Let me tell you about a free sample that cost someone $1,200.
A client of mine — let's call her Emily — was renovating her 580 sqft condo in Portland's South Waterfront. She needed new floors. She'd narrowed it down to two LVP brands: one at $3.49/sqft, one at $4.29/sqft.
She went to the store. She picked up free samples of both. She brought them home. She laid them on her floor. She looked at them in the afternoon light. She decided: "The $3.49 one looks fine. It's cheaper. I'll go with that."
She ordered 600 sqft. Cost: $2,094. Installation: another $1,200. Total: $3,294.
Six months later, she called me. The floor looked terrible. The color she'd seen in the afternoon light was completely different in the morning. The sample she'd looked at — a 6"×6" piece — didn't show the pattern repetition. Now that the whole floor was installed, the repeating pattern was obvious every 4 feet. It looked cheap.
She wanted to replace it. But that would mean pulling up 600 sqft of LVP, disposing of it, and buying new material. Another $3,300.
She'd saved $480 by choosing the cheaper brand. It cost her $3,300 to fix.
That free sample cost her $1,200 in wasted installation labor. And she's still living with a floor she hates because she can't afford to replace it.
That's when I started tracking the true cost of free samples.
The Up-Front Cost: What You Actually Pay
Let's start with the obvious: free samples aren't free.
I tracked every trip I made to pick up flooring samples for my own 1952 ranch renovation.
Trip | Store | Miles Round Trip | Gas | Parking | Time (hrs) | "While I'm Here" Purchases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | Home Depot (LVP) | 8 | $1.60 | $0 | 1.5 | $14 (light bulbs) |
#2 | Lowe's (carpet) | 10 | $2.00 | $0 | 1.0 | $0 |
#3 | Flooring Specialty (engineered hardwood) | 18 | $3.60 | $4.00 | 2.0 | $0 |
#4 | Costco (Coretec) | 14 | $2.80 | $0 | 1.5 | $87 (groceries — let's be honest) |
#5 | Home Depot (again — different brand) | 8 | $1.60 | $0 | 1.0 | $0 |
Total | 5 trips | 58 miles | $11.60 | $4.00 | 7.0 hours | $101 |
The "free" samples cost me $116.60 in direct costs. Plus 7 hours of my time.
If I value my time at $50/hour (the bare minimum for a contractor), that's another $350.
Total true cost of my "free" samples: $466.60.
And I only bought one floor.
The Hidden Cost: What You Don't See Coming
Free samples have a second cost that's harder to measure: the decision fatigue tax.
Here's what happens:
You go to the store. You pick up 3-4 samples.
You bring them home. You look at them. You compare them.
You pick one. You order it. You install it.
You realize — too late — that you made the wrong choice.
The problem with samples:
Size: A 6"×6" sample doesn't show pattern repetition. A 12"×12" sample doesn't show how the floor looks across an entire room.
Lighting: Store lighting is different from home lighting. Afternoon light is different from morning light.
Context: A sample on a white floor looks different from a sample on a wood subfloor.
Surroundings: A sample next to your cabinets looks different from a sample alone.
I've seen this happen dozens of times. Clients pick a floor based on a 6" sample, install it, and hate it.
The cost of a wrong decision:
Wasted material: 600 sqft of LVP at $3.50/sqft = $2,100.
Wasted labor: $1,200 to install, $1,200 to remove and dispose = $2,400.
Total cost of a wrong floor decision: $4,500+.
That free sample just cost you $4,500.
The Sample-to-Full-Floor Math
Here's the problem with free samples: they're not representative.
Sample Size | Area (sqft) | How It Looks | What It Hides |
|---|---|---|---|
6"×6" | 0.25 sqft | One or two pattern repeats | Pattern repetition, color variation, texture |
12"×12" | 1.0 sqft | A few pattern repeats | Pattern repetition across a room |
18"×36" (showroom sample) | 4.5 sqft | Still not a room | Still not a room |
For a 430 sqft studio, you're making a decision based on 0.06% of the floor area.
That's like buying a car based on a 1-inch square of the paint color.
The "Free" Sample Trap
Here's what the free sample is designed to do:
Get you in the store. Once you're there, you might buy other things.
Get you to commit. Once you've taken a sample home, you're more likely to buy from that store.
Get you to stop shopping. Once you've made a decision, you stop comparing.
The psychology:
Sunk cost fallacy: "I already drove to the store and picked up this sample. I should just buy it."
Commitment bias: "I spent time deciding. I don't want to start over."
Endowment effect: "I have the sample in my hand. It feels like mine."
The free sample isn't free. It's a marketing tool designed to get you to stop comparing and start buying.
The "Borrow a Full Plank" Alternative

Here's a better way: borrow a full plank.
Most specialty flooring stores will let you borrow a full plank (or a full box) for a deposit. You pay for it, take it home, live with it for a week, and return it for a refund.
Method | Cost | What You See | What You Learn |
|---|---|---|---|
Free sample (6"×6") | $0 (plus gas/time) | One corner | Pattern, color, nothing else |
Borrowed full plank (48"×6") | Refundable deposit (~$20) | Full pattern, texture, color variation | How it looks with your cabinets, your walls, your light |
Borrowed full box (5-6 planks) | Refundable deposit (~$100) | 10-15 sqft installed | How it looks across a floor, how it wears |
I've started recommending clients borrow full planks or full boxes. It costs a deposit, but it saves you from making a $4,500 mistake.
