• Home
  • About
    • Personal Posts
  • Privacy
  • Shop
    • My Account
    • Checkout
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
Sawdust Girl®

Sawdust Girl®

Renovation, cabinet building and woodworking plans and tutorials. Build like a Girl®

  • My Home
    • Clinton TN House
      • Clinton TN House in Progress
    • Maryville TN House
      • Maryville TN House Tour – Completed Rooms
      • Maryville TN House in Progress
        • Basement
        • Basement Storage Closet
        • Bedroom Office
        • Craft Room
        • Dining Room
        • Entry
        • Garage
        • Guest Bedroom
        • Hallway
        • Jack and Jill Bathroom
        • Kitchen
        • Kitchen Entry
        • Laundry Room
        • Library
        • Living Room
        • Loft
        • Madison’s Room
        • Master Bedroom
        • Master Closet
        • Pantry
        • Porch
        • Powder Room
        • Wes’ Office
    • Illinois House
    • Calderwood Cottage
  • My Workshop
    • Clinton Workshop
  • Build & Breakfast
  • Cabinet Making 101
    • Cabinets
    • Doors
    • Drawers
  • Projects and Plans
    • Countertops
    • Beds
    • Benches
    • Bookshelves
    • Desks
    • Gift Ideas
    • Holiday
      • Christmas
      • Halloween
    • Home Accessories
    • Kids
    • Kitchen Cabinets
    • Lockers
    • Nightstands
    • Organization accessories
    • Recipes
    • Sewing
    • Tables
    • Vanities
    • Wardrobes
    • Woodworking
      • Wood Finishing
    • Workshop
    • Workshop Storage and Organization
  • Remodeling 101
    • Baseboard and Trim
    • crown molding
    • Demolition
    • Door and Window Casings
    • Door Installation
    • Drywall
    • Electrical work
    • Flooring
    • Home Maintenance
    • Painting
    • Plumbing
    • Resources
    • Safety
    • Tile
    • Wall and Ceiling Treatments
  • Sawdust Squad
  • The Sawdust Diaries
    • Andrea
    • Ava D.
    • Beckie F.
    • Cara C.
    • Courtney B
    • Fawn T.
    • Jenn D.
    • Kelly C.
    • Kristy K.
    • Lara T.
    • Malisa B.
    • Marnie D.
    • Robin C.
    • Val F.
  • Tools
    • Products
    • Tool Reviews & Overviews
    • Inspiration & Ideas

How to Remove Carpet – Painless Carpet Removal

All Posts, Demolition, Madison's Room, Remodeling 101

Every remodeler needs to know How to Remove Carpet.  It’s pretty easy if you use the right tools and cut it down into manageable sections. I have a bad back, so I’m all about painless carpet removal and taking steps to avoid injury.How to Remove Carpet

 

We removed the carpet in Madison’s bedroom so I took some pictures in order to show you how to remove carped without breaking your back!

Carpet Removal Tools

First off, you’re going to want to prepare yourself with some essential safety gear and tools.

  • Dust mask in case your carpet is saturated with dust (like ours was)
  • gloves
  • safety glasses (mine are invisible in this picture — IT’S THE LATEST FAD!)
  • hearing protection.

How to remove carpet.

  • a sharp utility knife

How to remove carpet.

There are some other tools you’ll need to but let’s not get too far ahead of ourselves. First, let’s get that ugly, filthy, disgusting carpet OUT of the house.

OK, so you have your tools, now how to remove the carpet.

How to remove carpet

Use your utility knife to cut the carpet into strips that are manageable sizes. Small enough for you to roll up and carry out of the house and throw into the garbage pile.

Cut into sections before you remove carpet.

Depending on how dirty and disgusting the carpet is, you might want to bag up the removed sections before you carry them outside.Removing carpet in a bedroom

After carpet removal, repeat with the carpet pad.How to remove carpet.

How to remove carpet.

Once all that is out of the room, you’ll need a couple other tools to pull up the tack strip.  Be careful.  There are nails on both sides of those creepers and it HURTS if you kneel down in the wrong place.

  • Hammer
  • Prybar (I call it a CRobar but am not sure if that’s spelled CroWbar or CroBar or CroeBar or what…so I go with PryBar because that is easy to spell.)

How to remove tack strip.

Then you have to pull up the gazillion staples that secured the carpet pad to the subfloor.  I like these tools for that job:

  • Plyers
  • scrapers (5 in 1 painters tool works great for popping up staples)

Pulling staples after removing carpet

Last but not least, you’ll need a scraper to get ALL the crap that was splattered and globbed, blobbed and gooped all over the floor while it was being built. (They knew it was going to be carpeted so it REALLY didn’t matter WHAT was left on the subfloor.)

How to remove carpet.

And carpet removal is that easy.  Now you can prep your floor for something a little nicer.  (AND I’m sure something that will be laid with a little more love and care.)

How to remove carpet. Easy steps for carpet removal.

How to remove carpet. Steps for easy carpet removal.

