Estimate how many tiles you need, including gap size, waste, number of boxes, and total cost.
Tip: 5–10% waste is common, and wider grout gaps increase tile count.
Area Size: The total floor or wall area you want to cover.
Tile Size: The coverage area of one tile including grout gap.
Gap Size: The grout line spacing between tiles.
Waste: Extra percentage to cover cuts, breakage, and layout losses.
Boxes Needed: Total boxes required based on tiles per box.
Tip: 5–10% waste is common, and wider grout gaps increase tile count.
Area Size: The total floor or wall area you want to cover.
Tile Size: The coverage area of one tile including grout gap.
Gap Size: The grout line spacing between tiles.
Waste: Extra percentage to cover cuts, breakage, and layout losses.
Boxes Needed: Total boxes required based on tiles per box.
Whether you're retiling a bathroom floor, installing a kitchen backsplash, laying porcelain floor tiles in a living room, or covering an entire patio with outdoor tiles, one of the most common mistakes DIYers and contractors make is buying the wrong quantity of tiles. Buy too few and you risk running out mid-project — possibly from a batch that's been discontinued. Buy too many and you've wasted money on expensive surplus materials sitting in a garage.
Our free tile calculator is a precise, professional-grade tile quantity calculator and tile estimator built for homeowners, interior designers, tilers, and construction professionals. Enter your room or surface dimensions, your tile size, your grout gap, your waste allowance, and your box size — and instantly receive five results: area size, tile size (including gap), tiles needed, boxes needed, and total estimated cost. It supports any tile format — from 4×4 inch mosaic tiles to 600×1200mm large-format porcelain slabs — across both Imperial and Metric unit systems, making it the most flexible tile area calculator available online.
Understanding each input ensures you get an accurate tile count for every project — whether it's a compact tile calculator for bathroom job or a full tile calculator for floor installation across an entire house.
At the top of the tool, select Imperial (in, ft) or Metric (cm, m, mm). Crucially, both tabs convert all measurements to meters internally before calculating — meaning you can freely mix units across fields. Enter your room in feet, your tile in inches, and your grout gap in millimeters, and the calculator handles all conversions automatically.
Input the Area Length and Area Width of the surface you're tiling. This can be a floor, wall, shower enclosure, backsplash, or any rectangular surface. Both fields accept five unit options: mm, cm, m, in, and ft — giving you complete flexibility regardless of how you measured the space.
For irregular rooms with alcoves, doorways, or angled sections, calculate each sub-area separately and add the results together, or measure the largest bounding rectangle and increase your waste percentage to account for the extra cuts.
Enter the Tile Width and Tile Length of the individual tile you're using. These should be the actual face dimensions of the tile — not the nominal or box-labeled size, which may include a small production tolerance. Both dimensions support the same five unit options, so a 600×300mm tile can be entered as 60cm × 30cm, or a 12×24 inch tile as 12 × 24 inches — whichever matches your tile spec sheet.
This is the most commonly overlooked input in any tile quantity calculator — and one of the most impactful. The grout gap is added to both the tile width and tile length before calculating how many tiles fit in your area. A wider grout gap means slightly fewer tiles fit per row and column, which can meaningfully change your total tile count on large areas.
Common grout gap sizes by tile type:
The calculator includes quick-reference common gap sizes — simply type your gap in any unit and the tool converts it automatically.
The waste field defaults to 10% — the standard professional allowance for most tiling projects. Waste accounts for tiles cut at edges and corners, breakages during cutting and handling, layout adjustments, and tiles held in reserve for future repairs. Use these guidelines:
If you know how many tiles come in a box (from the product label), enter it in the Box Size field. The calculator will then compute exactly how many full boxes to buy — always rounding up, since you can't purchase a partial box. Enter the Price per Box to activate the tile cost calculator and see your total material cost instantly.
Hit Calculate and receive all five results: Area Size, Tile Size (effective with gap), Tiles Needed, Boxes Needed, and Estimated Cost.
Area = Area Length (m) × Area Width (m)
All dimensions are converted to meters before this calculation, regardless of the unit entered.
Effective Tile Area = (Tile Width + Gap) × (Tile Length + Gap)
The gap is added to both dimensions because each tile, when laid, occupies slightly more space than its bare face — one grout line runs along each edge.
Raw Tiles = Total Area ÷ Effective Tile Area
Tiles Needed = ⌈ Raw Tiles × (1 + Waste% ÷ 100) ⌉
The ceiling function rounds up to the nearest whole tile — you can never use a fraction of a tile.
