Hi,
You helped me considerably when preparing my apartment for sale.
After 30 years in apartments, I'm now in a house with stairs.
Quite noisy wooden stairs but recently the bottom two make a nasty cracking sound when I tread on them.
If I repeat the steps right away they're fine, it's only if I haven't stepped on them for a while.
I have no idea what's under the wooden panels or how to fix them before something snaps.
Can you help please?
Thanks, Peter
It’s very understandable to be worried when a stair suddenly makes a sharp cracking sound @477bus, especially in a new home. The good news is that it’s extremely unlikely that anything is about to snap or that the stairs are structurally unsafe. Timber stairs commonly expand and contract, and the sound of timber rubbing on timber can be surprisingly loud, even though it isn’t a sign of impending failure.
From what you’ve described, the fact that the noise happens only after the stair has been “resting” for a while points strongly to normal timber movement. When you step on the tread the first time, it flexes slightly and settles, which stops the noise until it has time to relax back into position again.
The next step is simply to narrow down where the movement is happening. If you can access underneath the staircase, for example from a storage cupboard, this makes things easier because you can look for loose wedges, gaps, or framing that is no longer tight. If you aren’t able to get under the stairs, you can still crouch down at the front and check the joint between the tread, which is the horizontal piece, and the riser, which is the vertical piece. If there is a small gap there, the tread may be flexing and rubbing.
Without that access, there is unfortunately not much you can do from the front alone. Most real fixes, such as packing gaps or re-wedging joints, need to be done from underneath. At this stage, what you are hearing is much more characteristic of harmless movement than structural damage, so you can take a breath. If you are able to get even a partial view under the stairs, that will tell us more and we can talk through exactly what to look for and how to tighten things up.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Mitchell
Thanks for that. The bottom stair is right on the ground so I can't get under unless I can somehow remove the part I step on and look inside.
I guess the bottom two are the ones that catch the most weight walking up.
I will check for gaps as you suggest.
Just checked for gaps and between the first and second stair on the right hand side vertical there is gap.
Not visible in the photo but you can squeeze a knife in there.
Hollow sound when hit with the handle.
Humid on the Sunshine Coast with big storms so that's what it looks like.
Thank you for your help.
PS You don't benefit directly from advice but I've spent a lot in Bunnings before and after moving.
The Maroochydore store is within walking distance ad the worst thing is they sell sausage in bread every day.
Cheers!
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