February 14, 2017 · 11 Comments

« How to Apply Beadboard to Cabinets
Attaching Cabinet Drawer Fronts »

Comments

  1. Sarah says

    February 14, 2013 at 9:25 am

    So sorry to hear about your back. Your post made me think of our last house, in Houston. It was late in my fourth pregnancy and our roof took a hit in a hurricane and there was extensive water damage. We were trying to move back in as soon as possible (before the baby came!). After all the drywall went back in and painting and all that, I remember being over at our house, knowing the carpet was going in the next day, and I couldn’t handle it. Everything was such a disaster! I called the ladies in book club and we cleaned that night instead of discussing books. Drywall dust is such nasty stuff but we vacuumed and cleaned off everything, and cleaned the floors. There were gobs of joint compound, screws, nails, etc. It made me feel so much better knowing my pad and carpet went down on clean floors, and I think it is atrocious that me, soon to have a baby, and my excellent book club friends had to do it, and not the contractors, but, such is life I suppose.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      February 23, 2013 at 12:34 am

      Joint compoud dust IS the worst! Sticks around forever… Globs are not so bad. So to speak. LOL

      Reply
  2. Jean says

    February 14, 2013 at 11:50 am

    Oh, I feel your pain…literally! I have back issues, too and sneezing is a scary prospect! I hope you get some relief soon.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      February 23, 2013 at 12:35 am

      Thanks Jean.

      Reply
  3. Pamela says

    February 14, 2013 at 3:36 pm

    Yay. I didn’t realize it was this easy. Just in time for me to tackle the walk-in closet. I figure I would start small and I screw up, nobody will see the disaster but me and sweetie and if it goes well, then I can expand to other areas.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      February 23, 2013 at 12:38 am

      Well it’s pretty hard to screw up carpet removal. It can definitely be more or less difficult though, depending on how you tackle it. I think it’s a great idea to start small and gain confidence though. Go get it! 🙂

      Reply
  4. Cathy Michels says

    February 14, 2013 at 4:54 pm

    Sorry to hear you are having trouble with your back! Have you had a bone density test? I had a similar problem a year and a half ago and when I went to the doctor I found out that I had serious bone loss. I couldn’t believe it because I had none of the risk factors (heavy caffeine consumption, cigarette smoking, sedentary life style, etc.) and I have always been a lover of dairy products. The pain was actually from a broken rib and I later broke one in the front just from leaning over the back of the sofa to reach something that had fallen. I only mention this because broken ribs don’t show up on x-rays and the issue could become exacerbated by chiropractic adjustments. I used to laugh at my sister when she asked me if I’d had my bone density checked. After all, they say weight bearing exercise helps prevent bone loss and I had been doing heavy lifting all my life, as well as, lots of walking. Besides that only happens to old people – right!?! Guess I was wrong. 🙁 Hope you heal soon, Take good care of yourself – we would miss you and your wonderful woodworking adventures if you didn’t! Happy Valentine’s Day!

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      February 23, 2013 at 12:43 am

      Oh Cathy, that sounds painful. Broken ribs. I hope there is something you can do to help with that. Calcium and magnesium? I don’t know if I’ve had a bone density test. I’ll have to ask next time I go to the Dr.

      Reply
  5. Linda S. in NE says

    February 14, 2013 at 9:28 pm

    I am so sorry to hear of your recent back pain. I can certainly relate during the past six months. I think I messed mine up just bending over to take a leash off a dog’s collar. At least you are being “pro-active” about your problem, and trying to do all the right things to make it feel better. Me, not so much. Without health insurance, laying on the heating pad and hoping it will feel better is about all I can manage. Take care.

    Reply
  6. Annie says

    November 16, 2020 at 1:09 pm

    Hi there thanks for the post and sorry to hear about your back. Just wondering how long it took took remove it all.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      November 16, 2020 at 8:41 pm

      A couple hours for this small room. Cutting, rolling carrying out and then removing tack strips. It’s not a bad job.

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

New Post email notification signup

You Subscribed!

Legal Stuff

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

Disclosure

Recent Posts

  • Lodge Update – Floors, Cabinets, Countertops, and Appliances
  • Lodge Kitchen Cabinet Progress
  • Halloween Mad Gab – Halloween Party Ideas
  • Concrete Backsplash or Vertical Wall Treatment
  • Building and Installing a Giant Faux Beam on the Ceiling

Disclaimer:

Although it is my intention to provide accurate plans and clear instructions, not all plans have been tried and tested. Using plans or information found on SawdustGirl.com indicates that you agree with the Terms of Use policy and will accept full responsibility for the process and outcome of any project you attempt. All plans are for private use only. Plans and information published on SawdustGirl.com may not be reproduced, republished or distributed in any manner without written permission from Sandra Powell, Sawdust Girl. Actual projects built using Sawdust Girl plans may be published on your own site without instructions or "tutorial" as long as you provide a link to my original post with full post title or "SawdustGirl.com" as link title.

Copyright © 2022 · anchored theme by <a target="_blank"