Tile Calculator

Enter your area and tile size for the exact tile count — plus thinset, grout, spacers and everything else you'll actually need.

Input
Tile size (inches)
Grout joint width
Waste allowance10%

Grout is calculated from your tile size and joint width — no guessing. We never pad quantities.

You'll need
110 tiles
of 12×12 in tile

Based on 100 sq ft, 12×12 in tiles, 3/16 in — standard (default), 10% waste.

Materials list

Thinset mortar3 bags
50 lb bags · ~40 sq ft per bag · 1/4″ square-notch trowel
Sanded grout3 bags
≈ 55 lbs needed · 25 lb bags
Tile spacers2 bags
Bags of 100 · X-type for consistent 3/16 in joints
Grout sealer1 bottleoptional
Apply after grout cures 72 h to protect from stains.
Grout sponges1 spongeoptional
Large coarse sponge for wiping haze — replace each job.

Tools you'll want

Buy-once items — skip any you already own.

1/4″ notch trowel
Use 3/8″ for tiles larger than 15 in.
Rubber grout float
Tile wet sawoptional
Rentable from big-box stores. Manual cutter for simple straight cuts.

Where to buy (optional)

Happy with your list? Tap any item below to open it at a retailer. These are affiliate links that support the site at no extra cost — but shop wherever you like.

Estimates only — verify quantities before buying.

How to calculate how much tile you need

Tile quantity is the total area divided by the size of one tile, with a waste factor for cuts:

tile area (sq ft) = (tile width in × tile length in) ÷ 144
tiles needed = (total area × (1 + waste%)) ÷ tile area
grout (lbs) = 16 × joint width × (tile W + tile L) ÷ (tile W × tile L) × area

Add multiple areas (rooms, hallways, backsplash) and they are summed. Thinset coverage adjusts automatically for tile size: larger tile needs a deeper trowel notch, so coverage per bag drops.

Common mistakes

  • Not enough waste for diagonal or patterned layouts — bump to 15–20%.
  • Buying tile from different production lots — colour shade varies between batches.
  • Wrong grout type: sanded grout is not for tight joints under 1/8 in (it scratches polished surfaces).
  • Skipping backer board in wet areas — standard drywall will fail.

Frequently asked questions

How much tile do I need for 100 square feet?+

For 100 sq ft with 12×12 in tiles and 10% waste, you need about 110 tiles. Divide the total area by the area of one tile (tile width × tile length in inches ÷ 144), then add your waste percentage.

How much extra tile should I buy for waste?+

Add 10% for straight, square layouts. Use 15–20% for diagonal patterns, patterned tile, or rooms with lots of cuts and angles. Always buy from the same production lot — colours vary between batches.

How much thinset do I need?+

One 50 lb bag of thinset covers roughly 40–50 sq ft with a standard 1/4 in square-notch trowel. Large-format tile (over 15 in) needs a bigger notch, so coverage drops to about 30 sq ft per bag.

How much grout do I need?+

Grout coverage depends on tile size and joint width. For 12×12 in tile with 3/16 in joints, plan on roughly 0.5 lbs per sq ft — about one 25 lb bag per 50 sq ft. Smaller tiles or wider joints use more grout.

What grout joint size should I use?+

3/16 in is the most common for standard ceramic floor and wall tile. Use 1/8 in for natural stone and polished porcelain. Large-format rectified tile can go as tight as 1/16 in. Wider joints (1/4 in) suit handmade or rustic tile.

Sanded vs unsanded grout — which should I use?+

Use sanded grout for joints 1/8 in or wider. Use unsanded grout for joints narrower than 1/8 in, for glass tile, and for polished or softer stone — sand can scratch delicate surfaces.

Do I need cement backer board under tile?+

Yes, on floors and wet areas (showers, tub surrounds). Cement backer board — or an uncoupling membrane — gives tile a stable, moisture-resistant base. Tick the checkbox and the calculator adds the sheets to your list.

Related calculators

Flooring Calculator (soon)
Sheet Cut Calculator (soon)
Reviewed by the RenoSheets team for calculation accuracy. Method: area ÷ tile size with adjustable waste; thinset from trowel-notch coverage rates; grout from joint-width formula calibrated to manufacturer data. Last updated 2026-05-23. Estimates only — verify quantities before purchasing.