Sanding For A Hardwax-Oil Finish

Sanding prep – grit recommendations and sanding steps for furniture, flooring and exterior wood

FLOORING
FURNITURE
EXTERIOR
Proper sanding for a hardwax-oil finish opens the wood grain, ensures even oil absorption, and creates a smooth surface without clogging the pores. Skipping this step—or sanding incorrectly—can lead to blotchy colour, rough texture, and reduced durability.

Why Sanding Matters

  • Even Colour Absorption

  • Smooth Touch

  • Long-Lasting Protection

Choosing the right grit for your Osmo projects

These grit recommendations are based on sanding for a hardwax-oil finish like Osmo, to provide better protection and overall finish quality.

120 grit

Best hardwax-oil absorption
Ideal for flooring

180 grit

Good hardwax-oil absorption
Ideal for general sanding and furniture

320 grit

Low hardwax-oil absorption
Recommended grit to use between coats of Osmo

400 grit

Poor hardwax-oil absorption
Recommended grit to use between coats of Osmo

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Sanding prep guide to flooring when using a hardwax-oil icon image

Sanding requirements for flooring

Proper sanding for a hardwax-oil finish is essential for a smooth, professional result. Just like with lacquering, wooden flooring must be correctly sanded before applying Osmo.

The deeper the sanding marks are, the more noticeable the indentations and irregularities will appear. This will be even more visible with color treatments as the pigments collect in the sanding marks. Once the last sanding step is completed, it should be decided on site whether the sanding quality is sufficient for the planned surface treatment.

Depending on the wood species and the applied product, we recommend 120 grit for clear finishes and grit 120 to 150 grit for coloured finishes. Contaminants such as greases, oils or cleaning agents must be fully removed as they can influence the bond between the wood surface and coating.

Sanding steps by machine type

IMPORTANT: Always sand in the direction of the wood’s natural grain to avoid swirl marks (unless directed otherwise). Thoroughly vacuum and wipe with a lint-free cloth after each grit change. Dust particles in the wood grain will prevent the finish from adhering to the wood fibres, resulting in an uneven, patchy finish.

New Installation or Renovation

Step One: Pre-sand with belt grinder up to 60 grit

Step Two: Sand across the grain with 60 grit

Step Three: 80 grit

Step Four: Fill Visible Joints and Gaps

Step Five: 80 grit

Step Six: 120 grit


New Installation with minimal height discrepancies in floor

Step One: 40 grit

Step Two: 60 grit

Step Three: 80 grit

Step Four: Fill Visible Joints and Gaps

Step Five: 80 grit

Step Six: 120 grit

New Installation

Step One: Use 40 grit  if the flooring has large differences in height between the individual wooden elements OR use 60 grit if the flooring has only small differences in height between the individual wooden elements

Step Two: 80 grit

Step Three: Fill Visible Joints and Gaps

Step Four: 80 grit

Step Five: 120 grit

Step Six: Check surface quality and perform additional sanding steps if necessary (up to G150). Change to a single disc machine for the final sanding step.


Renovation

Step One: Use 16 grit if the flooring has a thick finish layer, large amount of dirt and stains or deep scratches OR use 24 grit if the flooring has a thin finish layer, normal amount of dirt and stains or scratches

Step Two: 36 grit / 40 grit

Step Three: 60 grit

Step Four: 80 grit

Step Five: Fill Visible Joints and Gaps

Step Six: 100 grit

Step Seven: 120 grit

Step Eight: Check surface quality and perform additional sanding steps if necessary (up to G150). Change to a single disc machine for the final sanding step.

New Installation

Step One: Use 40 grit if the floor has large differences in height between the individual wooden elements) OR use 60 grit if the floor has small differences in height between the individual wooden elements

Step Two: 80 grit

Step Three: Fill Visible Joints And Gaps

Step Four: 120 grit


Renovation

Step One: Use 16 grit if the floor has a thick finish layer, large amount of dirt and stains or deep scratches OR use 24 grit if the floor only has a thin finish layer, normal amount of dirt and stains or scratches

Step Two: 40 grit

Step Three: 60 grit

Step Four: 80 grit

Step Five: Fill Visible Joints And Gaps

Step Six: 120 grit

Sanding requirements for furniture

Coarse grits leave rough surfaces, while overly fine grits will prevent hardwax-oil from penetrating, reducing durability and scratch resistance. For furniture, stop at 220 grit; finer grits like 320 can be used between coats for extra smoothness.

