The Tile Grout Calculator helps you estimate how much grout you need for floors, walls, backsplashes, and shower installations. Instead of guessing, you can use your actual tile dimensions and grout joint size to estimate grout weight, bag count, and material cost more accurately.

Grout may seem like a minor material compared to tile, but running short in the middle of a project can create delays, mismatched product issues, and unnecessary trips back to the supplier.
Over-ordering grout also adds avoidable cost, especially on larger projects or when using specialty grout products.
Accurate grout estimation helps contractors and homeowners:
Because grout quantity depends on joint volume rather than just surface area, it is important to calculate it using the actual tile and grout dimensions.
This tile grout calculator helps estimate:
It also accounts for:
That makes it much more useful than a simple square-foot estimate.
Several factors have a direct effect on grout quantity.
Wider grout joints require more grout. A floor installed with 1/4-inch joints will use significantly more grout than the same floor installed with 1/8-inch joints.
The deeper the joint, the more grout it takes to fill it. Thicker tile generally means deeper grout joints and more grout required.
Smaller tile formats usually create more joints across the same area, which means more grout. Larger-format tile often reduces total grout volume because there are fewer joints per square foot.
Even with careful planning, grout is lost during mixing, cleanup, and installation. Projects with complex layouts, lots of cuts, or irregular obstacles often need extra allowance.
The Tile Grout Calculator estimates grout usage by modeling joint volume based on your room size, tile dimensions, grout width, and tile thickness. It then converts that into an approximate grout weight and bag count.
This helps contractors and installers get closer to a realistic material order without relying on rough guesses or broad rules of thumb.
It is especially useful when comparing different tile sizes or grout joint widths because it quickly shows how those decisions change the total material requirement.
Start by entering the length and width of the area being tiled in feet. Then enter your tile length and width in inches.
Next, input the grout joint width and tile thickness. These two values are especially important because grout usage is heavily influenced by joint size and depth.
After that, choose the grout type and add a waste percentage. If your project has a lot of cuts, corners, fixtures, or irregular edges, you can add an extra obstacle or complexity factor in the advanced options.
You can also select the grout bag size and add a price per bag to estimate total material cost.
The calculator will then estimate:
The main output tells you the estimated total grout required for the project. This is the practical number to use when ordering material.
You should also review the base grout weight compared to the recommended order amount. The difference between those numbers represents the added waste allowance, which helps account for real-world installation conditions.
If the bag count feels high, look at the grout joint width and tile thickness first. Those are often the biggest drivers of grout usage. Even a small increase in joint width can significantly increase the amount of grout needed.
The calculator is especially useful for comparing scenarios such as:
Grout estimates are only as useful as the assumptions behind them. It is important to match your inputs to the actual tile and installation method.
Some projects need more grout than expected because of uneven spacing, irregular cuts, niche details, or transitions. Wet areas like showers may also require different grout products than dry floor areas, which can affect both quantity and price.
It is also wise to keep a little extra grout if color matching matters. Future repairs can be much easier when you already have matching grout on hand.
A grout calculator helps with one part of the job, but contractors still need to turn those material quantities into a full estimate and proposal.
Eano helps you do that.
With Eano, contractors can:
Instead of moving between spreadsheets, notes, and proposal templates, Eano helps teams go from material calculation to estimate to proposal more efficiently.
Book a demo to see how Eano helps contractors estimate faster and win more jobs.