A cracked or chipped bathroom tile presents a choice: repair the individual tile, or use it as an opportunity to retile. Both options have their place — the right answer depends on the extent of the damage, the age of the tiles, and your budget and plans for the bathroom.
When Repair Is the Better Option
- The damage is limited to one or a few tiles in an otherwise sound tiled surface
- The tiles are a matching run that’s still available (in case repair isn’t sufficient), or is discontinued (making matching impossible)
- The bathroom is otherwise in good condition and you’re not planning renovation
- Budget is a priority — tile repair costs a small fraction of retiling
- The damage is cosmetic (chip, crack) rather than structural (tile lifting off, water behind tiles)
When Retiling Makes More Sense
- Multiple tiles are cracked or damaged across a wide area
- Tiles are hollow when tapped, indicating widespread adhesive failure
- There’s evidence of water ingress behind the tiles (staining, damp walls)
- You’re planning a bathroom renovation anyway
- The tile style is very dated and you want a different look
The Problem With Matching Discontinued Tiles
One of the strongest arguments for repair over retiling is when tiles are discontinued. Tile ranges change every few years, and finding a perfect match for tiles fitted 5+ years ago is often impossible. Repair preserves the existing tile rather than forcing a full retile due to inability to match.
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