Laminate vs. tile flooring

These two are opposites in a useful way. Tile is hard, cold, fully waterproof, and lasts decades — the right call for bathrooms, kitchens, and entryways. Laminate is warmer, softer, far cheaper to install, and a realistic DIY job — better for living spaces and bedrooms. The deciding questions are usually how wet the room gets and who's doing the work. Here's the full comparison.

The quick verdict

  • Choose tile for bathrooms, kitchens, mudrooms, and entryways — anywhere waterproofing and long-term durability matter most.
  • Choose laminate for living rooms, bedrooms, and halls where you want a warm wood look, a softer floor underfoot, and a budget- and DIY-friendly install.

What they're made of

  • Laminate is a dense fiberboard (HDF) core topped with a photo-realistic wood print and a tough clear wear layer. It floats over the subfloor and clicks together — but the wood-based core is why moisture is its weakness.
  • Tile is fired ceramic or porcelain, set in thinset mortar with grouted joints. Porcelain is denser and harder than ceramic and is the more durable, water-resistant of the two. Either way, it's a rigid, waterproof, mineral surface — the opposite of laminate in almost every property.

Side-by-side comparison

FactorLaminateTile (ceramic/porcelain)
Installed cost$3–$8 / sq ft$7–$20 / sq ft
Water resistanceWater-resistant at best100% waterproof
DurabilityGood; wears through eventuallyExcellent; tiles can crack
Feel underfootWarmer, softer, quieterHard & cold (great with radiant heat)
Scratch resistanceExcellentExcellent
Best roomsLiving rooms, bedrooms, hallsBaths, kitchens, entries, mudrooms
DIY installEasy (floating click-lock)Hard (substrate, thinset, grout)
MaintenanceSweep & damp-mopEasy, but grout needs resealing
Lifespan15–25 years50+ years

Cost compared by room size

Tile usually costs two to three times as much installed — not because the tile is dear (it can be cheap) but because setting it is skilled, slow work. Using typical installed ranges (materials + labor):

Room sizeLaminate ($3–$8/sq ft)Tile ($7–$20/sq ft)
Small room — 120 sq ft$360–$960$840–$2,400
Bathroom / bedroom — 200 sq ft$600–$1,600$1,400–$4,000
Kitchen / living — 320 sq ft$960–$2,560$2,240–$6,400
Main floor — 800 sq ft$2,400–$6,400$5,600–$16,000

Laminate is also the bigger DIY saver, since its floating planks remove most of the labor. The numbers above use typical national ranges — see our methodology for how we build cost estimates.

Know your square footage first

Use the flooring calculator for laminate boxes, or the tile calculator for tile counts with waste — each gives quantities and an editable cost.

Open the Tile Calculator

Which should you choose, room by room?

  • Bathroom, kitchen, mudroom, entrywayTile. Waterproofing and durability win where there's water, dirt, and traffic.
  • Living room, bedrooms, hallwaysLaminate. Warmer and softer underfoot, with a convincing wood look for less.
  • BasementsTile for moisture resistance — or consider waterproof luxury vinyl plank as a warmer middle ground.
  • Open-plan kitchen/living → many homeowners tile the kitchen and run laminate (or LVP) through the living area, with a transition strip between.

Installation & maintenance

This is the biggest practical difference. Laminate is floating click-lock — planks snap together over a foam underlayment with no glue or nails, so a handy homeowner can do a room in a weekend. Tile is a true skilled trade: it needs a flat, rigid substrate (usually cement backer board), thinset mortar, spacers, a tile saw or snap cutter, and grouting — doable as a DIY project, but far less forgiving. For upkeep, laminate just needs sweeping and a barely-damp mop; tile is easy to clean but its grout lines need periodic resealing to stay stain- and water-resistant. If you want the step-by-step, see our how to tile a floor guide.

Frequently asked questions

Which is cheaper?
Laminate — about $3–$8/sq ft installed vs. $7–$20 for tile, mostly because setting tile is slow, skilled labor. A 200 sq ft room is ~$600–$1,600 laminate vs. $1,400–$4,000 tile.
Better for a bathroom?
Tile — it's fully waterproof and the bathroom standard. For a budget wood look in a bath, waterproof LVP beats laminate.
Does tile add more value?
Generally yes — it's a durable, premium, waterproof finish buyers expect in kitchens and baths, and it can last 50+ years.
Is tile harder to install?
Much — laminate clicks together and floats; tile needs a rigid substrate, thinset, cutting tools, and grouting. See our how to tile a floor guide.
Which lasts longer?
Tile — 50+ years vs. 15–25 for laminate, which can't be refinished. Tiles can crack and grout needs resealing, but the surface itself is extremely durable.

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