How many backsplash tiles do I need?
Enter the tiled area in square feet and the tile dimensions in inches. A 120 sq ft floor with 12 x 12 in tile and 10% waste needs 132 tiles.
Tile size changes the count
A 12 x 12 tile covers about 1 sq ft, a 12 x 24 tile covers about 2 sq ft, and a 3 x 6 subway tile covers about 0.125 sq ft. Use actual tile dimensions for the count.
Waste depends on layout
Straight layouts often use less waste than diagonal, herringbone, patterned, shower niche, or backsplash outlet-heavy layouts. Keep trim and accent pieces separate.
Tile count is not the full material list
This page estimates tile quantity. Thinset, grout, trim, waterproofing, spacers, backer board, and transitions should be planned separately.
Tile size coverage reference
Tile coverage is length x width divided by 144. Actual coverage can vary slightly by product and grout joint.
| Tile size | Sq ft per tile | Tiles for 100 sq ft before waste |
|---|---|---|
| 3 in x 6 in subway | 0.125 sq ft | 800 tiles |
| 4 in x 4 in | 0.111 sq ft | 900 tiles |
| 6 in x 6 in | 0.25 sq ft | 400 tiles |
| 12 in x 12 in | 1.00 sq ft | 100 tiles |
| 12 in x 24 in | 2.00 sq ft | 50 tiles |
| 24 in x 24 in | 4.00 sq ft | 25 tiles |
Tile setting material coverage checks
Use the actual product label for final ordering. These are the inputs that most often change coverage.
| Material | Main coverage driver | Common reason to estimate separately |
|---|---|---|
| Grout | Tile size, joint width, tile thickness | Mosaics and wide joints use more grout. |
| Thinset / mortar | Trowel notch, substrate, tile format | Large-format tile and uneven substrate use more mortar. |
| Adhesive / glue | Product type and surface | Walls, floors, and wet areas may require different products. |
| Backsplash tile | Outlets, ends, trim, small cuts | Small areas can still have high cut waste. |
Before you calculate
- Measure the usable floor or wall area before adding waste.
- Check product coverage per box, tile, bag, or unit.
- Calculate separate rooms or surfaces when layouts or materials differ.
Common mistakes
- Forgetting cuts around edges, fixtures, stairs, or transitions.
- Using nominal product size without checking actual coverage.
- Combining rooms with different waste needs into one estimate.
Formula
units = ceil((area * (1 + wastePercent / 100)) / coveragePerUnit)
Assumptions
- Measure each backsplash rectangle as width times height.
- Add separate wall sections together.
- Use a tile or sheet calculator to add waste and convert square feet into pieces.
Example
Estimated backsplash square feet: 35 sq ft
How to calculate backsplash square feet sq ft
- Measure the project area in square feet.
- Enter the coverage per sq ft from the product label or supplier data.
- Add waste for cuts, overlaps, damaged pieces, or layout changes.
- Divide adjusted area by coverage per sq ft and round up to a whole purchasable unit.
- Check accessories, trim, fasteners, seams, or prep materials separately.
Before you buy materials
- Round up to full boxes or product units.
- Keep attic stock or repair material in mind for flooring projects.
FAQ
What is the example backsplash square feet square-foot result?
Use the measured project inputs, product coverage, and waste, then calculate the planning result. In the default example, the result is 35 sq ft.
How do I calculate how many tiles I need?
Divide project area by tile coverage, then add waste. Tile coverage in square feet is tile length x tile width divided by 144 when dimensions are in inches.
How many 12 x 12 tiles for 120 sq ft?
A 12 x 12 tile covers about 1 sq ft. For 120 sq ft with 10% waste, plan about 132 tiles.
How much waste should I add for tile?
A common planning buffer is 10% for simple layouts and more for diagonal patterns, small cuts, fragile tile, showers, niches, or backsplashes with many outlets.
Does this include grout and thinset?
No. Tile count, grout, and thinset should be estimated separately because their coverage depends on different inputs.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.