Tile Installation in Kyle, TX
HandyMan Install serves Kyle on a regular weekly schedule — approximately 25 miles south of Austin on I-35. Kyle is on our regular I-35 south corridor schedule. No travel fees. Our scope is tile installation: new installation, replacements, and renovation work throughout Hays County and the wider Austin metro. $500 labor minimum. No repair calls.
We work in Plum Creek, Anthem, and throughout the Kyle ZIP codes 78640. Homeowners, investors, and general contractors all reach us the same way — call 512-290-5153 or fill out the estimate form.
Get a Free Estimate → Call 512-290-5153
Why We Know Kyle’s Market
Kyle is home of Seton Medical Center Hays; one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States — grew from 5,300 residents in 2000 to over 67,000 today. 1,100%+ population growth since 2000; master-planned subdivisions continue expanding south of Austin along I-35. The housing stock is mostly 2000s–2020s master-planned builds with open layouts and high renovation turnover as original builder finishes age; strong market for flooring replacement, bathroom upgrades, and fence installation — which directly shapes the project types and renovation approaches we see here.
Hays County black clay Vertisol is extremely expansive — among the most active foundation movement soils in Central Texas; LVP and tile are strongly preferred over solid hardwood; fence posts require deep concrete footings. We account for this on every tile installation project in Kyle — from substrate selection to material specification to cure time management.
We regularly work in Plum Creek, Anthem, Dry Creek, 6 Creeks, Post Oak, Crosswinds, Sunset Hills, Waterleaf. Our service area covers Plum Creek Golf Course and the surrounding Hays County communities.
What We Use — Materials and Products
Every material we bring to a Kyle job site is specified for Central Texas conditions — humidity cycles, clay soil movement, and the construction era of the property all factor in. The primary materials for this work are:
Porcelain floor tile (standard format: 12×12, 18×18, 24×24, large-format 24×48)
Ceramic wall tile (3×6 subway, 4×16 subway, 4×4 field tile, decorative inserts)
Large-format porcelain (24×24, 24×48 — requires back-buttering and medium-bed mortar)
Mosaic accent tile (penny round, hexagon, glass mosaic — mounted on mesh backing)
Schluter KERDI waterproofing membrane (bonded to cement board in all wet zones)
RedGard liquid waterproofing (brush-applied at seams, corners, and penetrations)
Durock 1/2″ cement board (USG brand; replaces drywall in all wet zones)
HardieBacker 1/2″ cement board (James Hardie brand; alternative to Durock)
White polymer-modified thinset mortar (bonding agent for all tile types)
Medium-bed mortar (required for tiles larger than 15″ in any dimension)
Non-sanded grout (joints under 1/8″ — subway tile, mosaic)
Sanded grout (joints 1/8″ and larger — floor tile, large format)
Penetrating sealer (applied to grout after cure — prevents staining)
Schluter DILEX and JOLLY edge trim profiles (tile edge finishing)
Product selection is made at estimate time based on your specific scope, substrate condition, and the finish level you’re after. We don’t substitute materials mid-project.
How the Work Gets Done
Every project follows a defined sequence. Skipping steps produces failures that appear weeks or years later — not at final walkthrough. Here is the sequence for this work in Kyle:
Substrate assessment: moisture test, flatness check, deflection test
Cement board installation: 1/2″ Durock or HardieBacker fastened to studs, alkali-resistant mesh tape at seams
Waterproofing membrane: KERDI bonded with unmodified thinset OR RedGard brushed at seams and corners
Layout planning: dry-lay tile to confirm pattern, minimize cuts, center visual field
Thinset mixing to peanut butter consistency (slump test)
Back-buttering large-format tiles (required over 15″ in any dimension)
Tile setting with correct notched trowel (1/4″×1/4″ V-notch for small tile; 1/2″×1/2″ square notch for large format)
Spacer placement (consistent joint width throughout)
Grout application after 24-hour thinset cure
Grout sealing after 72-hour grout cure
Schluter edge trim installation at all exposed tile edges
Among the most active foundation movement soils in central texas; lvp and tile are strongly preferred over solid hardwood; fence posts require deep concrete footings
Common Project Scopes in Kyle
These are the most common project types we handle for this service in Kyle. Every scope is walked individually before we quote — site conditions always vary.
