Building Guide
5 Best Flooring Companies in Cache Valley, Utah
Our ranked guide to the top flooring companies in Cache Valley — from carpet and hardwood to tile and luxury vinyl — based on years of building custom homes in Logan and Northern Utah.
Choosing the right flooring company can make or break a custom home build. Flooring is one of the most visible, most touched, and most lived-on finishes in any home — and the showroom you walk into often matters as much as the product itself. After more than 80 custom homes built across Cache Valley, we have worked with most of the major flooring providers in the area.
Here are the five flooring companies we recommend most often to our clients in Logan, North Logan, Hyde Park, Providence, Smithfield, and the rest of Cache Valley — ranked in the order we would send a homeowner to visit them.
1. Hart Floor Co. — Our Top Recommendation
If you only visit one flooring showroom in Cache Valley, make it Hart Floor Co. in Logan. They are the company we recommend first to nearly every Duke Building Co. client, and there is a reason for that.
Why we recommend Hart Floor Co. first:
- Deep product selection across every category — carpet, hardwood, luxury vinyl plank (LVP), tile, and laminate
- Designer-level guidance — their team understands how flooring choices interact with cabinets, paint, and trim, which matters in a custom home
- Installation craftsmanship — clean seams, level transitions, and the kind of finish work that holds up year after year
- Communication on schedule — flooring is one of the last trades on site, and Hart consistently hits the dates we give them
For homeowners who want one trusted partner to walk them through every flooring decision in their custom build, Hart Floor Co. is the easiest "yes" we give.
2. All In One Flooring America
All In One Flooring America in North Logan is a strong second option, especially for homeowners who want the buying power of a national flooring co-op combined with a locally owned showroom.
What stands out:
- Large showroom with carpet, hardwood, LVP, tile, and laminate all under one roof
- Promotional financing and seasonal sales that can stretch a flooring budget
- Helpful for homeowners who want to compare a wide range of price points in one stop
A great choice when you want broad selection and competitive pricing without sacrificing local service.
3. CP Build Enterprises
CP Build is headquartered in Logan and is best known for serving multifamily and production builders, but their flooring division is a real asset for Cache Valley custom home clients as well.
Where CP Build shines:
- Strong relationships with manufacturers, which helps on lead times for hardwood and LVP
- Experienced project management — useful on larger custom homes with multiple flooring types
- Solid choice when a homeowner already has a clear product spec and wants efficient buy-out and install
If you know what you want and need a builder-friendly partner to deliver it on schedule, CP Build is a name worth knowing.
4. Castalite — For Tile
For tile specifically, Castalite is Cache Valley's specialist. They have served the area for over 45 years and carry Northern Utah's largest selection of tile, brick, block, rock, and pavers.
Why we send clients to Castalite for tile:
- The deepest tile selection in the valley, including porcelain, ceramic, natural stone, and mosaics
- Showroom staff who actually understand tile setting materials, grout, and trim profiles
- A great resource for showers, fireplace surrounds, backsplashes, and outdoor hardscape tile
If your build has a feature shower, a floor-to-ceiling fireplace, or a custom backsplash, Castalite should be on your shortlist.
5. Steve's Carpet Barn
Steve's Carpet Barn on North Main in Logan rounds out the list. They are a long-standing local flooring shop best known — as the name suggests — for carpet.
Why they earn a spot:
- Straightforward, no-frills shopping experience
- Reliable option for carpet replacement and basic flooring projects
- Local ownership and a long track record in Cache Valley
A solid pick for homeowners working on a remodel or carpet refresh rather than a full custom-home flooring package.
How to Choose the Right Flooring Company for Your Build
When we walk clients through flooring decisions, we ask them to think about three things:
- Lifestyle — kids, pets, mudrooms, and entryways all change which products make sense
- Maintenance — some hardwoods and natural stones look stunning but require more care than LVP or porcelain tile
- Long-term value — flooring is hard to change later, so spending a little more on the products you live on every day is almost always worth it
For most of our Cache Valley custom homes, we start the conversation at Hart Floor Co. and bring in Castalite for specialty tile. From there, the right combination depends on your floor plan, budget, and design direction.
Building a Custom Home in Cache Valley?
Choosing the right flooring partner is one of dozens of decisions you'll make during a custom build. If you'd like help navigating those decisions with a builder who has long-standing relationships with the best trade partners in Logan and Cache Valley, get in touch with our team. We'd love to talk through your project.
You can also explore our completed projects to see how these flooring choices come together in real Cache Valley homes.
Questions about Best Flooring Companies in Cache Valley, Utah
What flooring holds up best in Cache Valley homes?
Engineered hardwood and luxury vinyl plank (LVP) handle Cache Valley's seasonal humidity swings better than solid hardwood. Porcelain tile remains the most durable choice in mudrooms and primary baths.
How much does flooring cost in a Logan custom home?
Installed flooring budgets in our Cache Valley builds typically run $8–$18 per square foot for LVP and engineered hardwood, and $12–$25 per square foot for tile depending on size and pattern.
Should I use the builder's flooring vendor or shop independently?
Most homeowners save time and money using a builder-coordinated vendor because pricing, sequencing, and warranty claims are handled in one place. Independent showrooms are useful for hard-to-source materials.
Does radiant floor heating work with hardwood in Northern Utah?
Yes — provided the hardwood is engineered (not solid), acclimated on site, and installed over a properly tuned hydronic or electric system. Solid hardwood over radiant heat frequently cups in Cache Valley winters.