Bathroom Tiling in Sawtry
In a hard-water village like Sawtry, bathroom tiling has to do more than look smart — it has to seal the wall properly enough that limescale doesn't find a hidden gap to work behind. 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. We tile bathrooms properly — waterproof adhesive, flexible grout rated for wet environments, and movement joints where they're needed.
From small Sawtry en-suites that need a single feature wall to full retiles in the newer Bellway bathrooms, the spec varies but the prep stays the same. We work with every type of tile — large-format porcelain, small mosaic sheets, natural stone, ceramic, and glass. If you've got tiles picked out, we'll fit them. If you haven't decided yet, we'll advise 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 — we'll tell you before we start, not halfway through.
Across Sawtry we tile everything from compact en-suites in Conington terraces to large family bathrooms on Glatton Road. Whether it's a single splashback behind the basin or a full floor-to-ceiling retile, we measure, cut, and grout to a standard that lasts. No lippage, no uneven spacing, no tiles working loose six months later.
The full bathroom retiles we do in Sawtry are almost always part of a wider renovation, which means the tiling step needs to land at exactly the right point in the sequence. The biggest tiling jobs we do across Sawtry are full bathroom retiles for renovation projects, and these tend to be where prep matters most. We level uneven floors, brace stud walls where heavy floor tiles are going down, fit tile-backer board where lath-and-plaster won't take the load, and prime plasterboard 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.

