Scope: Builder tile outdated — bathroom needs modernization
Approach: Remove old tile; install cement board and waterproofing; set new tile to spec
Scope: Shower leaking behind tile (no waterproofing membrane on original install)
Approach: Full gut: remove tile, cement board, and wet drywall; install KERDI system; new tile
Scope: Kitchen backsplash upgrade
Approach: Remove old tile or install over existing (if flat and sound); set new backsplash tile
Scope: Grout cracking in shower (no membrane; substrate movement)
Approach: Diagnose substrate; if movement-related, full replacement required; if surface-only, regrout may hold
Scope: Entryway or laundry room needs durable flooring
Approach: Install 12×12 or 18×18 porcelain floor tile — water resistant, durable, low maintenance
Tools and Equipment on Every Job
The right tools produce better results and protect the materials being installed. Here is what we bring to every Kyle job site for this work:
Wet saw with diamond blade (all tile cuts)
Angle grinder with diamond cup wheel (notches and curves)
Rubber float (grout application)
Margin trowel (mixing and spot application)
1/4″×1/4″ V-notch trowel (small tile)
1/2″×1/2″ square-notch trowel (large format)
Tile spacers (1/16″, 1/8″, 3/16″, 1/4″)
Rubber mallet (seating tile in thinset)
Level and straightedge (alignment verification)
Grout sponge and bucket
What the Finished Work Looks Like
We define what done looks like before we start. The outcomes for this work are specific and verifiable:
Shower tile installation with cement board and KERDI waterproofing membrane
Bathroom floor tile — porcelain on Durock or directly on slab
Kitchen backsplash — subway or custom tile pattern
Entryway and laundry room floor tile
Large-format porcelain installation (24×48) — premium bathroom upgrade
Waterproofed, grouted, and sealed tile installation at manufacturer specification
Trades That Work Before and After Us
This work doesn’t happen in isolation. Proper sequencing with other trades prevents rework and keeps Kyle projects on schedule:
Plumbers cap supply lines before tile begins; reconnect fixtures after tile and grout cure
Electricians run rough-in for heated floor mats before cement board is installed
Drywall trade uses cement board in wet zones — tile setter installs this, not the drywall crew
Painting follows tile in bathrooms (paint dry zones after tile is grouted)
Cabinet installation follows tile in bathrooms and kitchens
Pricing Reference for Kyle (2026)
All prices are labor only unless noted. These are planning benchmarks — every project is quoted individually after a scope conversation.
Labor minimum: $500. Materials quoted separately. Demo and disposal quoted separately when applicable.
Get a Free Estimate → Call 512-290-5153
How This Service Fits the Broader Picture
Tile installation is a finish trade that includes substrate preparation, waterproofing in wet zones, tile setting, grouting, and sealing
The Schluter KERDI waterproofing membrane is part of the shower assembly system: cement board → KERDI membrane → thinset → tile → grout → sealer
Porcelain tile is used for bathroom floors, shower walls, kitchen backsplashes, and entryways — applications requiring a durable, waterproof, easy-to-clean surface
Serving Kyle, TX — located in Hays County, part of the Austin metro service area.
Tile installation works alongside the plumbing trade (cap lines before tile, reconnect after), the painting trade (paint dry zones after tile), and cabinet installation (vanity installation follows tile)
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the waterproofing membrane really necessary in a shower?
Yes, without exception. Cement board is moisture-resistant — it won’t fall apart when wet — but it is not waterproof. The membrane applied over the cement board is what keeps moisture out of the wall cavity. A shower installed without a proper membrane (KERDI or RedGard at minimum) will look perfect for 2–5 years and then fail catastrophically behind the tile. We install the membrane on every shower. No exceptions.
What size tile should I use for my bathroom floor?
12×12 is the traditional standard and still works well. 18×18 and 24×24 have become the modern standard in renovated baths — fewer grout lines create a cleaner look and are easier to clean. Large-format 24×48 is a premium choice that requires a very flat substrate and medium-bed mortar. We’ll advise based on your bathroom dimensions and subfloor condition.
Can tile be installed directly over existing tile?
Sometimes. The existing tile must be well-adhered (no hollow spots or loose tiles), the combined thickness must not create floor height issues at transitions, and the substrate must not flex. We assess this during the estimate — it’s not automatic, but it’s often possible in kitchens and dry-area floors.
How long before I can use the shower after tile installation?
Thinset requires 24 hours to cure before grouting. Grout requires 72 hours to cure before grouting and sealing. After sealing, the shower should be allowed to off-gas for 24 hours before water contact. Total: 5–7 days from tile-setting completion to first use.
Do you do repairs — like replacing one broken tile or regrout?
No. Our $500 minimum and installation focus means we handle new bathroom tile, full shower replacements, and new backsplash and floor tile scopes. Single tile replacements and regrout-only jobs are below our minimum.
What’s the difference between thinset and mastic?
Thinset (polymer-modified cement mortar) is correct for all wet areas, all floor tile, and all large-format tile. Mastic (organic adhesive) is only appropriate for wall tile in dry areas and should never be used in showers or wet zones — it fails when exposed to sustained moisture. We use thinset exclusively.
Is Kyle part of your regular service area?
Kyle is on our regular schedule — approximately 25 miles south of Austin on I-35. Kyle is on our regular I-35 south corridor schedule. No travel fees. Call 512-290-5153 or submit the estimate form. We follow up within one business day.
Do I need a permit for this work in Kyle?
City of Kyle Building & Development Services; permit required for structural fence work over certain height; standard renovation trades are generally permit-exempt. For most residential renovation scopes — replacement and new finish work within existing structures — permits are not required. Structural changes and additions may require permits. We advise you at estimate time.
Other Services Available in Kyle
All five core installation services are available in Kyle with no travel fee:
See all installation services in Kyle →