Software
Houzz Logo Print
brijonsson

grey grout colour with subway tile in bathroom

6 years ago
We are doing a full bathroom reno in approx 3 weeks. I have everything picked out, except for the grout colour. The bathroom we are working on is relatively small and has no natural light (pictured) - no the pink tub is NOT staying ;)

I have included a pic of the floor tile sample. Sorry I don’t have a better photo. It looks darker in real life and is a 12 x 24 slab in black. The cabinet will be a walnut wood, our fixtures will all be matte black, and the bath/shower will be surrounded with 3x6 gloss white subway tile.

NOW I am having a huge dilemma with the grout colour. Initially, I was all about a dark grout... now I am unsure, as the bathroom is smallish and dark and I don’t want it to look chaotic in there. However, I do NOT want to do a white grout, and I am finding the silvers etc too cold for my liking. A light to mid grey is what I seem to like.

I have narrowed it down to two grouts (but am open minded to others). Driftwood (pictured from another Houzz users post, and left grout sample in last pic) and rolling fog (lighter grey - right sample grout in last pic).

Does anyone have any advise, given the info I have provided? Would driftwood clash with the floor tile. Since there is some brown tones in there?

Thoughts, advise, opinions - all welcome!!!!!

Comments (36)

  • 6 years ago

    A contrasting grout will highlight EVERY little imperfection in the tile installation and layout. A 1/16" variation in a joint that is only 1/8" wide is a 50% error and jumps right out at you.

    If the layout is done poorly and you end up with little 1" pieces of tile in the corners, it will jump right out at you.

    If your contractor is not a real pro, anything but white is asking for trouble.

    If your contractor is not a perfectionist, you be back here crying like so many other people.

    The pattern just isn't interesting enough that you need to highlight it. A simple wall of shiny white makes its own statement.

    TL,DR: Use white.

  • 6 years ago

    Why don't you like white grout? If you believe it is harder to keep clean you are wrong about that. A high quality undsanded grout with latex additive in it will stay pretty damn white and look better than grays over time. Gray grout gets soap scum on it that you constantly need to get off to keep the color uniform.


    If you just don't like the color of white grout then you need to be ready to live with little flaws like the above poster said.

  • 6 years ago
    You can do different grouts on floor and wall. Grout that contrasts with the tile will call attention to the grout lines (vs the tile itself). And tatts is right, if it’s not a perfect job, you will hate it. I’d pick a grout to work with the floor tile and a white or off white for the wall tile. The light gray may be nice, as long as you’re sure it’s a perfectly laid wall. Definitely not a dark gray for the wall.
  • 6 years ago
    The floor tile will have grout that matches the floor tile. The subway tile is the one I am having the grout dilemma about.
  • 6 years ago
    My answer is the same: white grout with white tile. Unless you want to highlight the lines around your tile. If that’s the look you’re going for, and you think it’s going to be a near perfect tile job, do the gray. I don’t think that look has much staying power, though. Bath walls will need to be wiped down after a shower either way. White and gray both will grow mold or the orange bacteria if you leave the wet all the time.
  • 6 years ago

    Your current wall looks to have white grout. I see a white wall, not individual tiles. I like that look very much.

  • 6 years ago
    Brick formation tile isn’t considered interesting enough to showcase? I think it is a very classic design that is visually very interesting.

    As for white subway tile and white grout, I do love how it looks, but I do sometimes find that it can make tile appear cheaper in appearance- and can make nice tiles look like one of those plastic sheet walls (which we currently have). With our bathroom lacking natural light I am worried that white grout would make the tile appear flat, since there isn’t much light available to play off of the tile surface.

    I appreciate the opinions and advise! Giving me some thought for sure.
  • 6 years ago

    You bring up a good point about the plastic sheet walls. Can you test your options? Or keep looking at bathroom pics of both to see which you like better? I prefer when the grout is similar in colour to the tile. I'm not a fan of delineating every tile on a wall. What layout pattern have you chosen for your tiles? That will affect the look as well.




  • 6 years ago
    From those photos I prefer the white grout, but I also am thrown off by the whole bathroom being tiled in in the dark grout photo. That is way too much of everything for me. This picture is exactly what I like (except we would be doing classic staggered horizontal brick formation), and he colour scheme we are going for. I like how the tile is delineated, but not the focus of the room. I would prefer less of a brown grout, and go more towards grey, but would that work in my space?
  • 6 years ago

    I always thought dark grout is mostly used in public restrooms worldwide because it hides dirt and because it is the cheapest and the oldest color available (cement+sand+water).

  • 6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    I'm not a tile expert but I do know that grout comes in quite a variety of colours depending on the make. Have you considered every viable option? Perhaps you need something between white and cool grey? There might be a "dirty" white that's just the shade you need. Look at Fresh Snowdrop below (09) and Winter White (29) below.

    Ardex - Flex


    Look at the white below. Not blinding white.

    Mapei grout

    If you're not sold on either of your two colour options, can you keep looking? Btw, in your inspiration pic, I like the grout between the tiles but not the look on the wall edges.

