When the flooring sub blames the subfloor and the framing crew blames the schedule, the GC pays. Moisture data eliminates the finger-pointing and keeps your project moving.
You manage the schedule, the trades, and the budget. Moisture is the invisible variable that disrupts all three.
A concrete slab that hasn't cured or a wood subfloor that tests too wet pushes the flooring install back days or weeks. If you don't know until the flooring crew shows up, you're rescheduling trades, adjusting timelines, and explaining delays to the owner. Testing the substrate weeks before the flooring date prevents this.
The floor fails. The flooring contractor says the subfloor was too wet. The framing crew says conditions were fine when they finished. The owner wants answers. Without independent moisture data, you're mediating a dispute with no evidence. With data, you know who's right.
A moisture-related flooring failure on a project doesn't just cost materials and labor. It generates change orders, delays occupancy, and damages your relationship with the owner. Documenting subfloor conditions before the flooring trade arrives protects your budget and your reputation.
Smart GCs build moisture verification into the project timeline at three critical moments.
Before scheduling the flooring trade, verify the substrate meets moisture specifications. For concrete slabs, scan with a C555 to find problem areas and place Rapid RH sensors for ASTM F2170-compliant data. For wood subfloors, a quick Orion scan flags wet plywood over crawl spaces, areas near exterior walls, or spots exposed to weather during framing. Catch a wet substrate weeks early, and you adjust the schedule once instead of scrambling at the last minute.
When the flooring sub arrives, do a joint moisture check and document the readings together. Both parties sign off on subfloor conditions. This creates a clear handoff point: everything before this reading is the GC's responsibility. Everything after is the flooring contractor's.
Between flooring installation and owner occupancy, environmental conditions can shift. A data logger placed on site during this window tracks temperature and humidity. If the HVAC isn't running or conditions drift, you know before the owner moves in, not after.
See the tools that keep your schedule on track and your trades accountable.