Wyatt Education Group · 2026-03-15 · 7 min read
How to Read a Tile Layout Plan — A Tiler's Guide to Working from Drawings
Understanding tile layout plans, shop drawings, and set-out documents — how professional tilers read technical drawings and translate them into perfect tile installations.
Walk onto any commercial tiling job and you'll be handed a set of drawings. Your ability to read them — quickly and accurately — is the difference between a professional result and an expensive rework. Here's how qualified tilers interpret tile layout plans and translate them into real-world installations.
📐 Fun fact: In large commercial projects, tile layout drawings are often produced by specialist architectural technologists and can run to dozens of pages. A qualified tiler needs to cross-reference floor plans, elevations, and set-out sheets simultaneously — it's a genuinely technical skill.
The Main Document Types You'll Encounter
A tiling documentation package typically includes several different document types, each serving a different purpose:
- Floor plan: A top-down view showing room dimensions, the position of fixed elements (drains, columns, doorways), and the tile layout grid.
- Elevation drawings: Front-on views of walls showing tile patterns, heights, positions of fixtures, and grout joint locations.
- Set-out drawings: Detailed drawings showing the starting point for the tile layout, the direction of the tile run, and how cuts fall at edges and obstacles.
- Tile schedule: A table listing tile types, sizes, colours, finishes, and which areas each tile applies to.
- Detail drawings: Close-up drawings of complex junctions — stairs, skirtings, coved bases, thresholds, and transitions between tile types.
Understanding Scale
All technical drawings are drawn to scale — meaning the drawing is a proportionally reduced representation of the real thing. The scale is always noted in the drawing title block (e.g., 1:50 means 1mm on the drawing = 50mm in real life).
To measure anything on a drawing, you use a scale ruler — a triangular ruler with multiple scales. Match the scale marked on the drawing to the corresponding scale on your ruler, and you can measure directly off the paper.
Pro tip: Never measure from a photocopy of a drawing — photocopying can distort scale. Always work from the original or a properly printed copy. On site, dimensions should be confirmed with actual measurement as well as reading from the drawing.
Reading the Title Block
Every technical drawing has a title block — typically in the bottom right corner. This contains critical information:
- Project name and address
- Drawing title and number
- Revision number and date (always check you have the latest revision)
- Scale
- Drawn by / approved by
Always check the revision before you start working from a drawing. It's surprisingly common to find that a drawing has been superseded and the version on site is out of date.
Understanding Set-Out Points and Reference Lines
The set-out drawing will show a specific starting point for the tile layout — usually marked with a cross or a specific grid reference. This is your datum point — everything radiates from here.
- Grid lines: Regular lines showing where grout joints will fall, drawn at the tile pitch (tile size + grout joint size).
- Control lines: The primary horizontal and vertical reference lines used to establish the tile grid. On site, these are transferred using a chalk line and laser level.
- Cut lines: Where the drawing shows tile cuts at edges, these are often dimensioned on the drawing to help you verify your layout.
Reading Elevation Drawings for Wall Tiling
Wall tile elevations show you:
- The height of the tile field — where tiles start (typically at floor level, or off a datum height) and where they finish
- The position of feature bands, borders, or accent tiles
- The position of fixtures (towel rails, soap dishes, shower heads, power points) and whether they fall in the centre of a tile or at a joint
- The sequence of tiles — particularly important where there is a pattern or direction to the tile
Translating the Drawing to Site
Once you understand the drawing, transferring it to the actual space involves:
- Establishing your datum point on site (usually a fixed reference like the centre of a drain or a doorway)
- Snapping chalk lines to establish your control grid
- Doing a dry lay from the datum point to confirm cuts at edges match what the drawing shows
- Adjusting if necessary — if the room is not quite the dimensions shown on the drawing (and they rarely are exactly), you need to make a professional decision about how to absorb the discrepancy
- Marking the wall with pencil lines or laser lines before committing adhesive
Always check site dimensions: Drawings are created from survey data, but construction tolerances mean the actual room is never exactly what the drawings say. A tiler who checks actual dimensions before starting and flags discrepancies to the builder early is worth their weight in gold.
Symbols and Notation You Need to Know
- Arrow with "T" or "N": Indicates tile direction (run direction for rectangular tiles)
- Dashed lines: Indicate hidden elements — pipes, beams, or elements behind the tiled surface
- Cloud markings: On a revised drawing, clouds indicate what has changed since the previous revision
- Section markers (A-A, B-B etc.): Reference to a section cut shown elsewhere in the drawing set
- Hatching: Indicates material type — different hatch patterns represent different materials
Learn to Read Drawings as Part of CPC31320
Technical drawing interpretation is a core competency in the CPC31320 Certificate III in Wall and Floor Tiling. At Wyatt Education Group, we teach you to read and work from professional construction drawings — preparing you for the commercial tiling work environments where this skill is essential every day.
Ready to Become a Qualified Tiler?
Wyatt Education Group delivers the CPC31320 Certificate III in Wall and Floor Tiling — a nationally recognised qualification in Bankstown, Sydney. RTO 46003 | CRICOS 04130B.
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