Tile jobs vary wildly by material, layout, and prep work — every quote is custom. WrenchBid turns your voice into a professional quote you can text to the customer on the spot.
Try WrenchBid freeTile size, pattern, grout color, and backer board affect pricing
Bathroom vs. kitchen vs. floor — different labor rates
Customers bring in their own tile sometimes, changing the quote entirely
WrenchBid handles the paperwork. Speak your price, review the quote, and send it — all from your phone.
Here's what a tile quote sounds like with WrenchBid:
Tile quotes involve square footage for floors, walls, and niches, plus different materials for each surface. Speaking the measurements and tile choices for each area as you take notes in the bathroom is much faster than typing on a phone with wet or dusty hands.
Specify the tile size and layout pattern in your quote because herringbone and diagonal patterns take more labor than straight lay.
Always include backer board and waterproofing as separate line items — they are required for wet areas and add real cost.
Note whether the customer is supplying the tile or if you are sourcing it — material markup is a common dispute.
Most tile installers charge $5–$15 per square foot for labor depending on tile size, pattern, and substrate. Quote floor and wall tile separately and note whether the customer is supplying the tile or you are sourcing it — material markup is a common dispute.
Measure each surface separately, calculate square footage with 10–15% waste factor, add backer board and waterproofing for wet areas, then price labor per square foot by complexity. WrenchBid lets you speak the measurements on-site and sends the quote before you leave.
Break out tile material, backer board, thinset, grout, waterproofing, demo, and labor per square foot as separate items. Note the tile size and layout pattern because herringbone and diagonal take more labor — showing this detail wins jobs over vague lump-sum bids.
Free to start. No credit card. No app download.
Try WrenchBid free