From Carpet to Wood Stairs Redo – Cheater Version…
You know all of those stair tutorials that are a lot of work. Lots of scraping and lots of painting. Well, this is a cheater version (little scraping / little painting) that uses wood caps on top off your existing stairs. They are called Retro Treads and mine were unstained red oak from Lowes. Check out my step-by-step tutorial so that you can redo your own stairs with minimal work and maximum effect!

Tools and Materials
- Duraseal quick coat 2 hour antique brown stain
- Retrofit tread kit with riser
- Floor adhesive
- Floor adhesive caulking gun
- Finishing nails
- Finishing nailer

These required very little effort. If it weren’t for the landing, I would have been finished in a weekend.
Retro Treads can be found on the internet. Mine were unstained and I stained them a very dark color. I put three coats of stain on each tread two hours apart for curing.





Here is a picture of the landing. It consists of a Retrotread and then I glued assorted sizes of red oak boards to the far side of it. I was worried that the boards might stain differently than the Retroread but it was a perfect match.
*** UPDATE *** I get a lot of questions on if my wood steps are slippery and if we have trouble with people falling on them. I really think this involves many factors that are individual to your situation. We lived in Florida at the time I put these steps in our house. Since it is almost always hot there, we didn’t have a lot of sock-footed traffic on the stairs. I think that socks on stairs can be dangerous, either wood or carpet. Another factor for us, was the fact that only one bedroom was up these stairs. Pretty much only the teenager that was living up there, traveled up those stairs regularly and myself to clean. In addition, to these factors, my kids were older. All of them teenagers. Now in regard to the stairs themselves, I didn’t spend a lot of time sanding these treads. I made sure they wouldn’t have any super rough spots but I didn’t spend hours sanding them ultra smooth. And those glossy super shiny wood floors you see? These stairs are beautiful but the poly that I planned to add, I never did. So maybe a super shiny poly would have made a difference. ***

In my current house, the wood stairs lead to a carpeted hallway. I like how the previous homeowners transitioned this area. I thought others could use this idea as inspiration.