Bathroom Tiling in Chatteris
Hard-water scale furs up cylinders, shower valves and heat exchangers quickly in this part of the fens, which is why the same faults keep coming round. Bathroom tiling isn't just about how it looks — it's the waterproof barrier between your wet areas and the walls and floors behind them. Get it wrong and moisture gets in, boards rot, and you end up stripping the lot out and starting again. Your tiler tiles bathrooms properly — waterproof adhesive, flexible grout rated for wet environments, and movement joints where they're needed.
The post-war and modern estates on the edge of town were built quickly, and their first-generation plastic plumbing is now reaching the age where things start to give. Your tiler works with every type of tile — large-format porcelain, small mosaic sheets, natural stone, ceramic, and glass. If you$1ve got tiles picked out, they$1ll be fitted for you. If you haven't decided yet, you'll get advice on what works for your bathroom, your budget, and the substrate you're tiling onto. Not every wall can take heavy stone tiles without prep — you'll be told before work starts, not halfway through.
With the A141 and A142 meeting here, this has always been a working agricultural town, and its housing mixes old cottages with newer builds. Across Chatteris tiling jobs run from compact en-suites in Slade End terraces to large family bathrooms on Furrowfields. Whether it's a single splashback behind the basin or a full floor-to-ceiling retile, everything is measured, cut, and grouted to a standard that lasts. No lippage, no uneven spacing, no tiles working loose six months later.
Winter bites hard out on the open fen, and exposed runs in unheated outbuildings and lofts are the first things to freeze when the temperature drops. The biggest tiling jobs across Chatteris are full bathroom retiles for renovation projects, and these tend to be where prep matters most. Uneven floors are levelled, stud walls braced where heavy floor tiles are going down, tile-backer board fitted where lath-and-plaster won't take the load, and plasterboard primed properly before any adhesive goes on. The result is a tiled bathroom that still looks tight in twenty years — not one where the corners blow at the first temperature swing.

















