Sanded vs
Unsanded Grout
The complete decision guide — when to use each, why it matters, and how to get it right for floors, showers, backsplash, and walls. Written by a Certified Tile Installer with 18 years in the field.
Sanded vs Unsanded Grout: Side-by-Side
The single most important factor is joint width. Everything else follows from there.
| Property | Sanded Grout | Unsanded Grout |
|---|---|---|
| Joint width | 1/8" – 5/8" | Under 1/8" |
| Contains sand | Yes — silica aggregate | No aggregate |
| Shrinkage | Low — sand prevents it | Moderate — cracks in wide joints |
| Strength | Higher | Lower |
| Surface safety | Can scratch polished/glass tile | Safe on all surfaces |
| Vertical application | Heavier, may slump on walls | Easier on vertical surfaces |
| Price | Mid — ~$18–25 / 25 lb bag | Similar — ~$18–25 / 25 lb bag |
| Floors | Correct choice | Avoid — shrinks/cracks |
| Shower walls (narrow joint) | Wrong — may scratch tile | Correct choice |
| Polished marble / glass | Will scratch surface | Required |
| Needs sealing | Yes — especially in wet areas | Yes — especially in wet areas |
| Brands | Mapei Keracolor S, Laticrete PermaColor, CBP Polyblend Plus | Mapei Keracolor U, Laticrete PermaColor Unsanded, CBP Polyblend Plus Unsanded |
Which Grout Type by Joint Width
Joint width is measured from tile edge to tile edge. When in doubt, use a 1/8" drill bit as a physical gauge — if the bit fits with room to spare, use sanded grout.
| Joint Width | Grout Type | Typical Use Case | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/16" (1.5mm) | Unsanded | Rectified porcelain, large-format slab | Very precise cuts required at this width |
| 1/8" (3mm) | Either* | Standard ceramic, subway backsplash | Borderline — use unsanded on delicate surfaces, sanded on floors |
| 3/16" (4.8mm) | Sanded | Most standard wall and floor tile | Most common grout joint in residential tile |
| 1/4" (6mm) | Sanded | Slate, travertine, handmade tile | Wider joints need sand to prevent shrinkage |
| 3/8" (9.5mm) | Sanded | Rustic stone, saltillo, outdoor pavers | Consider medium-bed mortar for thick tile |
| 1/2" – 5/8" (12–16mm) | Sanded | Irregular stone, wide-joint decorative | May need custom sand-portland mix for very wide joints |
| Over 5/8" | Neither | Custom applications | Use mortar or custom grout formulation — standard grout will fail |
*At exactly 1/8": use unsanded for polished marble, glass, or any delicate surface. Use sanded for unglazed ceramic, porcelain, and all floors.
Which Grout for Each Surface — Specific Answers
The question isn't just sanded vs unsanded — it's sanded vs unsanded for your specific surface and joint width. Here's the breakdown by location.
Floor Tile
Almost always sanded. Floor joints are typically 3/16"–1/4", and floors take foot traffic — you need the sand's reinforcement against cracking and shrinkage.
→ SandedShower Walls
Depends on joint width. Under 1/8": unsanded. Over 1/8": sanded. For glass or polished tile in a shower: always unsanded regardless of joint width.
→ Depends on jointShower Floor
Typically sanded. Shower floors use mosaic or small-format tile (2×2, penny round) with 1/8"–3/16" joints. Sanded grout is stronger under wet conditions.
→ SandedBacksplash
Subway tile backsplash (3×6) uses 1/16"–1/8" joints — use unsanded. If backsplash is handmade tile or stone with wider joints, use sanded. Glass backsplash: always unsanded.
→ Usually unsandedBathroom Floor
Sanded grout. Bathroom floors are the same as any floor — standard joints (3/16"+) require sanded grout for durability. Exception: polished marble floor, always unsanded.
→ SandedPolished Marble
Always unsanded, regardless of joint width. Silica sand in sanded grout will scratch polished marble permanently. No exceptions. If the joint is wider than 1/8", seal frequently.
→ Unsanded onlyGlass Tile
Always unsanded. Glass tile is highly scratch-sensitive. Sanded grout will permanently etch the surface. Glass mosaic, subway glass, and glass pool tile all require unsanded grout.
