YOS INTERIORS
25525 137TH PL SE, Kent, WA 98042
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
Tile Installation for New Construction for new construction in Kent — coordinated with your build timeline, spec-compliant, and ready for final inspection. Browse 102 contractors experienced with builders, GCs, and new-construction permitting.
Typical cost in Kent
$7–$20 / sq ft
102 contractors in Kent
25525 137TH PL SE, Kent, WA 98042
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
14415 SE 204TH PL, Kent, WA 98042
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
13729 SE 273RD ST, Kent, WA 98042
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
17838 SE 285 ST, Kent, WA 98042
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
317 Railroad Ave S, Kent, WA 98032
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
10222 SE 270TH PL, Kent, WA 98030
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
27031 111TH CT SE, Kent, WA 98030
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
6329 S 251st St ,apt VV 101, Kent, WA 98032
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
27119 115TH AVE SE, Kent, WA 98030
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
10819 SE 244TH PL, Kent, WA 98030
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
PO BOX 5944, Kent, WA 98064
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
11502 SE 254TH PL, Kent, WA 98030
Tile, Ceramic, Mosaic, Natural and MFG Stone. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98030, 98031, 98032, 98042 +2 more
Kent, Washington's tile installation market reflects its position as King County's third-largest city — a dense, diverse suburban community in the Green River Valley between Seattle (20 miles north) and Tacoma (15 miles south). Kent's housing stock spans 1950s and 1960s ranch homes in the West Hill and East Hill neighborhoods, 1970s–1990s construction in Soos Creek and Covington-Kent areas, and newer 2000s–2010s development in East Hill Highlands. The Green River Valley's industrial roots mean many Kent homes were built as worker housing with utilitarian finishes — the active tile remodeling market reflects homeowners upgrading original bathrooms and kitchens that haven't been touched in decades. BLS SOC 47-2044 tile and marble setters in the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue MSA average $30–$50 per hour.
| Project | Scope | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Bathroom floor tile | 40–60 sq ft, ceramic/porcelain | $750–$1,500 |
| Bathroom floor, large-format | 12×24 or 24×24 porcelain | $1,000–$2,000 |
| Shower tile surround | 3-wall standard shower, ~60 sq ft | $1,800–$4,000 |
| Full bath tile (floor + shower) | Complete bathroom tile package | $3,200–$7,000 |
| Kitchen backsplash | 30–40 linear ft subway or mosaic | $800–$2,200 |
| Mudroom/laundry floor | 50–80 sq ft, porcelain | $800–$1,700 |
| Entryway tile | 60–100 sq ft patterned or stone | $1,100–$2,800 |
| Large-format floor (living area) | 200+ sq ft, 24×48 porcelain | $3,200–$6,500 |
| Heated tile floor (electric mat) | Per 50 sq ft with tile installation | $1,100–$2,200 |
| Regrouting (existing tile) | Per 100 sq ft | $350–$800 |
| Tile removal + disposal | Per 100 sq ft | $250–$600 |
Kent's 1950s–1970s ranch homes on West Hill and East Hill present specific tile installation challenges:
Kent receives approximately 37 inches of annual rainfall, primarily October through April, with ambient humidity creating Pacific Northwest moisture conditions year-round. In this environment, shower water proofing failure behind tile causes mold damage more rapidly than in dry-climate markets:
Kent has significant Somali, Eritrean, Ethiopian, Punjabi, and Vietnamese communities — some of the most culturally diverse in the Pacific Northwest. This cultural diversity influences tile preference patterns: traditional and decorative tile designs (geometric Moroccan patterns, decorative hand-painted Mexican tile, intricate mosaic work) are more frequently requested by Kent homeowners than the prevailing white-subway-tile aesthetic of other Seattle metro markets. This creates demand for Kent tile installers with experience in pattern-matched and decorative tile installation beyond basic field tile work.
Washington requires contractor registration under RCW 18.27 for any tile installer operating in Kent — minimum $12,000 bond, GL insurance, and L&I workers' comp enrollment. Kent's diverse contractor market includes unregistered operators who compete on price — the bond protection is especially important because crawlspace moisture-related failures in older Kent homes can be expensive to remediate if installation was improper. Verify any Kent tile contractor at lni.wa.gov/verify.
Tile installation in Kent requires WA L&I contractor registration under RCW 18.27:
Kent's contractor market is price-competitive and diverse. Verifying WA L&I registration at lni.wa.gov/verify separates registered, bonded contractors from unregistered operators — a meaningful consumer protection in a market where post-installation failure in Kent's moisture environment can be expensive.
RCW 18.27.200 penalty for unlicensed contracting: Gross misdemeanor — up to 364 days county jail + $5,000 fine.
The Tile Council of North America (TCNA) standards for subfloor deflection (L/360 minimum for standard tile; L/480 for natural stone and large-format) are critical in Kent's older housing stock:
A tile shower installed without waterproofing membrane in Kent will typically show evidence of moisture infiltration (soft drywall behind tile, musty smell, visible mold) within 18–36 months. Proper shower waterproofing materials for Kent:
Ask any Kent tile contractor quoting shower work: "What waterproofing system do you use, what is the product name, and do you flood test the pan before tiling?" Acceptable answer names a product. Unacceptable: "We use cement board and seal the grout."
