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Tile Calculator

Enter your room size and tile size, and get the exact number of tiles and boxes to buy - including the right wastage allowance for your layout. Works in feet/inches or metres/millimetres.

Surface parameters

01. Walls & surfaces

02. Tile specification

Calculated requirement
22tiles needed

Total surface area

80.0 sq ft

Wastage allowance

+2 tiles

Guide & worked example

How this calculator works

The calculator divides your floor (or wall) area by the footprint of a single laid tile - the tile face plus one grout joint on each side - then adds your wastage allowance and rounds up to whole tiles:

tiles = ceil( (room length × room width) ÷ ((tile width + grout gap) × (tile height + grout gap)) × wastage )

Including the grout joint matters: with small tiles and a wide gap, ignoring it overestimates the count and you buy boxes you don’t need. All math runs in exact metric units internally, so switching between feet and metres never changes the result.

Worked example

This example follows the unit system you pick in the calculator above.

16 ft × 13 ft kitchen floor, 24-inch porcelain tiles, 1/8-inch grout gap, laid in a straight grid:

  1. Floor area: 16 × 13 = 208 sq ft.
  2. Each laid tile covers 24.125 in × 24.125 in ≈ 4.04 sq ft including its grout share.
  3. 208 ÷ 4.04 ≈ 51.5 → 52 whole tiles to cover the floor.
  4. Add 10% for a grid layout: 51.5 × 1.10 ≈ 56.6 → buy 57 tiles (15 boxes at 4 per box).

Those extra tiles aren’t optional padding - they cover the cut tiles at the walls, the one or two that crack during cutting, and a spare for repairs years later.

Choosing the right wastage allowance

LayoutAllowanceWhy
Straight grid10%Cuts only at the room perimeter
Offset / brick / diagonal15%Every other row starts with a cut
Herringbone / chevron20%Diagonal cuts at every edge

Small rooms and rooms with many doorways, alcoves or fixtures sit at the high end of each range, because the perimeter is large relative to the area. If your tile is a natural stone with batch variation, round up rather than down - a later batch may not match.

If your job doesn’t fit one of these presets, choose Custom %… in the wastage menu and type your own figure - useful when your tiler has quoted a specific allowance or you’re matching an existing batch.

Tiling floors, walls, showers and backsplashes

The same count works for any tiled surface - measure the area, divide by the tile footprint, add wastage - but each job has its own measuring notes:

  • Floor tiles - measure the floor at skirting level and let the tiling run under the threshold of each doorway.
  • Wall tiles - multiply each wall’s width by its tiled height. Subtract only large openings (over about 1 m²); small ones are absorbed by the wastage allowance.
  • Shower and bathroom walls - tile each wall of the enclosure separately and add them. Small mosaics and feature strips push wastage toward 15–20%.
  • Backsplash - measure the run length by the height from worktop to wall units. Backsplashes are mostly cut edges, so round up.

Run the calculator once per surface and add the results, or total the areas first - either way, pick the wastage allowance that matches each layout.

Measuring tips

  • Measure at floor level along the skirting, not across furniture.
  • For walls, multiply width × height per wall and subtract windows and doors only if they’re larger than about a square metre - small openings are usually absorbed by the wastage allowance.
  • For L-shaped or irregular rooms, split the space into rectangles and run the calculator once per rectangle.
  • Buy all your tiles at once and check the batch/shade number on every box matches.
  • For substrate, movement-joint and wet-area details that go beyond the tile count, the TCNA Handbook for Ceramic, Glass, and Stone Tile Installation is the industry reference in North America.

Frequently asked questions

01

How many tiles do I need for a 12x12 room?

A 12ft × 12ft room is 144 square feet (about 3.6m × 3.6m, or 13m²). With 12-inch (300mm) tiles you need 144 tiles before wastage, or about 159 tiles with the standard 10% wastage allowance. With larger 24-inch (600mm) tiles you need 36 tiles, or about 40 with wastage. Enter your exact room and tile size above - in feet or metres - for a precise count.

02

How much extra tile should I buy for wastage?

Buy 10% extra for a straight grid layout, 15% for offset or diagonal layouts, and 20% for intricate patterns like herringbone or chevron. The extra covers cut tiles at edges, breakages, and future repairs. Always keep spares from the same batch, because colours vary slightly between production runs.

03

Does the grout gap change how many tiles I need?

Slightly, yes. Each grout line means each tile covers a little more floor than its own face, so wider grout gaps reduce the tile count marginally. The effect is small for large tiles but noticeable with small tiles, which is why this calculator includes the gap in its math.

04

How do I measure a room for tiling?

Measure the longest length and widest width of the room at floor level and multiply them for the area. For L-shaped rooms, split the floor into rectangles, calculate each one separately, and add the tile counts together. Measure twice - a 2-inch error across a room can change the count by several tiles.

05

How many tiles come in a box?

It varies by tile size and brand - large-format tiles often come 3–5 per box, while small ceramic tiles can be 10–25 per box. Check the box label for the count (or the coverage in m²/sq ft), then enter the tiles-per-box figure in the calculator to get the number of boxes to buy.

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