🧱 Tile Calculator — How Many Tiles Do I Need?

Tile Calculator Room Coverage, Wastage & Cost Estimator

Find exactly how many tiles you need for any room — floor, wall, bathroom or kitchen. Enter room dimensions and tile size, set your wastage allowance, and get an instant tile count with boxes needed and total cost. Add multiple rooms and subtract areas for doors, islands and other obstacles. Works for metric (metres) and imperial (feet) with 17 common tile size presets or custom dimensions. Grout joint size is included in every calculation.

Multiple roomsDeduct obstaclesBoxes + cost estimateMetric & imperial
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🧱 Tile Calculator

How Many Tiles Do I Need?

Enter room dimensions and tile size. Add multiple rooms and subtract obstacles. Get tile count, boxes needed and cost estimate instantly.

Units:
Tile size
Typical: 2–3mm wall tiles, 3–5mm floor tiles.
5% (simple room)20% (diagonal/complex)
Boxes & cost (optional)
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Tile size quick reference

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300×300mm
~11 tiles/m²
Classic bathroom & kitchen
With 3mm grout10.9 tiles/m²
Wastage (straight)10%
Wastage (diagonal)15%
Typical useBathroom floor/wall
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600×600mm
~2.75 tiles/m²
Living room & open plan
With 3mm grout2.74 tiles/m²
Wastage (straight)10%
Large format benefitFewer cuts
Typical useLounge, hallway
🛁
300×600mm
~5.5 tiles/m²
Bathroom wall tile
With 3mm grout5.47 tiles/m²
Wastage10–15%
OrientationPortrait or landscape
Typical useShower walls, en suite
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600×1200mm
~1.38 tiles/m²
Large format plank
With 3mm grout1.37 tiles/m²
Wastage10–20%
NoteNeeds flat substrate
Typical useHallway, open plan
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Tiling Guide

How to Calculate Tiles for a Room — Step by Step

Getting the tile quantity right before you order is one of the most important steps in any tiling project. Too few and you face the problem of matching a discontinued batch. Too many and you have wasted money. Here is exactly how this calculator works — and how to get the most accurate result.

Step 1 — Measure the room correctly

Measure the length and width of the floor or wall area in metres (or feet if using imperial mode). For a floor, measure wall to wall at the longest points. For walls, measure height and width of each wall section. If the room is L-shaped, calculate it as two rectangles and add both as separate rooms in the calculator. Always measure in multiple places — rooms are rarely perfectly rectangular. Use the longest dimension to be safe.

Step 2 — Subtract obstacles and deductions

Do not subtract doorways from a floor calculation — tiles are usually cut across doorways and the threshold tile is counted in the main area. Do subtract large fixed obstacles such as kitchen islands, bath panels, shower trays and built-in furniture bases where no tiling occurs. Enter each deduction as a length and width pair using the “Add deduction” button. The calculator subtracts these from the gross room area automatically.

Step 3 — Choose the right wastage percentage

Wastage accounts for cut pieces, breakages and the off-cuts discarded when fitting around edges, corners and obstacles. The standard rule of thumb is 10% for a straightforward rectangular room with a simple grid lay. Use 15% for diagonal patterns (tiles laid at 45 degrees), which waste more material at the edges. Use 15–20% for herringbone or basket-weave patterns. Use 5% for very large tiles (e.g. 1200×1200mm) in a clean rectangular room, since there are fewer cuts proportionally. Add an extra 5% if the room has many recesses, angled walls or complex shapes.

Step 4 — Account for grout joints

Grout joints are the gaps between tiles filled with grout. They are part of the floor area but not part of the tile itself. Standard grout joints are 2–3mm for wall tiles and 3–5mm for floor tiles. Rectified tiles (precision-cut with straight edges) are often laid with 1.5–2mm joints. The calculator adds the grout joint to each tile dimension before computing area per tile, which gives a more accurate result than calculating from tile dimensions alone. For most projects the difference is small, but it becomes meaningful over large areas or with wide grout joints.

Step 5 — Calculate boxes and round up

Tiles are sold in boxes. Enter the tiles per box from the product specification on the shop listing or tile packaging. The calculator divides total tiles needed by tiles per box and rounds up to the nearest whole box — you cannot buy a partial box. Enter the price per box to get a total material cost estimate. This does not include adhesive, grout, tools or installation labour.

Wastage Guide

Tile Wastage: How Much Extra Do You Really Need?

