I pulled up the rugs.
Hung floor urine fix before new flooring.
How to treat a plywood subfloor for urine before new carpet is installed.
The best floor sealer for pet urine is a stain blocking primer.
Let the house and floors all dry out vacuumed the salts from the urine.
The first step is to treat the subfloor with an enzymatic odor remover.
We used the wood bleach to minimize the amount of stains on the wood floor.
Follow the steps carefully since your floor might even need a new protective coating after cleaning out the affected areas.
Deodorizing a subfloor that has been soaked with pet urine requires a two step approach.
Anytime the urine gets all the way to subfloor you have to remove your flooring at least that far to let it dry and then seal it with something like kilz before putting new flooring down.
When not cleaned up immediately pet urine stains and odors can seep below your flooring surface and into the subfloor.
If urine stains have set into the plywood subfloor you can treat it in the same way you would treat any subfloor.
Treated it with a urine be gone which didn t do anything really.
Then i poured baking soda all over.
The previous owners never completed the renovation and just walked around on the bare floors and let their pets do whatever all day.
Read on further before continuing to tackle the situation.
You can also follow these steps for water damage on wood floors.
Without resanding waxes oils and furniture polishes used to clean wood floors seep into the pores of the finish and can prevent the new finish from bonding successfully.
You probably don t need to replace the entire subfloor.
Removing urine from subfloors takes elbow grease but the reward is a better smelling more sanitary home and a well behaved pet.
But they did do some nice work in preparing for the interior finishes.
Note that some wood reacts and swells on contact with any liquid an issue that might already exist as a result of urine.
Old dried up urine on hardwood floors the next methods will help you clean up old dog urine which has been dried up and left forgotten.
The odor you smell is from the crystallized urine in the impregnated wood.
Pull up the carpet and pad and search the subfloor for urine.
Simply abrading the floor and applying a new top coat might not fix the problem.
I think you probably do need to replace the flooring and take a long look at any sub flooring.