Bathroom Tile Installation in Williamsburg, Virginia

We supply and install MSI bathroom tile for showers, walls, and floors, built over proper waterproofing and rated for a wet room, for less than the big box. Serving the Historic Triangle.

Bathroom Tile Installation

Bathroom tile has to be beautiful and watertight, and the second part is where most of the trouble hides. We supply MSI shower, wall, and floor tile, the same lines the big box stores sell, sourced direct and priced for less, and install it over proper waterproofing with floor tile rated to stay safe when wet. A designer helps you pull the shower, walls, and floor into one look, and the design help is included. Serving Williamsburg and the Historic Triangle.

Watertight behind the tile, not just pretty in front

The part of a bathroom that decides whether it lasts is the part you never see: the waterproofing behind and beneath the tile. Skip it or do it poorly and water works into the walls and subfloor, which is how showers rot out and ceilings below them stain. We build over a proper waterproofing system first, then tile, so the surface that looks great on day one is backed by something that actually keeps water where it belongs for years.

Tile rated for a wet, slippery room

Not every tile belongs on a bathroom floor or in a shower. We steer you toward porcelain and rated tile that handle constant moisture, with slip-resistant options for floors and shower pans so the room stays safe underfoot. It is an easy detail to overlook when you are choosing for looks, and exactly the kind of thing a tile store should catch for you before it becomes a problem.

A shower, walls, and floor that work together

A bathroom can hold a lot of tile, and choosing each piece separately is how it ends up disjointed. Here you select the shower, wall, and floor tile together, with a designer making sure the scales, colors, and finishes belong in the same room. Seeing them side by side before ordering is what turns a pile of tile choices into a bathroom that looks intentional.

The same tile for less, set by a pro

Bathroom tile is the least forgiving tile work in the house, where a bad slope or a missed waterproofing detail turns into a real repair. We connect you with an installer who builds bathrooms regularly, and because we sell MSI tile direct, the tile itself costs less than at the warehouse. You get the right install and the lower price, instead of choosing between them.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does bathroom tile cost?

It depends on how much tile the bathroom needs, the tile you choose, and the waterproofing involved, but because we sell MSI tile for less than the big box stores, the budget goes further. We quote the actual room, including the shower, floor, walls, and the setting and waterproofing, so you see the real number before committing.

Do you install bathroom tile, or just sell it?

We supply the tile and connect you with an installer who handles the waterproofing and sets the tile correctly: sloped pans, level floors, and clean grout lines. Because the tile is chosen alongside the rest of your bathroom, the installer works from one coordinated plan rather than materials gathered from separate stores.

What tile is best for a shower floor?

Shower floors call for slip-resistant, low-absorption tile, often smaller mosaics whose extra grout lines add grip and follow the slope to the drain. We steer you toward tile rated for that use so the shower is safe as well as good-looking, rather than letting a pretty but slick tile end up underfoot.

How do I keep bathroom tile and grout from getting moldy?

Proper waterproofing, sealed grout, and decent ventilation are what keep a tiled bathroom healthy long term, and the first two are part of how we build it. Day to day, a quick squeegee and regular cleaning keep grout and tile clear. We tell you how to care for the specific tile and grout you choose.

Can you make a bathroom floor safer for aging in place?

Yes. We choose slip-resistant floor tile, can tie it into a curbless shower with a properly sloped, rated pan, and keep transitions flush. These choices make the bathroom safer to use without looking institutional, and they get designed into the room rather than added on later.