- minor smoothing of very small irregularities
- moisture management in approved systems
What it does not do is fix a bad subfloor.
Subfloor type changes the answer
Over concrete
Concrete usually raises the moisture question first. Even if the flooring itself is water resistant, the slab may still require a separate moisture-control layer if the product instructions call for one.
Over wood subfloors
Wood subfloors often focus more on sound, minor comfort, and flattening prep. Squeaks, panel movement, and fastener issues should be solved before the underlayment goes down.
What underlayment cannot fix
It will not:
- flatten a badly uneven floor
- repair rot or water damage
- solve standing moisture
- make loose subfloor panels stable
Use the subfloor prep checklist before deciding the floor system is ready.
Common mistakes
Buying the thickest option by default
More cushion is not automatically better. Too much softness can work against the floor’s locking system.
Assuming attached pad means no other layer is ever needed
Some floors still need a separate moisture-control layer depending on the substrate and install instructions.
Using underlayment to cover bad prep
Underlayment can soften tiny imperfections, but it is not a replacement for real prep work.
Estimating note
Underlayment is often sold in rolls. Measure the same floor area, then add only the overlap or waste amount the product instructions call for. Do not guess from the flooring box count.
FAQ
Do I need underlayment under vinyl plank?
Only if the vinyl product allows or requires it.
Does underlayment replace a vapor barrier?
Not always. Some products combine both, while others treat them as separate layers.
Can I double up underlayment?
Only if the flooring manufacturer specifically allows it. Many floating floors do not.
