Basement vs. Upstairs Laundry Rooms

When you have a house that presents equal opportunities for either a basement laundry room or an upstairs laundry room, you need to examine your lifestyle, preferences, and dislikes, plus take into account the needs of other occupants of your home.

When to Locate the Laundry Room Upstairs

If your house already has an upstairs area set aside for a laundry room, it makes perfect sense to locate the washer and dryer there. Laundry rooms rarely are multi-purpose; you will be hard-pressed to find another use for a laundry room space since they are often small, have no windows, and outlets are inconvenient. When you prefer laundry to be closer to your daily activities When disabled or elderly may be using laundry facilities When the weight of the machines and potential flooding are not issues When the laundry room is located upstairs and close to general living areas, bathrooms, kitchen, and bedrooms, laundry operations better integrate into your daily life. It is easy to hear when washer and dryer cycles have finished, and you can quickly shift clothes. If you are disabled, elderly, approaching old age, or otherwise want to keep your house fully accessible, an upstairs laundry room is the right choice. Moving clothing around is a horizontal activity, with no steps involved. Even those in wheelchairs may find that they can do their own laundry, as long as the floors are smooth, free of steps, and the door to the laundry room is wide enough.

When to Locate the Laundry Room in the Basement

One of the best things about locating the laundry room in the basement is that it offers you more freedom with the layout. Upstairs laundry rooms’ layouts are dictated by the layout of other upstairs rooms and usually are assigned a lower priority by designers and architects when it comes to spacing. When your basement has uncovered walls with exposed electrical and plumbing lines When overflow or flooding may be an issue When the weight of the washer or dryer may be a problem upstairs Even in larger homes, the laundry room is sometimes relegated to a slice of space next to the garage, kitchen, or mudroom. With the basement, though, you have far more room to work with, as long as the basement has not already been built out and finished. Basements tend to be rich environments for tapping into plumbing and electrical points. Ceilings and walls are often not left uncovered by drywall. In unfinished basements, water supply pipes might be found running overhead, between or through joists. Natural gas for gas dryers can be found in basements for furnaces and water heaters. If you have older machines or machines that have given you trouble in the past with overflows—or if you are just risk-averse—locating the laundry room in the basement will separate potential floods from the more sensitive upstairs living areas. Basement areas’ tough, durable flooring—concrete, ceramic tile, and inexpensive flooring—make them easy to clean up, should they flood. Basement concrete floors provide a stable surface for heavy machines, particularly if you intend to stack the dryer on top of the washer. Stacked washers and dryers’ footprint place greater stress on a smaller area than machines that rest side by side.

Upstairs vs. Basement Laundry Room: How to Choose

If you have open basement space and don’t mind the occasional trip up and down stairs with laundry, you’ll likely prefer locating the laundry room in the basement. This option gives you as much space as possible upstairs for eating, sleeping, and other life activities that you do on a daily basis, rather than less frequent laundry activities. If accessing the basement is an issue and you do have space upstairs for the laundry room, you may prefer to locate the room upstairs. This option lets you intertwine laundry activities with the rest of your daily activities—a plus if you have children and do a lot of laundry every week.