Wyatt Education Group · 2026-03-20 · 8 min read
How to Lay Floor Tiles Like a Pro — A Step-by-Step Guide
Everything you need to know about laying floor tiles — from surface prep and adhesive mixing to cutting, grouting, and finishing. A practical guide from qualified tiling trainers.
Laying floor tiles looks deceptively simple — until your first row comes out crooked and you're $600 deep in porcelain. The good news? With the right preparation and technique, floor tiling is an incredibly satisfying skill that you'll use for an entire career. Here's exactly how to do it right, the way we teach it in the CPC31320 Certificate III in Wall and Floor Tiling.
🎯 Fun fact: The Romans were laying mosaic floor tiles over 2,000 years ago — some of which still survive today. Good grouting technique clearly stands the test of time.
Step 1 — Assess and Prepare the Substrate
Before a single tile goes down, your substrate (the surface you're tiling onto) must be structurally sound, clean, flat, and dry. This is the step most DIYers skip — and it's the reason most DIY tiling jobs fail within a year.
- Check for flex: Walk the floor and feel for bounce or movement. Any flex greater than 3mm over a 3-metre span needs to be fixed before tiling.
- Check for level: Use a long spirit level or straightedge. Variations greater than 3mm need to be addressed with a floor levelling compound.
- Check for moisture: Concrete slabs need to cure fully — new concrete should wait at least 6 weeks. Test moisture levels with a plastic sheet taped to the floor overnight.
- Clean thoroughly: Remove dust, grease, paint, and any old adhesive residue. A contaminated substrate will cause tiles to de-bond.
Pro tip: Apply a bonding primer (like Mapei Primer G or Weber's equivalent) to concrete substrates before adhesive. It dramatically improves adhesion and reduces the risk of tile failure — especially in wet areas.
Step 2 — Plan Your Layout
Never start laying from a wall. Walls are almost never perfectly straight, and tiling from a wall will make your crookedness worse with every row. Instead, find the centre of the room and work outward.
- Snap a chalk line down the centre of the room lengthwise, then crosswise — you should have a perfect cross at the centre point.
- Do a dry lay (no adhesive) of your first few rows to see how tiles will fall at the edges. Adjust your starting point if necessary to avoid tiny cuts at visible edges.
- Account for expansion joints — never tile wall to wall without leaving a 10mm gap at perimeter edges, to be covered by skirting or a flexible sealant.
Step 3 — Mix and Apply Adhesive
The type of adhesive you use depends on your tile type, substrate, and whether the area is wet or dry. In Australia, you'll typically use a cement-based flexible adhesive for most floor applications.
- Mix ratio: Follow the manufacturer's specification exactly. Too much water weakens the adhesive significantly.
- Notched trowel: Use the correct notch size for your tile — larger tiles need a larger notch (typically 10–12mm for tiles over 300mm). This controls the adhesive thickness and coverage.
- Back-butter large tiles: For tiles over 400mm, apply a thin skim of adhesive to the back of the tile as well. This ensures full contact and prevents hollow spots.
- Working time: Don't spread more adhesive than you can cover in about 20 minutes — it will skin over and lose its grab.
⚠️ Common mistake: Using a wall tile adhesive on a floor application. Wall tile adhesives don't have the compressive strength needed for foot traffic and can crack under load. Always check the product is rated for floor use.
Step 4 — Lay the Tiles
Work in small sections — about 1 square metre at a time — pressing each tile firmly into the adhesive with a slight twisting motion to ensure full contact. Use tile spacers to maintain consistent grout joints.
- Check level as you go with a spirit level — both across individual tiles and across rows.
- Tap tiles gently with a rubber mallet to bed them into the adhesive, checking that they don't rock or sit proud of adjacent tiles.
- Wipe off any adhesive that squeezes up into the grout joints — it's much harder to remove once it sets.
Step 5 — Cut Tiles
Cutting tiles accurately is one of the most important skills in tiling — and one of the most satisfying when you get it right. For straight cuts, a wet tile saw (diamond blade) is the tool of choice for professional results. For curves and notches, an angle grinder with a diamond blade works well.
- Always measure twice and mark clearly with a felt-tip pen or tile crayon.
- Wear eye protection and ear protection — always.
- For notched cuts around pipe penetrations, use a hole saw attachment on a drill.
- Smooth sharp cut edges with a rubbing stone before installation.
Step 6 — Allow to Set, Then Grout
Allow adhesive to cure for at least 24 hours before grouting — longer in cold or humid conditions. Remove tile spacers before the adhesive fully hardens (usually at 4–6 hours), as they'll be impossible to remove once the adhesive sets.
- Mix grout to a smooth, lump-free consistency — like peanut butter.
- Apply with a rubber grout float held at 45 degrees, working diagonally across the joints.
- Remove excess grout before it fully hardens using a damp (not wet) sponge — wring it out thoroughly before each wipe.
- Buff the haze off with a dry cloth once the grout has firmed up but not fully hardened.
Pro tip: For wall-to-floor junctions and around fixtures, always use a flexible silicone sealant rather than grout. Grout is rigid and will crack at movement joints — silicone flexes.
Step 7 — Seal and Finish
Once fully cured (typically 48–72 hours for grout), apply a penetrating grout sealer to protect your joints from staining — especially important in kitchens, bathrooms, and laundries. Porcelain tiles generally don't need sealing; natural stone and cement tiles do.
Stand back, admire your work, and remember — every professional tiler started exactly where you are right now.
Want to Learn Tiling Professionally?
Everything in this guide is covered in detail in the CPC31320 Certificate III in Wall and Floor Tiling at Wyatt Education Group. You'll learn from qualified, industry-experienced trainers in our hands-on practical facility in Bankstown — and graduate with a nationally recognised AQF qualification that opens doors to employment and skilled migration pathways.
Ready to Become a Qualified Tiler?
Wyatt Education Group delivers the CPC31320 Certificate III in Wall and Floor Tiling — a nationally recognised qualification in Bankstown, Sydney. RTO 46003 | CRICOS 04130B.
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