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gillis95

Tile the whole floor vs around the new vanity in powder room?

gillis95
8 years ago

We're starting a bathroom remodel and just beginning the bid process. I'm still undecided about replacing our old vanity cabinets and know nothing about this process. I think I know the best answer but just wanted a second opinion.


I got one bid for everything we want. It's a little high but I know he's good. I have 2 friends who have a "tile guy" that they swear by and is good and very reasonable. I'm considering him coming and do the tile first. Then I can install our toilet and have a functioning toilet downstairs while I decide on everything else :)


Should I have him just tile the whole powder room floor (remove our old vanity) or decide on the vanity and install it then tile around it.


I'm leaning towards removing the vanity and tiling the whole floor. It's a very tiny room and the cost in insignificant.


Are there any cons to this? I'm serious I know nothing about remodels!


Thanks!

Comments (7)

  • catbuilder
    8 years ago

    The only con is leaving the vanity in place and tiling around it. You know the right answer, so do it.

    gillis95 thanked catbuilder
  • gillis95
    Original Author
    8 years ago

    Sorry I have to question and over think everything! I want to make sure we do this right. So - what if we (or future resident) needs to/wants to replace the floor years from now? Is the tile just chipped away around the edge of the vanity since it runs underneath? Or does the whole vanity then have to be removed and everything repaired? sorry I just don't know what's considered the best order for installations.

    We're not doing an open bottom vanity (ugh dirt traps!) so that's not an issue of needing tile run all the way under. It's more a timing issue with I can get Tile Guy to do this in 2 weeks but Whole Package Guy is running about 2 months into projects. Then I can have a floor and toilet functional while we figure out the rest. But if it's better for future floor replacement to just tile up to the new vanity then I'll just have to make a decision.


    Yes this kind of stuff paralyzes me! I'm bugging you all and not my husband :)

  • gillis95
    Original Author
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    ok I read some more on this and they explained you are used to seeing the tile butt up to the vanity because of cost. As a builder building hundreds of homes w 2-3 baths each that's a lot of unseen costly tile that they don't want to pay for so the tile up to vanity is the standard builder option.

    I'm always devil's advocate.

    If I choose to tile the whole floor: what if i need/want to replace the floor later. If I choose to tile up to the vanity: what if I choose to replace the vanity later?

    I can never win. Also in reality the fact of either one of these things happening is pretty slim and not my problem w a new owner (it's all tasteful neutrals).


    Think I'll go with the entire floor.

  • Nothing Left to Say
    8 years ago

    The bathroom in our first house still had the original tile. It was over sixty years old at that point. Newish vanity. Second house still had original tile. It was over fifty years old at that point. We replaced the vanity, which was obviously not the original so it was on at least the third vanity. Tile flooring lasts longer than vanities. Tile under the vanity.

  • Errant_gw
    8 years ago

    And vanities are easier to remove/replace than flooring.

  • MongoCT
    8 years ago

    For generic tile and a generic layout? I recommend tiling the entire floor.

    Now, if you were using a very expensive tile and to tile under the vanity would require you buying another box? Or two more boxes? That might be a reason for cutting in.

    It can also depend on design. I'll often run a border around the room, sometimes the design will result in the border running around front of the vanity too.

    When in doubt, tile the entire floor.