Floor Technician Resume: How to Show Floor Care, Equipment, and Finish in 2026

3 min read

A floor technician resume that only says "cleaned floors" gets filtered out. The employers hiring for this role care about one thing: can you care for floors by type, strip/wax/burnish, run equipment, and deliver a quality finish. The resumes that land interviews talk about floor care, equipment, and finish — not just "cleaned floors."

What your floor technician resume must prove

  • Floor care: VCT, hardwood, tile, carpet, concrete, by floor type.
  • Strip & refinish: strip, scrub, wax/finish coats, burnish, buff.
  • Equipment: auto-scrubbers, burnishers, buffers, extractors, pads/chemicals.
  • Finish & safety: shine/finish quality, slip safety, wet-floor signage, chemicals.

In one line: your resume should answer "what floors did you care for, how did you strip and refinish, and how good was the finish."

Don't just say "cleaned floors" — show refinishing and finish

"Cleaned floors" tells a manager nothing:

  • ❌ "Cleaned floors." — Says nothing about refinishing or finish.
  • ✅ "Stripped and refinished VCT with wax coats, burnished to a high shine, ran auto-scrubbers and burnishers, and maintained slip safety." — Floor care, refinish, equipment, and finish/safety.

Quantify around: area/sq ft, strip/refinish jobs, equipment, finish/safety. See how to quantify achievements on a resume. Keep claims honest and follow chemical/slip safety.

How to write the skills section

Group your floor technician skills so a reviewer can scan them:

  • Floor care: VCT, hardwood, tile, carpet, concrete, by floor type
  • Strip & refinish: strip, scrub, wax/finish coats, burnish, buff
  • Equipment: auto-scrubbers, burnishers, buffers, extractors, pads/chemicals
  • Finish & safety: shine/finish quality, slip safety, signage, chemicals
  • Other: scheduling around occupancy, equipment maintenance

See how to write the skills section. For a floor technician, lead with refinishing and finish — cleaning is the means, a stripped, refinished, high-shine floor is the result. Related roles are the carpet cleaner resume guide and the window cleaner resume guide.

Floor technician vs janitorial supervisor

These roles differ — keep your resume positioned:

  • Floor technician: specializes in floor care — stripping, refinishing, and equipment.
  • Janitorial supervisor: leads the cleaning team — see the janitorial supervisor resume guide — scheduling, quality, and crews.

One specializes in floor care; the other supervises the cleaning operation. Tailor to the target role — see how to tailor your resume to a job description.

Common mistakes

  • No refinishing: strip, wax, and burnish are the headline.
  • No equipment: auto-scrubbers and burnishers show real floor work.
  • No floor types: VCT, hardwood, and tile show range.
  • No safety: slip safety, signage, and chemicals matter.
  • Vague: "cleaned floors" loses to "stripped and refinished VCT, burnished to shine, ran auto-scrubbers safely."

Frequently Asked Questions

What should a floor technician resume highlight most?

Floor care by type, strip/refinish, equipment, and finish/safety. Use area/sq ft, strip/refinish jobs, equipment, and finish/safety to show your work — not just "cleaned floors." Follow chemical/slip safety.

How do I quantify a floor technician resume?

Use real numbers: area/sq ft, strip/refinish jobs, equipment, and finish/safety. "Stripped and refinished VCT, burnished to shine, ran auto-scrubbers safely" beats "cleaned floors." Keep claims honest.

How is a floor technician resume different from a janitorial supervisor resume?

A floor technician specializes in floor care — stripping and refinishing. A janitorial supervisor leads the cleaning team — scheduling and quality. One does floors; the other supervises. Frame your resume to match the role.

Should a floor technician resume mention floor types?

Yes. The floor types you've cared for (VCT, hardwood, tile, concrete) and the equipment you run show range — list them. Pair them with your refinishing and finish record so employers see you deliver quality floors safely.


The core of a floor technician resume is showing floor care, equipment, and finish. Make your refinishing, equipment, and finish clear, keep claims honest, and your resume will compete. When it's ready, run it through Prism Resume's free check: prismresume.com/check.

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