A few stores in Portland offer this:
Flooring Specialty (NW Portland): Full plank deposit, 7-day return.
Lumber Liquidators (now LL Flooring): Full box deposit, 30-day return.
Some local shops: Will let you take a full box home for a weekend.
Call ahead. Ask. If they don't offer it, ask if you can buy a full box and return it unopened.
The "Rent a Sample" Option
There's a third option: rent a sample.
Some online retailers (like Flooret, which is online-only) will send you a full sample set with multiple full-size planks for a fee. You pay $20-50 for the sample set. If you buy the floor, they credit it back.
Brand | Sample Kit Cost | What You Get | Credit Toward Purchase |
|---|---|---|---|
Flooret | ~$30 | 6 full planks + accessories | Yes |
LL Flooring | $0 (free) | 6"×6" samples | No |
Home Depot (Lifeproof) | $0 (free) | 6"×6" samples | No |
Specialty shops | Variable | Full planks (deposit) | Yes |
The $30 sample kit is worth it. You can lay out 6 full planks, see the pattern, see the color variation, and live with it for a week.
The "Rent a Room" Approach
Here's the nuclear option: buy one box of the flooring you're considering.
Brand | Cost per Box | Sqft per Box | Total Cost | What You Learn |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Lifeproof LVP | $45 | 20 sqft | $45 | Full pattern, color variation, how it installs |
Coretec LVP | $60 | 20 sqft | $60 | Full pattern, color variation, how it installs |
Engineered hardwood | $85 | 20 sqft | $85 | Full pattern, color variation, how it installs |
Install that box in your closet, your bathroom, or your entryway. Live with it for 30 days. See how it wears. See how it looks in different light.
If you hate it, you're out $45-85. That's cheaper than a $4,500 mistake.
If you love it, you already have one box of your new floor. You're ahead by 20 sqft.
The "Sample to Full Floor" Math: One Client's Story
Let me tell you about Emily's mistake — and how she could have avoided it.
Decision Point | What Emily Did | What She Should Have Done |
|---|---|---|
Sample size | 6"×6" free sample | Borrow a full plank or buy a box |
Lighting check | Looked at it in afternoon light only | Looked at it in morning, afternoon, evening, and night |
Pattern check | Didn't check pattern repetition | Laid out multiple planks to see the repeat |
Context check | Looked at it alone | Looked at it next to cabinets, walls, and countertops |
Installation check | Didn't test a small area | Installed a box in the closet first |
The cost of her decision:
Cost | Amount |
|---|---|
LVP material (600 sqft × $3.49) | $2,094 |
Installation | $1,200 |
Total wasted | $3,294 |
Replacement cost (if she does it) | $3,300 |
Total cost of the mistake | $6,594 |
A $30 sample kit or a $45 box could have saved her $3,294.
That's a 100× return on investment.
The Full "True Cost" Scorecard
Scenario | Up-Front Cost | Time Cost | Risk of Wrong Decision | Total True Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Free sample (6"×6") | $0 | 7 hours (~$350) | High | $350 + risk of $4,500 mistake |
Borrowed full plank | $20 (deposit) | 3 hours (~$150) | Low | $170 (refundable) |
Paid sample kit ($30) | $30 | 3 hours (~$150) | Low | $180 (creditable) |
Buy one box ($45) | $45 | 3 hours (~$150) | Very low | $195 (you own the box) |
Free sample + wrong decision | $0 | 7 hours (~$350) | High | $350 + $3,294 = $3,644 |
So What Should You Do?

Take free samples if:
You're comparing colors (just checking the general hue)
You're already committed to a brand and just choosing between 2-3 shades
You're on a super tight budget and can't afford anything else
You're okay with some risk (you're not that picky)
Free samples are fine for a rough color check. They're not fine for a final decision.
Borrow full planks if:
You're choosing between brands (not just colors)
You want to see pattern repetition and color variation
You're willing to spend $20-50 to avoid a $4,500 mistake
You have a store nearby that offers this
This is the best value. It costs almost nothing and gives you real data.
Buy one box if:
You're really unsure and want to live with the floor for a few weeks
You're installing yourself and want to practice installation
You're in a small space (a 20sqft box covers a closet or a small bathroom)
You want to test durability (walk on it, spill on it, scratch it)
This is the safest option. You own 20 sqft of the floor. You can test it, abuse it, and live with it.
Don't rely on free samples alone if:
You're choosing the final floor for your whole house
You care about how it looks in different lighting
You're in a small space where pattern repetition is more obvious
You have cabinets, countertops, or walls that need to match
Free samples are a starting point, not a final decision.
My Personal Choice
For my own house? The 1952 Portland ranch?
I bought one box of three different floors I was considering. Total cost: $150. I installed each one in a different closet. I lived with them for 30 days. I walked on them. I spilled on them. I scratched them.
I chose the Coretec. Then I ordered the rest. I knew exactly what I was getting.
That $150 sample investment saved me from a $4,500 mistake.
The Bottom Line
Free samples aren't free.
They cost you time, gas, and — most importantly — the risk of making a wrong decision.
The true cost of a free sample:
Direct cost: $0 (plus gas and time)
Hidden cost: The risk of a $4,500 mistake
Opportunity cost: The better floor you didn't consider because you stopped shopping
The cost of a paid sample:
Direct cost: $20-50 (refundable or creditable)
Hidden cost: None (you actually see what you're buying)
Opportunity cost: None (you make a confident decision)
If you're choosing a floor, spend the $50 on a full sample kit or a box of the floor. It's the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy.
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