tiling a bathroom

How much to tile a bathroom? A realistic UK cost guide

Tiling a bathroom in the UK typically costs between £400 and £1,500 for materials and labour combined, though the final figure depends heavily on the size of the room, the tiles you choose, and whether you hire a professional or tackle it yourself. Understanding the breakdown of those costs – from adhesive and grout through to day rates for skilled tilers – helps you budget accurately and avoid nasty surprises halfway through the job. But how much does it cost to tile a bathroom if you want premium large-format porcelain on every surface?

Key takeaways

  • Porcelain tiles can be used on both walls and floors, potentially reducing overall complexity and labour.
  • Ceramic tiles are suitable for walls only – bear this in mind when comparing prices, as you will need a separate floor tile.
  • Professional tilers charge £150–£280+ per day, depending on location – always obtain at least three quotes.
  • Labour typically accounts for 30–50% of total tiling costs in a professionally tiled bathroom.
  • Budget a 10–15% contingency for hidden costs such as substrate repairs and tanking.
  • Use the Free Tile Visualiser to generate an accurate materials list and take the guesswork out of your budget.

How much does it cost to tile a bathroom? The key variables

There is no single answer to how much it costs to tile a bathroom because the total is the sum of several independent variables. Breaking these down separately gives a much clearer picture than any blanket figure.

The four main cost drivers are:

  • Room size – larger rooms require more tiles, more adhesive, more grout, and more labour hours;
  • Tile type and price per m² – budget ceramic wall tiles can be found for as little as £15/m², while premium large-format porcelain can exceed £80/m²;
  • Labour costs – professional tilers in the UK charge between £150 and £250 per day depending on location and experience, with London rates typically at the higher end;
  • Preparation and additional works – tanking a shower enclosure, replacing damaged plasterboard, or fitting underfloor heating all add to the total.

A useful starting point is to calculate the surface area of the walls and floor you intend to tile, add 10–15% for cuts and wastage, and use that figure to request tile quotes and estimate adhesive and grout quantities.

Material costs: tiles, adhesive, and grout

Tiles are almost always the single largest material cost. For tiles for bathroom projects, the choice between ceramic and porcelain is the most significant decision you will make on materials. Ceramic tiles are a more delicate material suitable for walls only, and they typically sit at the lower end of the price range. Porcelain tiles, fired at higher temperatures to produce a much harder and denser finish, can be used on both walls and floors.

As a rough guide to tile costs in the UK market:

  • Budget ceramic wall tiles: £15–£20 per m²
  • Mid-range ceramic or porcelain wall tiles: £20–£45 per m²
  • Premium porcelain (wall and floor): £45–£90+ per m²

Beyond tiles themselves, factor in adhesive (approximately £20–£30 per 20kg bag, covering around 4–5m²), grout (£10–£20 per bag depending on coverage and type), tile spacers, and silicone sealant. For a typical 5m² small bathroom, materials excluding tiles usually run to £80–£150 in total.

Labour costs: Hiring a professional tiler

If you are not going the DIY route, understanding tiler day rates is essential to budgeting accurately. In the UK, most professional tilers charge on a day-rate basis rather than per tile or per m². Typical day rates are:

  • Outside London and major cities: £150–£180 per day;
  • Major cities (Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds): £180–£220 per day;
  • London: £220–£280+ per day.

Most tilers will provide a fixed quote for the full job rather than working open-ended on a day rate, particularly for smaller bathrooms. Always obtain at least three quotes, and make sure each one specifies what is and is not included – surface preparation, tile cutting, grout, and sealant are sometimes quoted separately.

A typical small bathroom (under 4m²) with straightforward wall and floor tiling will take an experienced tiler 1.5 to 2 days. A larger bathroom with a shower enclosure, feature wall, or complex pattern might take 3–4 days. Multiplied by a day rate, you can see how labour quickly becomes the dominant cost in a full bathroom retile.

If you tile it yourself and supply your own labour, you can typically halve the overall cost – bringing a small bathroom tile job down to £240–£450 all-in for materials. The learning curve is manageable in a simple, rectangular room, and the savings are substantial. For a fuller picture of the process, our guide “How to tile a bathroom covers every stage from surface preparation to grouting in detail.

Get an accurate budget before you buy

Our Free Tile Visualiser removes one of the biggest sources of budget uncertainty: not knowing exactly how many tiles you need. By inputting your room dimensions and choosing your tiles within the visualiser, you receive a complete materials list, so you can build a precise cost model before placing a single order. For anyone planning a bathroom renovation in the UK, this kind of digital planning tool is invaluable, and it means fewer expensive return trips to order more tiles because you ran short.

Ready to get a precise materials list and control your bathroom budget?

Try our Free Tile Visualiser now – design your room, choose your tiles, and get everything you need in one list. Don’t know what tiles to choose? Check out our bestsellers!

Hidden costs worth budgeting for

Even experienced renovators are occasionally caught out by costs that only emerge once the old tiles come off. The most common hidden costs in a bathroom retile are:

  • Damaged plasterboard or render – removing old tiles sometimes brings the substrate with them; replacing sections of plasterboard adds £50–£150 per sheet for supply and fit.
  • Waterproofing (tanking) – shower enclosures should ideally be tanked before tiling; a professional application costs £150–£300 and is absolutely worth it.
  • Skip hire or waste disposal – a full bathroom strip-out generates significant waste; budget £100–£180 for skip hire in most UK regions.
  • Movement and expansion – in heated bathrooms or rooms over underfloor heating, a flexible adhesive and correctly placed expansion joints are essential; these add modest cost but prevent costly cracking later.

Building in a 10–15% contingency on top of your projected costs is standard practice for any tiling or renovation project, and it rarely goes unspent in a bathroom.

How much should you realistically budget for bathroom tiling?

The cost of tiling a bathroom in the UK can vary significantly depending on the size of the room, the tile material, and whether you hire a professional or complete the work yourself. While a simple small bathroom may cost only a few hundred pounds in materials, premium porcelain, complex layouts and additional preparation work can quickly increase the final budget.

Careful planning is the best way to avoid unnecessary costs and surprises during the renovation process. By using the Free Tile Visualiser, you can accurately estimate tile quantities, experiment with layouts and build a more reliable budget before placing an order. Factoring in labour, preparation work and a sensible contingency will help ensure the project runs far more smoothly from start to finish.

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