Tiler is measuring up a 4.2m x 3.6m bathroom with a separate 2.1m x 1.8m shower recess. Before the tile order, you need the total tile count with the correct waste allowance for the tile size and a diagonal lay pattern.
Tiles = (Area ÷ Tile area) × Waste factor
Always round up to full boxes. Order 10–15% extra for future repairs.
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the number of tiles required to cover an area from the room dimensions and tile size. Applies waste percentage for different laying patterns (straight, diagonal, complex). Shows total area to purchase and number of boxes based on pack coverage.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Room area (m²) = Length x Width
Tile area (m²) = Tile length (mm) / 1000 x Tile width (mm) / 1000
Tiles required = Ceiling(Room area x Waste factor / Tile area)
Waste factors: Straight 1.10 | Diagonal/feature 1.15 | Complex 1.20
Tiles are ordered in square metres plus a waste factor. The waste accounts for cuts at walls and corners, breakages during installation, and the offcuts from pattern alignment. Diagonal laying creates larger corner triangles and more cut waste than straight laying. Always round up to full boxes -- buying half a box is impossible and returning leftover boxes is often subject to restocking fees.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Tile area: 0.6 x 0.6 = 0.36 m² | Tiles net: 15.12 / 0.36 = 42 tiles | With 10% waste: 42 x 1.10 = 46.2 -> 47 tiles | Area to buy: 15.12 x 1.10 = 16.63 m²Tile area: 0.1 x 0.1 = 0.01 m² | Tiles net: 3.78/0.01 = 378 | With 15%: 378 x 1.15 = 434.7 -> 435 tiles | Area: 3.78 x 1.15 = 4.35 m²Floor: 15.12 x 1.10 = 16.63 m² | Wall: 32 x 1.10 = 35.2 m² | Different tile sizes -- order separately4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Not ordering extra tiles for future repairs from the same batch | Ordering only the quantity needed plus waste | Years later, a cracked tile cannot be matched because the batch is discontinued | Order an extra 5-10% beyond the waste calculation and store flat in a dry location. This tile repair insurance is far cheaper than trying to match tiles years later. |
| Not deducting areas that will not be tiled (bath, vanity footprint, built-in furniture) | Using the gross room area without deductions | Overordering by 5-20% on rooms with fixed fittings | Deduct the floor area under any built-in furniture, freestanding baths (if tiles will not go under), and permanent built-ins. For vanity units on legs, the floor under them is usually tiled -- only deduct fixed floor-mounted bases. |
| Using the same waste percentage for different room complexities | Applying 10% waste to every job | Running short on complex-shaped rooms or diagonal patterns | Increase waste to 15% for rooms with many internal angles, niches, diagonal laying and small or linear tile formats. Use 20% for highly complex feature work or micro-mosaic tiles. |
| Not checking tile batch numbers when ordering multiple packs | Ordering without specifying the same batch | Colour variation across the same installation -- highly visible in most tile formats | Specify that all packs must be from the same batch number. For large quantities, request the supplier to reserve full batch quantities before placing the order. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: