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How to Grout Wall Tile

Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years are bearing down on you. Family is coming over. What about that cracked and crumbling grout in your bathroom or on your kitchen backsplash?

No worries, I’m here to save the day for you! You can have great looking grout in just a few hours if you don’t have too much to do. Let’s get started now.

Degree of Difficulty: hammer-3-5

Step One: Gather the following tools. You’ll need a hard rubber float made especially for applying ceramic tile grout. You can find these at hardware stores, big box home centers and at Amazon.com. Get a special grout sponge while you’re at it. These sponges have rounded corners and edges. My favorite one measures about 7 x 5 x 2 inches. Do NOT use a sponge that has sharp 90-degree edges or corners.

Step Two: Purchase a bag of wall grout that matches the color of your existing grout. If your grout is dirty, clean it first and allow it to dry so you know it’s true color. Wall grout is different than sanded floor grout. Wall grout is made for grout joints that are 1/8 of an inch or LESS in width. Most wall tile has grout joints that measure about 1/16th of an inch. Wall grout is just a powder with no silica sand particles in it.

Step Three: You need to remove any crumbling or loose grout. You can use a flat-bladed screwdriver and a hammer if you need to. Be very careful you don’t chip or scratch the tile. You can use small power rotary tools that have bits that are made to remove grout. Once again, practice using this tool in an out-of-the-way location so you get comfortable with it.

Step Four: Once all the bad grout is removed, use a vacuum or brush to remove any small particles or dust. It’s time to mix the grout.

Step Five: Using a clean bucket, pour about a cup of the wall grout powder into the bucket. Add clean cool or cold water. Add it slowly and stir the water into the grout until the consistency of the grout is that of warm cake icing. You don’t want the grout to be so thin that it pours or flows easily. If you add too much water, the grout will crack and crumble and all your work will be wasted.

Step Six: Dip the hard-rubber float into some water and shake it off. Use a wide putty knife and scoop some grout from the bucket and put it on the wall tile where you’re grouting. Put on about one-half cup or so.

Step Seven: Hold the rubber float at a 30-degree angle to the surface of the tile and push the grout ahead of it much like a bulldozer pushes soil. Cross the grout joints at a 45-degree angle so the edge of the rubber float does not drop down into the recessed grout line joints. Push hard enough so virtually no grout is left on the surface of the tile.

Step Eight: Wait about ten minutes. Dip the sponge in clear water and saturate it with water. Squeeze ALL of the water out of the sponge. Lightly wipe the sponge across the tile to remove any grout paste. Flip the sponge over to reveal a clean surface and wipe again. Each stroke will make the grout joints look better and better. Rinse the sponge frequently and squeeze it removing all water.

Step Nine: When the grout joints look quite good, to get them to match the existing grout, try putting the grout sponge on a narrow edge and slide it back and forth along the grout joint until the grout profile and width matches your existing grout joints.

Step Ten: After an hour, use clean water and the grout sponge to wipe down the tile to remove all grout haze from the tile. Change this water frequently and fully rinse the sponge each time you go to use it over the tile. Once again, squeeze ALL water from the sponge before putting it on the tile.

Summary: Water is your enemy when grouting. If you put too much water on the grout when finishing the joints, you’ll dilute the cement paste and the grout will be weak. It will crack and crumble in time. After two hours, take an old towel and buff the tile to remove any grout haze from the ceramic tile. Congratulations, you did it! You grouted ceramic tile!

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