When sanding for a hardwax-oil finish, be aware that deep sanding marks or irregularities will show—especially with coloured finishes, where pigments settle into the grooves.

1. Choose the Right Grit

For sanding furniture we recommend using 150–180 grit. Sanding too coarse leaves visible scratches; too fine (beyond 220 grit) will effect the hardwax-oil’s absorption ability, resulting in low durability and stain-resistance.

2. Sand with the Grain

Always sand in the direction of the wood grain to avoid cross-grain scratches that can’t be concealed later.

3. Smooth Progression

For smoother finishes, you can move up to 220 grit—especially on furniture—but stop there. Avoid going beyond this point to maintain the wood’s receptivity to the finish.

4. Remove All Dust

After sanding, thoroughly clean the surface with a tack cloth, microfiber cloth, or use a vacuum with a brush attachment. Any remaining dust will effect the adhesion of the hardwax-oil and prevent it from penetrating, resulting in poor durability and scratch-resistance.

5. Apply in Thin Layers

When applying Osmo, use a very light coats—just enough to work in with gentle circular or figure-eight motions using a pad or brush. 

6. Optional Between-Coat Sanding

For an ultra-smooth result, lightly sand between coats up to 320 grit.

Sanding requirements for exterior wood

Required Tools

  • Belt sander (3″×21″ or 4″×24″) with good dust extraction
  • Fresh belts: P40, P60, P80, P100 (you won’t always use all)
  • Edge/detail sander or sanding block for corners/rail posts
  • PPE: safety glasses, hearing protection, dust mask/respirator (P100), gloves
  • Vacuum with brush head, stiff nylon deck brush, raking light or headlamp
  • Weathered/grey wood (no heavy film): Start P60 → P80. Optional P100 if needed.
  • Old film finish or deep ridges: Start P40 → P60 → P80 (then stop, or P100 if still rough).
  • Softwoods (cedar/pine) in good shape: Often P60 → P80 is enough.

Deck walking surfaces: Do not exceed P100—smoother than that can reduce traction and oil uptake.
Exterior furniture/handrails (not walking surfaces): P120–P150 is acceptable.

Before you start

  1. Dry wood only. Moisture content max. 20%. Avoid sanding right after rain or washing.
  2. Fix hardware. Set or re-drive any protruding screws/nails 1–2 mm below the surface. Replace damaged boards.
  3. Clear the surface. Sweep, scrape off any blobs, and remove staples or metal that will tear belts.
  4. Coatings check. Thick paint/varnish? Mechanically remove the bulk first (scraper/planer) to avoid clogging belts.

Sanding technique (belt sander)

  1. Orientation: Sand with the grain/board length. On cupped boards, your first coarse pass can be a light diagonal to knock down highs, but finish with the grain.
  2. Flat & moving: Keep the plate flat; let the sander’s weight do the work. Don’t tilt. Keep a steady pace; overlap passes by ⅓”.
  3. Edges first (coarse grit): Break down high edges very lightly to avoid rounding. You want crisp arrises for grip and a neat look.
  4. Progress grits: Vacuum between grits. Don’t skip more than ~one step (e.g., P40→P80 only if scratches are removed).
  5. Watch for issues:
    • Clogging/burn: Swap belts as soon as you see resin or burn marks.
    • Waves: Slow your pace; widen your stance; don’t push down.
    • Swirl marks: Usually from switching to a random-orbit—finish final passes with the belt sander along the grain.

Edges, corners & details

  • Use an edge/detail sander or a sanding block with the grain around posts, walls, and steps.
  • Don’t try to sand inside board gaps; clean them with a scraper or thin tool instead.
  • For stair treads: treat them like deck boards—stop at P80–P100.

Clean-down

  1. Vacuum thoroughly (boards and gaps).
  2. Stiff-brush the surface to lift fine dust from open grain, then vacuum again.
  3. Inspection under raking light: No paint/old finish, no shiny patches, scratches removed, edges still crisp.
  4. Ready for finishing: Proceed once dust is removed and the surface is dry. For oil finishes, a P80–P100 profile is ideal for even absorption and long-term maintenance.
  • DO keep fasteners sunk, belts fresh, and passes overlapping.
  • DO stop at P80–P100 on deck walking areas (traction + oil uptake).
  • DON’T over-round board edges.
  • DON’T sand damp wood.
  • DON’T rush grit jumps—remove the previous scratch pattern before moving on.

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