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10% — standard for most projects — A 10% wastage allowance is right for a rectangular or near-rectangular room laid in a straight grid pattern. This covers normal edge cuts (tiles against walls are cut to fit), an average number of breakages, and a small reserve. If you are an experienced tiler who rarely breaks tiles, 8% may be sufficient. If you are tiling for the first time, 12% gives more comfort.
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15% — for diagonal patterns and irregular rooms — Diagonal patterns (tiles at 45 degrees) waste significantly more material because every perimeter tile must be cut at an angle. The off-cut triangles are rarely usable elsewhere. Similarly, rooms with many internal corners, recesses or non-parallel walls generate more waste cuts than simple rectangles. Use 15% as a minimum for these situations.
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20%+ — for complex patterns and highly irregular spaces — Herringbone, basketweave, Versailles and other multi-direction patterns can waste 15–25% of material. Similarly, tiling bathrooms with many plumbing fixtures to cut around, or oddly shaped spaces with angled walls, can push wastage higher. When in doubt, set 20% — the extra boxes can always be stored for future repairs and matching later is difficult once the batch is discontinued.
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The dye lot problem — why you should always over-order slightly — Ceramic and porcelain tiles are manufactured in batches. Even within the same product range, two boxes from different production runs (different “dye lots”) can vary subtly in colour, shade, or surface texture. Once a particular batch is sold out, the shop may stock a new batch that is visibly different when placed next to the original. If you run short mid-project and need to order more tiles, you may not be able to match your existing floor or wall. Always err on the side of buying one extra box — store it in case of future repairs.
Comparison

LazyTools vs Other Tile Calculators

FeatureLazyToolsHomeDepotTile.co.ukOmnicalculator
Multiple rooms✅ Yes❌ One room❌ One room❌ One room
Deductions for obstacles✅ Yes (per room)❌ No❌ No⚠ Limited
Grout joint size✅ Yes (mm)❌ No✅ Yes✅ Yes
Adjustable wastage %✅ Yes (5–30%)⚠ Fixed 10%⚠ Fixed✅ Yes
Boxes + cost estimate✅ Yes✅ Yes✅ Yes⚠ Boxes only
Metric and imperial✅ Both⚠ Imperial only⚠ Metric only✅ Both
17 tile size presets✅ Yes❌ No⚠ Some⚠ Few
Reference

Tiles Per Square Metre — Quick Reference

Tile sizeGrout (3mm)Tiles/m²Tiles/ft²
100×100mm103×103mm cell94.28.75
150×150mm153×153mm cell42.73.97
200×200mm203×203mm cell24.32.26
300×300mm303×303mm cell10.91.01
300×600mm303×603mm cell5.470.51
450×450mm453×453mm cell4.870.45
600×600mm603×603mm cell2.750.26
600×1200mm603×1203mm cell1.380.13
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Measure room length and width. Multiply for gross area. Subtract any obstacles. Divide by tile area (tile + grout joint). Add wastage (10% standard). Round up. Enter your dimensions in the calculator above for an automatic result.

10% for a standard rectangular room with straight grid pattern. 15% for diagonal pattern, irregular rooms, or many obstacles. 20% for complex patterns (herringbone, basketweave). 5% for very large tiles in simple rooms. When in doubt, add an extra box.

Divide 1 by the tile cell area (tile + grout joint) in m2. 300x300mm with 3mm grout = 10.9 tiles/m2. 600x600mm = 2.75 tiles/m2. See the reference table above for all common sizes. The calculator shows tiles per m2 (or ft2) in its results.

Total tiles needed (with wastage) divided by tiles per box, rounded up to the nearest whole box. Enter tiles per box in the calculator above and it calculates this automatically.

Enter bathroom length and width, add deductions for bathtub or shower tray, set tile size and 10-15% wastage. Add tiles per box and price for cost. Works for floor tiles and wall tiles. Free, no account, no ads.

Yes. Grout joints are part of the floor area. Adding 3mm to each tile dimension before computing area gives a more accurate result than using tile dimensions alone. For 300x300mm with 3mm grout, each tile occupies 303x303mm = 0.0918m2 rather than 0.09m2 - a 2% difference that adds up over large areas.

Switch the calculator to Imperial mode using the toggle at the top. Enter room dimensions in feet. Select a tile size in inches from the presets (4x4, 6x6, 12x12, 12x24, 18x18, 24x24 inch) or enter custom mm dimensions. Results shown in square feet and tiles per square foot.

Yes. Always buy at least one extra box from the same batch. Tiles from different production runs can vary in shade or texture. If a tile cracks in 5 years and you need a replacement, matching the original batch after it is discontinued is often impossible. Store leftover tiles from the same batch after installation.

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