  • 6 years ago
    Those are great options, I know I can purchase the Mapei grouts at Lowe’s.
    I currently have the Custom Building Products sample grouts to choose from. The light warm greys seem to be limited, but rolling fog is so far my favourite in terms of the lighter greys. But yes I see what you are saying about an off white.... that would look nice.
  • 6 years ago
    We updated our 60 year old guest bath last year and it’s similar to yours. We had matte white subway tile with dark gray grout installed. We also had dark gray floor tiles with matching grout installed. Our custom vanity is white.
  • 6 years ago
    Okay maybe this will help:

    These are my 3 current favourite colours set up on our countertop and our showerhead. Imagine dark grey/black slab floors and warm wood cabinets. We will be doing a 1/16 inch grout line. Too dark??
  • PRO
    6 years ago

    the first picture you posted is perfect. Driftwood? looks great.

    Oyster gray is another one. Don't go too dark.

  • 6 years ago
    If you are afraid of white grout getting dirty use epoxy grout, it will never change colour , if you use coloured grout with small tiles it will be to busy you will regret it in few weeks.
  • 6 years ago

    Mapei Frost with white tile. Very forgiving.


  • 6 years ago
    I just did Mapei warm gray grout with my white hex on the shower floor. I like it a lot and thought white would be too stark and I was correct!
  • 6 years ago

    Of your three favourite combos, I'd go with the first, the lightest. (Is your bathroom lighting done? Make sure you check your samples in the same lighting.)

    I still find the grey too contrasting but that's my preference. If it were my bathroom, I'd be comparing White Dove, Bright White, Snow White and Bleached Wood.

    This afternoon, I noticed the subway tile in a restaurant bathroom and quickly snapped a closeup to show you a "white" grout with white tile. (Not saying that's a source of high end design inspiration but the wall looked like a white wall to me, not stacked tiles.) Should have taken a pic of the whole wall to show you the effect but someone came in and I didn't want to seem creepy. :P


  • 6 years ago
    Yeah it is so hard to imagine what grout will look like in your space with just a little plastic stick sample and a couple tiles.

    The pics I took of the sample grouts next to our counter and showerhead is in our current bathroom lighting, but we will be adding right above the bath/shower as well.

    I still think I prefer the grey grouts to the off white, but it is difficult to know for sure.
  • PRO
    6 years ago

    just take some leftover tile and glue it to a board. try the different grout samples. let dry. see which one you like best.

  • 6 years ago

    I'd do as Beth suggested. The same way it's a good idea to paint large poster boards and move them around a space to check colours in different light, I think testing grout is worth the time.

  • 6 years ago
    That looks so great, smitrovitch! Can I ask a few questions? What size of tile did you use, what size are your grout lines, and does the surface of the tile have an irregular surface or is that a flat subway tile? Could you post photos of the entire bathroom?
  • 6 years ago

    Thanks! The tile is Middleton Square in oxford white by Marazzi. They have a lovely reflective wavy surface. Tiles are large, 4 1/4" x 12-7/8". I'll grab some photos for you tomorrow.

  • 6 years ago
    @sloughshark what color grout did you go with?
  • 6 years ago
    @CJ Bera we went with “rolling fog,” a light-medium grey grout from Home Depot’s collection, and it is absolutely perfect. I will post photos of the complete project soon.
  • 5 years ago

    Before and after with rolling fog Home Depot grout

  • 5 years ago

    Looks fantastic! Thanks for sharing pics of the completed project.

  • 5 years ago

    Thanks! I could have taken some better photos, and we still haven’t made the mirror we are going to use, but you all get the picture ;)

  • 5 years ago

    @Slough Shark I love how your bathroom came out!! That grout color looks great with your subways, just the right amount of contrast. what color grout did you use for your floors?

  • 5 years ago

    @Slough Shark we are just getting started with the master bath in our new (budget) build- although we have hired a reputable tiler to do the tile work. 4x16 white glossy subways for the shower walls and grey pebble mosaic for the shower floor. Bathroom floor tile is a dark grey and I am struggling to pick a grout for the floor tile. I want to use the same color for the mosaic and hexagon floor tile. Looks like your floors might be about the same color... could you post a pic of the floor tile? Im considering pewter or dove gray from custom building products.

    i am now debating choosing rolling fog instead of platinum for the subways after seeing your results!!



  • 5 years ago

    Hi! Excuse the poor quality photos of the bathroom, the lighting is not great. We used charcoal grey for the floor grout! But it lightened up considerably, which I actually like. The same happened to my parents floor grout when they used charcoal. And I still, one year after our reno, LOVE the rolling fog. I think I would have regretted going platinum OR darker for the grout. Happy reno-ing!

  • 5 years ago

    @Slough Shark thanks for the information!! We already grouted the guest bathroom with dove grey and I love it! I think our floor tile is just a tad lighter and that grout color seems to match the tile quite well. I think we will end up using the Dove grey in the master for both floor tile and the shower floor pebibles. The pebbles are a little lighter then the floor tile so hopefully it will still look ok. We have decided to go with rolling fog for the white subways though. So glad I ran into this thread!!

    here is a pic of the dove gray in the guest bath.




  • 5 years ago

    One more question, was your charcoal from custom? it almost looks lighter then the dove gray In your photos

  • 5 years ago

    I LOVE your floor tiles. Great shape! I have attached a photo of the brand we used for charcoal (from Home Depot). It initially came out so dark grey it looked black, but lightened pretty quickly. It could be because of the mineral content in our water here? I wash the floors often, so that could just be mineral build up. It doesn’t bother me though, otherwise I would get one of those “grout pens” to darken it again. Which I may do for a freshen up!