Gloved hands pressing large-format porcelain tile into thinset mortar, natural window light raking across the surface showing mortar ridges

Porcelain · Marble · Mosaic

Grout · Metro Area Tile Installation

Licensed & Insured
Tile Installation
in Dallas–Fort Worth

Porcelain, marble, and mosaic — kitchens, bathrooms, showers, and entryways. Every grout line pulled flush. Every permit pulled on time.

TX LIC #T-25809Bonded & Insured
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No deposit required to book.

Permit-Ready
No Sub-Contractors
Herringbone Specialist
01

Homeowner FAQ

Do I need a permit for a shower retile?

In most DFW municipalities — yes, if you're replacing the waterproof membrane or modifying the drain.

A permit isn't just paperwork. It's the city confirming the waterproof membrane was installed correctly before the tile goes on top. If a future buyer's inspector finds a shower retile with no permit, your sale can stall or fall through. We pull the permit, schedule the inspection, and hand you the final sign-off card. That's included in the quote — not an add-on.

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Close-up of waterproof membrane being rolled onto concrete board in shower area, orange applicator tool visible

Waterproof membrane application — the layer inspectors check

Tile spacer cross seated in a grout joint between large-format floor tiles, level visible in background on finished floor

Consistent spacing — the foundation of flat, professional work

02

Homeowner FAQ

What's the difference between porcelain and ceramic for a bathroom floor?

Porcelain absorbs less than 0.5% water. Ceramic absorbs up to 3%. For a bathroom floor, that gap matters.

Ceramic is kiln-fired clay. Porcelain is the same process but with denser, finer clay fired at higher temperatures — the result is a tile that's harder, heavier, and nearly impervious to moisture. For bathroom floors that see daily wet-foot traffic, we specify porcelain rated PEI 3 or higher. For backsplashes and dry areas, ceramic is fine and often $1–2/sq ft cheaper. We'll tell you which is right for your project, not which is more expensive.

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03

Homeowner FAQ

How long before I can walk on new tile?

24 hours before light foot traffic. 72 hours before you move furniture back. 7 days before heavy loads.

Thinset mortar reaches working strength in about 24 hours at 70°F — enough for careful foot traffic in socks. Full cure takes 28 days, but for practical purposes: wait 72 hours before sliding appliances or setting heavy furniture. Grout needs 24–48 hours before it can get wet, and 72 hours before you use a steam cleaner. We leave a printed card with your specific tile's cure schedule. No guessing, no ruined floors.

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Precision level tool resting on a freshly set floor tile showing perfectly flush surface with no lippage

Zero lippage — every edge flush within 1/32"

Step 1 of 3 — Free, No Obligation

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Measure & Quote

We come to you, measure the space, and leave you with a written quote. No deposit. No pressure. Just numbers on paper.

We confirm within 2 hours

by phone or text

On-site measure takes 20 min

we work around your schedule

Written quote same day

itemized material + labor

Step 1 of 3

What type of project?

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