Standard tile installation in Kent does not require a King County or City of Kent building permit. However:
A WA-registered tile contractor manages permit questions as part of project scoping — this is a baseline expectation of professional service.
Kent's diverse community creates legitimate demand for decorative tile installation beyond standard field tile. A Kent tile installer with experience in:
Ask for photos of past pattern tile work when selecting a Kent tile installer for decorative tile projects.
Kent homeowners have access to strong DIY resources — Home Depot on 84th Ave S and a Lowe's in the area provide full tile selections, and Kent's economically diverse population includes many skilled trades workers who are capable DIYers. The question of professional vs. DIY tile in Kent comes down to two critical variables: the project type (backsplash vs. shower), and the condition of the substrate (new slab vs. older particleboard subfloor in an East Hill ranch home).
| Factor | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Kitchen backsplash (subway tile) | Strong DIY candidate | $800–$2,200 professional |
| Laundry / mudroom floor | Good DIY on flat concrete slab | $800–$1,700 professional |
| Bathroom floor (no shower adjacency) | Moderate DIY — subfloor assessment needed | $750–$1,500 professional |
| Shower tile (full surround) | High risk — waterproofing complex | $1,800–$4,000 professional |
| Large-format tile (16×24 and larger) | Lippage risk; requires professional skill level | Proper layout, back-butter, levelness |
| Particleboard subfloor replacement | Moderate DIY if structurally sound | Assessment + replacement built into quote |
| Subfloor deflection (L/360) testing | Not done by most DIYers | Standard pre-install step |
| Tile saw operation | Rental $50–$150/day; learning curve | Pro-grade saw, experienced operation |
| Heated floor mat (electric) | DIY mat install; electrician required for hook-up | Electrician subcontracted by contractor |
| WA L&I registration | Homeowner exempt in own home | Required — verify lni.wa.gov/verify |
| Workmanship warranty | None | 1–2 years standard |
| Grout sealing (maintenance) | DIY — grout sealer from hardware store | Should be included in professional finish |
Kitchen backsplash: The most DIY-friendly tile project in Kent. Standard subway tile (3×6) or mosaic sheets on a flat drywall backerboard surface behind a countertop is accessible for a motivated DIYer. Materials cost for a Kent kitchen backsplash: $150–$450 (tile, thinset, grout, tape, tile saw rental). Professional cost: $800–$2,200. Real savings potential.
Laundry room or mudroom floor on slab: Flat concrete slab (common in Kent's 1990s–2010s construction) is ideal for DIY tile — the substrate is stable, level (if slab is flat), and requires no wood subfloor preparation. 12×12 or 18×18 ceramic or porcelain on a flat slab is the most forgiving DIY tile scenario.
Simple bathroom floor (vanity/toilet area, no shower): If the Kent bathroom floor is a separate area from the shower (not an open wet/dry shared floor), a motivated DIYer with a wet saw and proper tile project prep can tile a vanity area floor effectively. Key requirement: confirm the subfloor is adequate (plywood, not particleboard; L/360 compliant).
Mosaic sheet backsplash (decorative accent): Kent's diverse community creates demand for decorative mosaic patterns. Small mosaic sheets are within range for careful DIYers — the mesh backing helps with alignment, though grout consistency and sealing require attention.
Any shower tile project: Kent's Green River Valley location and Puget Sound climate create moisture conditions that accelerate damage from improperly waterproofed tile. A shower waterproofed with only cement board + grout sealer in Kent develops mold within 18–24 months. Full professional waterproofing (Kerdi, WEDI, RedGard) with flood test is the non-negotiable standard. Remediation of a failed shower in an older Kent home (mold in wall cavity, rotted floor joists adjacent to shower pan) runs $5,000–$12,000.
Older Kent ranch/split-level homes (1950s–1970s, East Hill, West Hill): These homes require professional subfloor assessment before tile. Particleboard subfloors (common in 1970s Kent construction) must be replaced — a licensed WA contractor coordinating subfloor replacement + tile is the appropriate solution. DIY tile on an unassessed older Kent subfloor is high-risk.
Large-format porcelain (16×24 or 24×48): The popular contemporary floor tile requires professional layout planning, minimum 95% mortar coverage (back-butter technique), properly modified large-format thinset, and careful levelness management between adjacent tiles. DIY large-format tile consistently shows lippage (tile edges not flush with each other) visible under raking light — an expensive redo in a Kent open-concept floor plan.
Steam shower or wet room: Steam shower waterproofing exceeds standard shower requirements — the entire wall and ceiling assembly must be vapor-proofed (not just waterproofed), using appropriate membrane systems. Specialized knowledge required.
Underestimating subfloor prep time and cost. A Kent homeowner planning to DIY bathroom floor tile in a 1968 ranch home on East Hill frequently discovers:
Budget 40–60% of professional cost for materials when DIYing Kent bathroom tile — and factor in the subfloor assessment before purchasing tile.
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