→ Unsanded onlyOutdoor Tile
Sanded grout in almost all cases. Outdoor tile uses wider joints to accommodate thermal expansion, and sanded grout is more resistant to freeze-thaw cycling and movement.
→ SandedEverything You Need to Know
The science behind the choice — and the contractor details that prevent the most common mistakes.
Why Sanded Grout Contains Sand
Silica sand is added to grout as an aggregate — the same reason concrete contains gravel. When grout cures, water evaporates and the mixture shrinks slightly. Without sand, that shrinkage is significant enough to pull the grout away from tile edges, leaving hairline cracks and gaps that trap moisture and dirt.
In joints wider than 1/8 inch, the shrinkage force exceeds the grout's tensile strength. Sand distributes and resists the shrinkage, keeping the joint intact. This is why unsanded grout in a wide joint will always fail eventually — it is a material physics issue, not a product quality issue.
Why Unsanded Grout Exists
For joints narrower than 1/8 inch, sand particles (typically 0.3–0.5mm diameter) are too large to pack consistently into the joint. The result is a grainy, inconsistent fill with voids — the opposite of what you want. Unsanded grout has a finer, more fluid consistency that fills narrow joints completely.
Additionally, polished stone and glass tile have surfaces that silica sand will physically scratch and etch — permanently. Unsanded grout eliminates that risk entirely. On marble and glass, unsanded is not a preference — it is the only correct choice.
The 1/8" (3mm) Borderline
At exactly 1/8 inch joint width, either product can work. In practice, the decision comes down to the tile surface:
- Unglazed ceramic, porcelain, or stone: use sanded grout for strength
- Polished marble, glass, metal, or any delicate glaze: use unsanded grout to avoid scratching
- On floors at 1/8": always use sanded — the foot traffic demands the strength
Sanded vs Unsanded in the Shower
Shower grout fails more than any other tile installation — and the wrong grout type is frequently the reason. Here's what I see in the field after 18 years:
Shower walls with narrow-joint rectified tile (1/16"–1/8"): Use unsanded grout. The thin joints can't accommodate sand particles properly, and unsanded grout is easier to apply vertically without slumping.
Shower walls with standard ceramic or subway tile (3/16" joint): Use sanded grout. It is stronger, more water-resistant before sealing, and fills the joint more completely.
Shower floor (any format): Sanded grout. Shower floors typically use mosaic tile (1/8"–3/16" joints) and need sanded grout's strength for durability underfoot.
Single-Component Grouts (SCG): The Third Option
Products like Custom Building Products Prism and Laticrete PermaColor are Single Component Grouts (SCG) — polymer-modified grouts that work in joints from 1/16" to 1/2" without the sanded/unsanded distinction. They contain a fine aggregate that behaves like sanded grout in wider joints but doesn't scratch delicate surfaces.
For most modern tile projects, an SCG like Custom Prism eliminates the sanded/unsanded decision entirely. They cost slightly more but save time and reduce the risk of using the wrong product.
Sanded & Unsanded Options by Brand
Every major grout brand makes both sanded and unsanded versions. Here's the right product name for each scenario.
| Brand | Sanded Product | Unsanded Product | All-in-One Option |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mapei | Keracolor S (sanded) · Ultracolor Plus FA | Keracolor U (unsanded) | Mapei Calculator → |
| Laticrete | PermaColor Select Sanded | PermaColor Select Unsanded | Laticrete Calculator → |
| Custom Building Products | Polyblend Plus Sanded | Polyblend Plus Unsanded | Prism (any joint) → |
| Ardex | Ardex WJ 50 (wide joint) | Ardex FL (fine line) | — |
| TEC | TEC AccuColor Sanded | TEC AccuColor Unsanded | TEC Power Grout (any joint) |
| Bostik | Dimension RapidCure (sanded) | Dimension RapidCure (unsanded) | — |
Sanded vs Unsanded Grout — Questions Answered
The most common questions from homeowners and contractors — answered directly, without filler.
Calculate How Much Grout You Need
Now that you know which type to use — calculate exact bag counts for your project.