Tile Installation Estimate: Line by Line
A tile installation estimate has more lines than plank flooring because of the setting materials — thinset, backer board, grout, sealer — and because tile is labor-heavy and slow (a setter covers ~100–150 sq ft/day, far less than LVP). Use a 10–15% waste factor (higher for large-format or diagonal), and bill labor per square foot at your burdened rate. A 120 sq ft bathroom floor commonly estimates around $3,150.
Tile is where contractors who price it like vinyl lose their shirt. The material is only half the story — the setting system and the slow production rate drive the cost. Here’s the full line-by-line.
The lines a tile estimate needs
- Tile — sq ft × price × (1 + 10–15% waste). Large-format and diagonal push waste higher.
- Setting materials — thinset/mortar, backer board or membrane, grout, sealer, spacers. Easy to under-count.
- Labor — at your burdened rate and a realistic tile production rate (100–150 sq ft/day floor; less for walls, patterns, and small mosaics).
- Prep — substrate leveling, waterproofing in wet areas, demo of old surface.
- Markup → margin on the whole job.
A real example: 120 sq ft bathroom floor
| Line | Detail | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Tile | 138 sq ft (15% waste) @ $4.50 | $620 |
| Setting materials | thinset, backer, grout, sealer, waterproofing | $330 |
| Labor | ~1.5 days @ burdened crew | $1,650 |
| Demo + prep | old floor out, level | $250 |
| Direct cost | $2,850 | |
| Price @ ~10% margin | ÷ 0.90 | $3,150 |
Note how labor dominates — it’s more than tile + setting materials combined. That’s tile: you’re selling skilled hours, not boxes. Under-estimate the days and the whole bid collapses.
Flooring Estimate Calculator Pro
Handles tile’s higher waste factor, setting-material lines, and slower labor production rate alongside plank and hardwood — multi-room, box rounding, markup-to-margin, print-ready estimate. Excel + Google Sheets.
See the general method in how to estimate a flooring job, get your labor number from the Labor Burden Calculator, and review waste factors for large-format tile.
Trade Templates Co. builds back-office templates for solo trade businesses, QA’d against real job numbers before they ship. Numbers are illustrative — use local material and labor costs.
Frequently asked questions
What waste factor for tile?
10–15% standard, higher for large-format, diagonal, or patterned layouts where cuts waste more.
Why is tile labor so high?
Tile is slow — roughly 100–150 sq ft/day for floors, less for walls and patterns — and skilled, so labor often exceeds material cost.
What setting materials do I include?
Thinset/mortar, backer board or waterproof membrane, grout, sealer, and spacers — count them; they add up.
Do I need waterproofing in the estimate?
In wet areas (showers, bathroom floors) yes — membrane/waterproofing is a real material and labor line, not optional.
Get the Tuesday Template
One field-tested back-office template and a pricing tip in your inbox each week. No fluff.