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How to Lay Carpet Tiles

If you are considering DIY installation, it helps to understand the best installation method and various options available before you buy the carpet tiles to ensure you get exactly the right product.

What you install and how you install it can make a big difference to how easy carpet tile fitting is to complete and to how the end result can look. Save mess and waste with adhesive Tactiles, avoid adhesives at all, create more natural looks with odd shaped tiles; there are plenty of options to consider when selecting the perfect modular flooring installation for your office, retail store, healthcare property or home.

Consider design and layout

Gone are the days when carpet tiles were all square, 50x50cm and only available in blues or greys. Today, tiles come in a huge range of colours to mix and match into abstract patterns and designs as well as all kinds of shapes and sizes. First, square carpet tiles became rectangles to create monolithic or parquet patterns, next they evolved to biomimicry with a huge range of tile sizes and colour shades used on a single floor to create a more naturally patterned environment that also saved on waste. Think about all the things you can do before you buy your carpet tiles!

Free lay carpet tiles and modular floors

If you want to try DIY installation, free lay carpet tiles are ideal; though we always recommend using a professional carpet tile installer to ensure the best results! Free lay uses the same technique as with standard tiles but do not require adhesives for a much less messy installation which is easily rotated and replaced.

Low waste carpet tile adhesives and other options

Another useful innovation is Interface’s Tactiles; little plastic adhesive squares that reduce adhesive waste and make the whole job cleaner and quicker. Even standard liquid adhesives offer some great features like anti-microbial agents.

Carpet tile installation method for square tiles

Clean the floor then use chalk and a measuring tape to draw lines corner to opposite corner to find the centre of the room. Next draw lengthwise and widthwise chalk lines at the centre to guide your tile laying. Lay a test run without adhesive along the width wise line and ensure everything looks like it will fit straight to the walls.

Start laying tiles at the centre, applying adhesives smoothly to the floor leaving space for it to spread to the edges without spilling onto the neighbouring tile, and ensure a strong contact by pushing down across the tile area. As you reach the edges you will usually need to cut carpet tiles down to fit in the remaining space carefully using a sharp craft knife and metal ruler or piece of wood for a straight cut.