Tile Calculator
Work out how many tiles you need, including a wastage allowance.
An estimate. Allow more wastage for diagonal layouts, large tiles or rooms with lots of cuts.
From area to tile count
Each tile covers a small area equal to its width times its height. Divide the surface you are tiling by that figure to get the bare number of tiles, then add a wastage percentage for cuts, breakages and future repairs.
tiles = area ÷ (tile width × tile height) × (1 + wastage)
Because tiles come in boxes, the realistic number to buy is rounded up to whole boxes. Buying a little over from a single batch protects you against running short mid-job, when a colour-matched top-up is hard to find.
Covering 12 m² with 30 × 30 cm tiles means each tile covers 0.09 m², so you need about 134 tiles. Adding 10% for cuts and breakages brings it to 147 — about 13 boxes if a box holds 12.
Planning a tidy job
Most tiling mishaps come down to running out, or to mismatched batches. A quick estimate with a sensible wastage margin sidesteps both, and helps you budget before you reach the till.
Practical pointers
- Layout drives wastage. Straight grids waste little; diagonal and herringbone patterns waste more.
- Big tiles, bigger margin. A single bad cut on a large tile is a costly offcut.
- One batch, kept spares. Buy together and store the leftovers with the batch number.