Boxes Needed = ⌈ Tiles Needed ÷ Tiles per Box ⌉
Again rounded up — always buy full boxes.
Total Cost = Boxes Needed × Price per Box
You're tiling a bathroom floor measuring 8 ft × 10 ft using 12×12 inch ceramic tiles with a 3/16 inch (≈ 5mm) grout gap and 10% waste. Tiles come in boxes of 20 at $45 per box.
All converted to meters:
This is the classic tile calculator for bathroom floor and 12×12 tile calculator use case — one of the highest-searched tiling queries online.
You're laying 600×300mm porcelain tiles on a living room floor measuring 6 m × 4.5 m with a 3mm grout gap and 10% waste. Boxes contain 8 tiles at $95 per box.
This applies to the tile calculator for floor, tile calculator for living room, and tile square meter calculator use case — increasingly common as large-format porcelain tiles dominate residential interiors.
You're tiling a kitchen backsplash measuring 10 ft long × 18 inches high using 3×6 inch subway tiles with a 1/8 inch (3mm) grout gap and 10% waste. Tiles come in boxes of 50 at $60 per box.
Converted to meters:
This covers the tile calculator for kitchen, tile calculator for backsplash, and subway tile calculator and 3x6 tile calculator queries — the most popular backsplash tile format globally.
You're laying 24×24 inch tiles diagonally at 45° on a 20 ft × 15 ft floor. For diagonal layouts, use 20% waste instead of 10% because diagonal cuts at every border edge produce significantly more waste.
Compared to a straight lay (which would need only 82 tiles at 10% waste), the diagonal pattern requires 7 extra tiles — a meaningful difference on expensive large-format tiles. This is why adjusting the waste factor for your specific tile layout calculator scenario is so important.
You're tiling three walls of a shower enclosure: two walls at 1.2 m × 2.1 m and one wall at 0.9 m × 2.1 m, using 300×300mm ceramic tiles with a 2mm grout gap and 15% waste (extra for the many cuts around fixtures). Boxes contain 16 tiles at $38 per box.
Total area = (1.2 × 2.1) + (1.2 × 2.1) + (0.9 × 2.1) = 2.52 + 2.52 + 1.89 = 6.93 m²
This covers the tile calculator for shower, tile calculator for bathroom wall, and tile calculator for shower wall queries — run the calculation once per surface and add the totals together, or combine all surfaces into a single total area.
Choosing the right tile affects not just aesthetics but also your grout gap selection, waste factor, and installation method — all of which directly affect your tile count calculator results.
Ceramic tiles are the most widely used tile type globally. They're affordable, available in virtually every size and color, and easy to cut. Standard sizes include 4×4, 6×6, 12×12, and 18×18 inches (or 100×100mm to 450×450mm in Metric). Use a ceramic tile calculator with 10% waste for standard rooms and a 2–3mm grout gap for wall tiles.
Porcelain tiles are denser, harder, and more water-resistant than ceramic — making them the preferred choice for bathroom floors, kitchen floors, outdoor patios, and garage floors. Large-format porcelain (600×600mm, 600×1200mm, and even 900×1800mm slabs) is increasingly popular. Use a porcelain tile calculator with a 3–5mm grout gap. Large formats require a higher waste factor (12–15%) due to the difficulty of cutting big slabs.
Marble, granite, travertine, slate, and quartzite tiles add premium visual impact but require careful ordering — natural stone tiles vary in color and shade between batches, making it almost impossible to match a new order to an existing installation. Always add 15% waste minimum when using a marble tile calculator or stone tile calculator — buy all your tiles from the same batch in one order.
Subway tiles (typically 75×150mm / 3×6 inches) are having a prolonged design moment in kitchens and bathrooms. They're usually laid in a running bond (brick) pattern, which uses slightly more material than a straight grid. Use 10–12% waste in your subway tile calculator for running bond layouts.
Mosaic tiles come mounted on mesh sheets (typically 300×300mm per sheet) for easier installation. When using a mosaic tile calculator, calculate based on the mesh sheet size rather than the individual tile size — enter sheet dimensions as your "tile" dimensions and grout gap as 1–2mm.
Luxury vinyl tiles (also called peel and stick tiles in their simpler form) are calculated identically to ceramic and porcelain tiles. Use the luxury vinyl tile calculator mode with 5–8% waste — LVT cuts cleanly with a utility knife, producing less waste than hard ceramic tiles.
Before using the calculator, these approximate figures give a quick sanity check for common room sizes using 12×12 inch (300×300mm) tiles with a 3mm grout gap and 10% waste:
These are reference figures only — use our tile calculator for floor or tile calculator for bathroom with your exact dimensions for a precise count.
Once you know your tile count and area from this tile area calculator, you can estimate your grout requirement:
Grout needed (kg) = (Tile Length + Tile Width) ÷ (Tile Length × Tile Width) × Gap Width × Tile Thickness × Area × Grout Density
For most standard residential projects, a simplified rule applies: 1 kg of grout covers approximately 3–4 m² for 300×300mm tiles with a 3mm joint. For larger tiles with wider joints, coverage per kg drops; for smaller mosaic tiles, you'll use significantly more grout per square meter.
Our calculator provides your tile area in m² as a starting point — from there, your grout supplier can confirm the exact quantity based on your specific tile and joint dimensions.
Tile adhesive (also called tile mortar, tile cement, or tile glue) consumption depends on the tile size and the application method:
Multiply your area in m² (shown in the Area Size result) by the appropriate figure to estimate your adhesive bags. Most bags are 20kg, so divide your total kg by 20 for bag count.
Q1: How many tiles do I need for a 10×10 room?
A 10 ft × 10 ft room = 100 sq ft = 9.29 m². Using 12×12 inch tiles with a 3mm gap and 10% waste, you need approximately 113 tiles. For 600×600mm tiles with the same gap and waste, you'd need approximately 30 tiles. Use our tile calculator for floor with your exact tile size for a precise count.
Q2: How do I calculate tiles needed including waste?
Divide your total area by the effective tile area (tile size + gap on each dimension). Multiply the result by (1 + waste%/100) and round up to the nearest whole tile. Our tile calculator with waste handles this automatically — just enter your waste percentage (default: 10%) and the tool applies it instantly.
Q3: How many boxes of tile do I need?
Divide your total tile count by the number of tiles per box, then round up. If you need 86 tiles and your box contains 20, you need 5 boxes. Our tile calculator for boxes computes this automatically once you enter your box size.
Q4: How much extra tile should I buy?
The industry standard is 10% extra for most standard rectangular rooms. Add 15% for complex rooms with many cuts, angles, or obstacles. Add 15–20% for diagonal or herringbone patterns. Always buy slightly more than your exact calculated need — tiles from different batches can vary in shade, making future repairs impossible to match perfectly.
Q5: How many 12×24 tiles do I need for a bathroom?
For a standard 8×10 ft bathroom floor (80 sq ft / 7.43 m²) with 12×24 inch tiles, a 3/16 inch gap, and 10% waste, you'd need approximately 45 tiles. Enter your exact bathroom dimensions into our 12x24 tile calculator for a precise result.
Q6: What is the best grout gap for floor tiles?
For standard floor tiles (300–600mm), a 3–5mm grout gap is most common. Smaller gaps (2–3mm) work well with precision-cut rectified tiles. Larger gaps (6–10mm) are used for outdoor and patio tiles or for a deliberate rustic aesthetic. Our tile calculator with grout lines accounts for any gap size you specify.
Q7: Can I use this as a wall tile calculator?
Yes — simply enter the wall's height as "Area Length" and width as "Area Width." The calculation is identical for floors and walls. For a full bathroom with multiple walls, calculate each wall separately and add the totals, or combine all wall areas into a single total for a one-step result using our tile calculator for wall.
Q8: How do I calculate tiles for a diagonal layout?
Use the calculator normally with your room and tile dimensions, but increase your waste factor to 15–20% to account for the additional edge cuts that diagonal patterns create. The raw tile count calculation is the same — it's only the cut waste that increases significantly in a diagonal tile calculator scenario.
1. Tile Council of North America (TCNA) — Industry Standards for Tile Installation
The Tile Council of North America is the definitive industry authority for tile installation standards in the United States, publishing the widely-referenced TCNA Handbook for Ceramic, Glass, and Stone Tile Installation. Their specifications for grout joint widths, adhesive coverage, and waste allowances are the professional standard that every tiler, contractor, and architect references — directly supporting the grout gap guidance and waste factor recommendations throughout this content.
2. British Ceramic Tile / Tile Association (UK) — Technical Tiling Guidance Anchor
The Tile Association is the UK's primary trade body for the tile industry, representing manufacturers, distributors, and installation contractors. Their technical guidance on tile sizing standards, BS EN installation specifications, and grout joint recommendations directly supports the Metric content throughout this page — especially for UK and European audiences using the metric tab of this calculator.