Estimate ceramic, porcelain, and natural stone tile installation costs by room size, tile type, and pattern
Homeowners tiling kitchens, bathrooms, entryways, or patios — and anyone wanting realistic cost ranges before calling a tile contractor.
Calculate total tile installation cost including material, thinset mortar, grout, backer board, and labor — with adjustments for tile size and pattern complexity.
Tiling a 100 sq ft bathroom with mid-grade porcelain in a straight-lay pattern typically costs $900–$1,800 installed — about $9–$18 per square foot.
💡 Pro Tip: Order 10% extra for straight patterns and 15% for diagonal/herringbone. Keep spare tiles from the same dye lot — tiles are often discontinued within months.
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— sq ft area
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All materials + labor included
Input length and width to calculate the total tile area needed.
Select ceramic, porcelain, or natural stone based on your room and budget.
Larger tiles and complex patterns affect labor costs and waste percentages.
See total cost with all materials and labor — ready for contractor comparisons.
Labor is the dominant cost in tile installation — typically 50–60% of the total. Tile setting is skilled work: subfloor prep, layout planning, cutting precision, and proper mortar application all require experience. A poor tile job shows immediately and is expensive to redo.
Pattern complexity matters significantly. Straight-lay is fastest. Offset/running bond adds minimal time. Diagonal adds 15–20% to labor and waste. Herringbone and custom patterns can double labor costs — save these for accent walls or small areas.
Types, patterns, grout, and installation tips
For most floor applications, porcelain is the sweet spot. Water absorption under 0.5% makes it ideal for bathrooms and kitchens. Lasts 50+ years. Through-body porcelain won't show chips.
Large format tiles (24"×24" and bigger) are the dominant trend. They create a seamless, modern look and fewer grout lines to clean. But they require flatter subfloors and cost more to install.
Light grout shows dirt more. Dark grout hides it — but stains show on light-colored tile. Use epoxy grout in wet areas for stain resistance. Always seal standard grout within 72 hours of installation.
Tile is the best conductor for in-floor radiant heat. Unlike hardwood or LVP, tile won't expand/contract over heating mats. Plan radiant heating before tile installation — add $10–$18/sq ft for the system.
Tile is rigid — any flex in the subfloor causes grout cracking and eventual tile failure. Deflection must be L/360 or less. Never tile over OSB without backer board. Budget $1–$3/sq ft for subfloor prep.
Tile is waterproof; grout is not. In shower walls and floors, use a waterproof membrane (Schluter Kerdi, RedGard) under the tile. This adds $2–$4/sq ft but prevents costly water damage behind walls.
Material cost by tile type:
Labor by pattern:
For bathroom floors:
Yes, under specific conditions:
In most cases, removing old tile and starting fresh produces better results, especially in wet areas where old waterproofing may be compromised.
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