Introduction
Planning a tiling project for your bathroom floor, kitchen backsplash, or entire living area? Getting the tile quantity wrong means costly delays or wasted materials. This tile calculator takes the guesswork out of your renovation by delivering precise numbers based on your actual room dimensions and tile specifications.
Whether you’re a DIY homeowner tiling a small powder room or a contractor managing a commercial flooring installation, you need accurate estimates for tiles, grout, and total budget. Enter your room length and width, tile size, grout joint width, and wastage percentage, the calculator instantly tells you how many tiles to buy, including extras for cuts and breakage.
Toolraxy’s tile estimator handles both floor and wall projects, accounts for door and window cutouts on walls, and even calculates approximate grout needed. No more overbuying or last-minute store runs. Get professional-grade estimates in seconds, completely free.
How to Use
Select surface type – Choose Floor or Wall depending on your project
Enter room dimensions – Input length and width (meters or feet)
For walls only – Add subtract area for doors and windows
Specify tile size – Enter tile length and width (cm, inches, or mm)
Set grout joint width – Typically 2–5mm for most installations
Choose wastage percentage – Standard recommendation is 10%
Add cost details (optional) – Price per tile and tiles per box
Click Calculate – View instant results including total tiles, boxes, cost, and grout estimate
How the Tool Works
The tile calculator follows a straightforward mathematical process. All measurements are converted to a consistent unit (meters for area, millimeters for grout) before calculation.
Formula:
Total Area = Length × Width
Net Area = Total Area − Subtract Area (walls only)
Tile Area = Tile Length × Tile Width
Raw Tiles = Net Area ÷ Tile Area
Tiles Needed = ROUNDUP(Raw Tiles)
Tiles with Wastage = ROUNDUP(Tiles Needed × (1 + Wastage% ÷ 100))
Boxes Needed = ROUNDUP(Tiles with Wastage ÷ Tiles per Box)
Total Cost = Tiles with Wastage × Price per Tile
Grout Calculation Logic:
The grout estimate approximates volume based on total joint length. The calculator determines a grid pattern (horizontal and vertical tile counts), multiplies joint length × joint width × joint depth (standard 6mm), then converts to kilograms using grout density of 1.8 g/cm³.
Validation Behavior:
If tile area is zero or invalid, results display “—”
Subtract area cannot make net area negative (minimum zero)
All tile counts round up (ceil) since partial tiles require full tiles
Wastage percentage capped at 30% in the input field
Box calculation only activates when tiles per box > 0
Edge Cases Handled:
Zero or empty inputs default to 0
Different unit combinations (metric and imperial mixed are converted)
Door/window subtraction for wall surfaces only
Price per tile at zero shows “—” for cost
Worked Example
Scenario: A homeowner is tiling a small bathroom floor measuring 2.5 meters by 3 meters. They plan to use 45cm × 45cm porcelain tiles with 3mm grout joints, 10% wastage for cuts and breakage. Each tile costs $4.50.
Step-by-step calculation:
Total floor area = 2.5m × 3m = 7.5 m²
Tile area = 0.45m × 0.45m = 0.2025 m² per tile
Raw tiles needed = 7.5 ÷ 0.2025 = 37.04 tiles
Rounded up = 38 tiles (no partial tiles)
With 10% wastage = 38 × 1.10 = 41.8 → rounded up to 42 tiles
Total cost = 42 × 4.50=∗∗4.50=∗∗189.00**
Boxes needed (if 6 tiles per box) = 42 ÷ 6 = 7 boxes exactly
What the result means: Purchase 42 tiles. This covers your 7.5 m² floor plus extra for diagonal cuts, damaged tiles, and future replacements. The 10% wastage is appropriate for a standard rectangular room with minimal complex cuts.
What’s the Difference Between Floor and Wall Tile Calculations?
Floor calculations typically cover whole rooms without subtracting fixed features. Wall calculations often exclude door and window areas (which the calculator does automatically when you select Wall). Wall tile layouts may also include chair rails, listellos, or accent strips requiring separate estimates. Floor tiles usually have higher durability ratings and different slip resistance requirements.
Benefits of Using This Tool
Saves time – Instant calculations eliminate manual math and unit conversions
Reduces errors – No more mixing centimeters with inches or forgetting wastage
Instant results – Updates as you change any input value
Free to use – No subscriptions, no hidden fees, no email required
Private – All calculations happen in your browser; no data sent to any server
Accessible on any device – Works on phones, tablets, laptops, and desktops
Professional-grade – Same formulas contractors use for material bids
Grout estimation included – Avoids separate calculator for joint materials
FAQs
How accurate is this tile calculator?
The calculator is mathematically accurate based on the inputs you provide. Accuracy depends on your room measurements. For best results, measure length and width at multiple points (rooms are rarely perfectly square) and use the smallest dimension. The grout estimate is approximate (±15%) since actual usage varies with notch trowel size and surface flatness.
Can I calculate tiles manually without a tool?
Yes: area ÷ tile area + wastage. But manual calculation requires converting all units to match, accounting for partial tiles (always round up), and separately calculating wall cutouts. The automated tool eliminates unit conversion errors and recalculates instantly when changing tile size or room dimensions.
What causes the tile count to change when I adjust grout width?
Grout joints occupy physical space between tiles. Wider joints slightly reduce the number of tiles needed per square meter because each tile covers slightly less net area. The effect is small—about 1-2% difference between 2mm and 5mm joints—but the calculator accounts for this.
Is this tile estimator safe to use for commercial projects?
Yes. The mathematical formulas are identical for residential and commercial applications. For large commercial jobs, we recommend calculating each room or zone separately and adding a 5% master lot buffer for future replacements across the entire project.
What is the difference between actual tile size and nominal tile size?
Nominal size is the advertised dimension (e.g., 12×12 inches). Actual size is slightly smaller due to manufacturing tolerances and rectification edges. For precise estimates, measure a few tiles from your actual batch and use the average actual size, especially for large-format or natural stone tiles.
Does the calculator include tile adhesive or mortar?
No. This tile calculator estimates tile quantities, grout, and tile cost only. Adhesive/mortar coverage depends on trowel notch size, substrate flatness, and tile type. Typically, one 25kg bag of thin-set mortar covers 5-8 m² for floor tiles using a 1/4-inch notch trowel.
Why do I need to round up tile quantities?
Tiles cannot be purchased in fractions. Even if your area calculation suggests 37.4 tiles, you must buy 38 full tiles. The rounding is built into the calculator—what you see is what you buy.
Can this tool calculate tiles for hexagonal or other non-rectangular shapes?
The calculator assumes rectangular tiles. For hexagonal, penny round, or arabesque shapes, use the same calculation but increase wastage to 15-20% due to higher edge cut waste. For accurate hexagonal estimates, consider specialized mosaic calculators.
How do I measure a room with closets or alcoves?
Measure each rectangular section separately, calculate each area, then sum all areas. Enter the total area by adjusting length or width to match the combined area, or run separate calculations and add tile quantities manually. The calculator accepts one continuous length and width.
What’s the best grout joint width for my tile?
For rectified tiles (perfectly uniform edges), 2-3mm works. For calibrated tiles (standard ceramic), 3-5mm accommodates size variation. For natural stone or handmade tiles, 5-10mm is common. Wider joints hide imperfections but collect more dirt. The calculator defaults to 3mm—adjust to match your tile specification.