Wyatt Education Group · 2026-03-10 · 8 min read
The Complete Tool Kit — Every Tool a Professional Tiler Needs and Why
From tile saws and notched trowels to grout floats and laser levels — the complete professional tiling tool kit explained. What to buy, what to hire, and what separates amateurs from pros.
Your tools are your livelihood. A professional tiler's kit represents years of investment and refinement — the difference between a tool bag that makes your job easier every day and one that fights you at every turn. Here's what you actually need, what's worth spending money on, and what you can hire when you need it.
🔧 Fun fact: The notched trowel — the most fundamental tiling tool — hasn't changed in design for over 150 years. It's one of those tools that was essentially perfect when it was invented and has required no improvement since. Sometimes the old ways are the right ways.
Measuring and Layout Tools
Getting your layout right before a single tile goes down is what separates a professional result from an amateur one. These tools make that possible:
- Laser level: A rotating or cross-line laser level is the most transformative tool in a modern tiler's kit. Essential for setting out large areas quickly and accurately. Budget $150–$400 for a reliable unit.
- Long straightedge (3m aluminium): For checking substrate flatness and tile level across large areas. Get at least 1.8m and ideally 3m.
- Spirit levels (600mm and 1200mm): For checking individual tiles and smaller sections. Worth investing in quality — cheap levels aren't accurate.
- Steel tape measure (8m): Self-locking, with both metric and a clear 1mm graduation.
- Chalk line reel: For snapping long straight reference lines across floors.
- Tile spacers: A full range of sizes — 1.5mm, 2mm, 3mm, 5mm, 10mm — to suit different tile types and joint specifications.
- Square (600mm or 900mm): For checking that corners are truly 90 degrees before you start.
Cutting Tools
Cutting is where jobs are won and lost. Wrong tool = slow, ugly cuts. Right tool = fast, clean, professional results.
- Wet tile saw: The essential power tool for professional tiling. A diamond blade wet saw makes straight cuts in any ceramic, porcelain, or stone tile with precision and speed. A good mid-range saw (Rubi, Sigma, or similar) will run $500–$1500. Worth every dollar.
- Angle grinder with diamond blade: For curved cuts, notches, and fitting around pipes and obstacles. A 115mm grinder is the standard size for tiling. Always use water or work in a well-ventilated area — silica dust is a serious health hazard.
- Tile nipper: A hand tool for nibbling small amounts off the edge of a tile — useful for trimming mosaic pieces and making small irregular cuts.
- Score-and-snap cutter (manual): For high-volume straight cuts on standard ceramic tiles. Much faster than a wet saw for simple straight cuts on easy-to-cut materials.
- Diamond hole saw set: For cutting holes for pipe penetrations, drainage grates, and outlet boxes. You'll use these constantly.
- Grinder with grinding/polishing discs: For smoothing cut edges, removing adhesive, and surface preparation work.
⚠️ Silica dust warning: Cutting ceramic, porcelain, and stone tiles without water suppression or respiratory protection releases respirable crystalline silica — a serious occupational health hazard that causes silicosis. Always use wet cutting methods or an appropriate P2 dust mask when dry cutting is unavoidable. This is a legal requirement under WHS regulations in Australia.
Application Tools
- Notched trowels: The single most important tiling tool. You need a range — 6mm v-notch for wall tiles and mosaic, 10mm square notch for medium format floor tiles, 12mm square notch for large format tiles. Keep them clean and replace when notches wear down — worn notches give inconsistent coverage.
- Margin trowel: A small, flexible-bladed trowel for mixing adhesive, back-buttering tiles, and working in tight spaces.
- Bucket and paddle mixer: For mixing adhesive and grout consistently. A drill-mounted paddle mixer ($30–$50) is much faster and more consistent than mixing by hand.
- Rubber mallet: For bedding tiles into adhesive without cracking them.
- Tile levelling system: Clips and wedges (like Raimondi or Levtec) for keeping large format tiles perfectly flat during installation. Essential for tiles over 600mm — invaluable for preventing lippage.
- Suction cups (manual and mechanical): For handling and positioning large, heavy tiles safely. A single large porcelain slab can weigh 20kg+ — you need suction cups to handle it without dropping or cracking it.
Grouting Tools
- Rubber grout float: The standard tool for applying grout to joints. Use a firm, high-quality float — cheap ones flex too much and don't pack the joints properly.
- Grout sponges (multiple): High-quality, large-cell grout sponges for cleaning excess grout from tile surfaces. Cheap sponges fall apart and spread grout around rather than removing it.
- Grout bag: For applying grout to textured surfaces where a float would push into surface texture (natural stone, heavily textured tiles).
- Grout saw / grout rake: For removing old or failed grout without damaging tiles. Indispensable for repair work.
- Silicone gun (good quality): For applying silicone sealant at movement joints. A smooth-action gun makes a dramatic difference to the quality of silicone application.
Safety Equipment
Non-negotiable — this is the gear that keeps you working long-term:
- P2 dust mask (or powered air respirator): For cutting work. This is a legal requirement under WHS regulations.
- Safety glasses: Always when cutting. A tile fragment in the eye ends careers.
- Knee pads: You'll spend a large portion of your working life on your knees. Good knee pads are an investment in your long-term health.
- Steel-capped boots: Required on any construction site. Large tiles are extremely heavy — dropped tiles break feet.
- Cut-resistant gloves: When handling freshly cut tiles with sharp edges.
- Ear protection: For extended cutting work — tile saws are loud.
What to Hire vs Buy
Not everything needs to be owned. Equipment worth hiring:
- Floor grinding machines (for substrate preparation on large areas)
- Vacuum-assisted dust extractors (for indoor cutting when wet cutting isn't possible)
- Large format tile laying systems (for specific high-end jobs)
Build Your Kit Through Training
At Wyatt Education Group, the CPC31320 Certificate III in Wall and Floor Tiling gives you hands-on experience with the full professional tool kit. You'll learn what each tool does, when to use it, and how to maintain it — building the competence and confidence that comes from real practice, not YouTube.
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.
Apply Now — It's Free