Skip to main content
Skip to main content
Tool-first calculator

Bathroom tile calculator: sqft, grout, and thinset.

Enter floor and wall dimensions to estimate total tile area, number of tiles, grout buckets, thinset bags, and a broad material cost. The calculator uses editable assumptions because tile waste, pattern complexity, and substrate prep vary by job.

Independent FatBook v3 cost indexVerified permit/source data where availableReviewed by Leonard "Chuck" Thompson
ft
ft
ft
ft
$
$
Total tile area (DIY material)
-
Local installed cost

What an installer charges for your scope.

The numbers above are material counts and sizing. Below shows what a contractor typically charges in your city for an installed version of this scope, scaled from FatBook's cost index of BLS wages + Craftsman labor hours + permits + materials.

Pick the cost-index service that matches the scope you're scaling. The default is the trade's headline service.
National Average
-
How to use this result
  • Buy tile in full boxes. Check the box for sqft coverage and round up to whole boxes.
  • Mosaics and small format tiles need more thinset coverage per sqft than large format. Add a bag if in doubt.
  • Material cost above is DIY only (tile + grout + thinset). Local installed cost below covers labor, prep, waterproofing, trim, and supplies as part of a typical bathroom remodel scope.
Cost-index version: 2026.Q2. Read the FatBook methodology, or use the bid and true cost calculators for an installed bathroom remodel bid check.
Data Sources Used On This Page
  • Independent FatBook v3 cost index for tile calculator for Austin.
  • BLS OEWS wage inputs and FRED PPI material inflation references.
  • Craftsman labor-hour references and contractor overhead benchmarks.
  • Verified permit/source data from PermitCalculator.com and permits_compiled where available.
Cost-index version: 2026.Q2
Updated: May 2026
Sources: BLS, NKBA, Remodeling Magazine, Craftsman
Reviewed by: Leonard "Chuck" Thompson
DO
Cost index built by David Olson, Founder of TheFatBook · Methodology reviewed by Leonard "Chuck" Thompson, LC Thompson Construction Co., Owner (retired) · 2026.Q1