How much does it cost to regrout a floor?

Most homeowners pay about $5–$11 per sq. ft. to regrout a tile floor when the job is a straightforward “remove old grout + install new grout” on a floor area. That typically puts many projects in the $600–$2,000+ range depending on size, tile type, and how much grout has to be removed.

That said, pricing varies a lot by scope. Some estimates that include heavier prep, difficult grout removal, or higher labor markets can run well above $10/sq. ft. (Homewyse’s January 2026 calculator shows a higher “regrout” range).


Average regrouting cost by floor size

Project type Size Typical total cost
Small floor (powder room / small bath) 15–40 sq. ft. $150–$600
Medium floor (kitchen / standard bath) 100–200 sq. ft. $600–$2,200
Large floor (open plan / big room) 200–300 sq. ft. $1,200–$3,300+

Why the ranges are wide: national guides commonly cite $250–$1,000 per ~100 sq. ft. for regrouting, but the per-sq-ft cost climbs fast when grout removal is slow (mosaics, damaged grout, tight joints) or the contractor has a minimum service fee.


What drives regrouting prices up (and down)

1) Tile size and grout-line density (biggest cost factor)

  • Mosaic / small tile = more grout lines per sq. ft. → more time removing grout and packing new grout.

  • Large-format tile → fewer grout lines → faster, cheaper labor.

2) Full regrout vs. spot repair

  • Spot/partial regrout is cheaper. Many “repair” jobs land around a few hundred dollars depending on size and access.

3) Grout type you choose

  • Cement grout is typically the budget-friendly standard.

  • Epoxy grout costs more and is more demanding to install, but it’s highly stain-resistant and durable—often chosen for high-moisture or high-traffic areas.

4) Removal difficulty and condition issues

  • If the grout is extremely hard, deeply stained, or the joints are very narrow, removal takes longer.

  • If you uncover moisture problems, repairs can move the job from “cosmetic” to “construction.” (This is where quotes can jump.)

5) Sealing (for cement grout)

  • Cement grout commonly needs sealing to reduce staining and moisture absorption; it adds labor/material cost but improves longevity.


Regrout vs. deep clean vs. grout colorant (quick decision guide)

Choose professional regrouting when you see:

  • Cracking, crumbling, missing grout, recurring mildew that returns quickly, or loose tiles.

Consider professional grout cleaning when:

  • Grout is solid but discolored (cleaning is often far cheaper than regrouting).

Use grout colorant/paint only when:

  • You want a temporary cosmetic refresh and the grout is structurally sound (results may be short-lived in wet/heavy-traffic areas).


Cost-saving tips that don’t cut corners

  • Get quotes that specify “full removal” vs “top-coat.” Real regrouting means removing old grout first.

  • Bundle rooms (contractors often have minimum service fees; combining areas can reduce the per-sq-ft cost).

  • Pick cement grout + seal for most floors unless you truly need epoxy’s performance.


FAQ

How much does it cost to regrout 100 sq. ft. of tile floor?
Common ballpark is $600–$1,000 for many standard floors, but it can be higher with mosaics, heavy grout removal, or premium grout.

Why do some estimates show $15–$35 per sq. ft.?
Some calculators price “regrout” like a high-effort scope (significant removal difficulty, site conditions, and options), which can land much higher than a basic floor regrout rate.

Is regrouting cheaper than replacing tile?
Almost always—regrouting is typically a restoration step that costs far less than demolition + new tile installation.