Free • No signup Composite Tile sample in room · Free

Preview Tile Sample in Your Room

Upload your room photo and a tile sample. AI composites it onto your floor or wall in seconds.

Living room with beige carpet flooring and a wood-look tile sample
Before
Same living room with wood-look porcelain tile composited onto the floor
After

Preview Tile Sample in Your Room Photo

Drop your photo here

or click to browse

Release to upload

Free • No signup

Popular use cases:
  • tile sample preview
  • room tile visualizer
  • tile sample in room
  • floor tile preview tool
  • wall tile sample preview
  • tile composite tool
  • tile before buying preview
  • virtual tile installation preview

Cost
Free No signup required
Time
Instant results in 15-30 seconds
Works on
Any device - browser, phone, tablet, desktop
Powered by
AI-powered photo editing
Scenario Prompt Time
Floor tile composite apply this tile sample to the entire floor 20s
Wall tile composite composite this tile sample onto the bathroom wall 25s
Pattern variation apply this tile in a herringbone pattern on the floor 30s

How it works

  1. Upload your room photo

    Drop a photo of the room where you want to preview tile into EditThisPic. Straight-on shots showing the full floor or wall area give the best results. JPG, PNG, WebP up to 7MB.

    Expect: Standard tile composite: 20-30 seconds. Large rooms or complex patterns: may need 1-2 refinements.
  2. Describe where to apply the tile sample

    Upload your tile sample as a reference image, then type your instruction: 'apply this tile sample to the floor' or 'put this tile on the bathroom wall.' The AI uses your sample photo as the source material and composites it onto the specified surface. No marking needed.

    Tip: Mention the surface explicitly — 'floor,' 'wall,' 'backsplash' — so the AI knows exactly where to composite the sample. Including 'matching the room's lighting' improves realism.

    Copy one of these to get started:

    Floor tile preview apply this tile sample to the entire floor, matching the room's perspective and lighting
    Wall tile in bathroom composite this tile sample onto the bathroom wall behind the vanity, covering the full wall surface
    Herringbone pattern from sample apply this tile sample to the floor in a herringbone pattern with thin grout lines
    Kitchen floor replacement replace the kitchen floor with this tile sample, keeping the cabinets and island exactly as they are
    3 more prompts
    Large format tile apply this large format tile sample to the floor with minimal grout lines and seamless edges
    Accent wall tile composite this tile sample onto only the accent wall behind the bed, floor to ceiling
    Comparing two tile samples apply this tile sample to the left half of the floor and show the existing tile on the right for comparison
  3. Review the composite

    Check that the tile pattern scales correctly, grout lines look natural, and the composite blends with existing room lighting. Use the before/after slider to compare against the original.

  4. Refine with markers if needed

    If the AI applied the tile to the wrong surface or missed an area, tap markers on the specific floor or wall section and regenerate. This is optional — most composites work without markers.

    Tip: Markers help when your room has multiple similar surfaces — like a floor and a lower wall that are both light-colored. One tap tells the AI which surface you mean.
Try it free

Preview Tile Sample in Your Room Photo

Drop your photo here

or click to browse

Release to upload

Free • No signup

"Brought 4 tile samples home from the showroom, photographed each one, and previewed them all in my bathroom in 15 minutes. Saved me from a $3,000 mistake." @TileReno_Mike

See it in action

Living room with beige carpet flooring and a wood-look tile sample
Before
->
Same living room with wood-look porcelain tile composited onto the floor
After

Wood-look porcelain on living room floor

A homeowner previewing a wood-look porcelain tile sample on their carpeted living room floor before purchasing.

Prompt: apply this tile sample to the entire living room floor, matching the room's lighting and perspective
Bathroom with plain beige wall behind vanity and a marble tile sample
Before
->
Same bathroom with marble tile composited onto the wall behind the vanity
After

Marble tile on bathroom wall

Testing a marble tile sample on a bathroom wall before committing to a full renovation.

Prompt: composite this marble tile sample onto the bathroom wall behind the vanity, full height from counter to ceiling
Entryway with dated linoleum floor and a dark slate tile sample
Before
->
Same entryway with dark slate tile composited onto the floor
After

Slate tile on entryway floor

Previewing a dark slate tile sample in an entryway to see how it pairs with existing trim and door color.

Prompt: apply this slate tile sample to the entryway floor, matching the perspective and keeping the door and trim unchanged

Detailed Guides by Scenario

📷

Homeowner Renovation Planning

Preview tile samples from the store in your actual room before committing to a purchase, saving time and preventing costly returns.

Common Scenarios

  • Testing 3-4 tile samples from Home Depot in your bathroom before buying a full box
  • Previewing how a dark tile contrasts against your existing light walls
  • Comparing porcelain vs ceramic versions of a similar tile in your space

Best Practices

  • Photograph each tile sample flat, close-up, in even light for the clearest composite
  • Take your room photo straight-on showing the full floor or wall you want to tile
  • Run composites with each sample and save results for side-by-side comparison
📷

Interior Design Client Presentations

Show clients exactly how specific tile products look in their actual space, using samples from your supplier catalog.

Common Scenarios

  • Presenting 5 tile options in a client's kitchen using their own room photo
  • Demonstrating how a bold patterned tile works with existing cabinetry
  • Creating mood boards with in-situ tile previews for design consultations

Best Practices

  • Photograph the client's room yourself for consistent quality across all previews
  • Match tile sample photos to actual SKUs the client can purchase
  • Present options from subtle to bold to help anchor client preferences
📷

Real Estate Listing Enhancement

Show buyers renovation potential by compositing modern tile onto outdated floors in listing photos.

Common Scenarios

  • Staging a dated bathroom with modern tile to show renovation potential
  • Showing buyers the difference a new kitchen floor would make in listing photos
  • Creating before/after renovation visualizations for marketing materials

Best Practices

  • Use universally appealing tile options like large-format porcelain or classic subway
  • Always disclose that tile visualizations are AI-generated per local regulations
  • Pair with other visualizations — countertop, cabinet, paint — for full renovation previews

If something looks off

AI applied tile to the wrong surface

Why: The AI couldn't distinguish between the floor and a similarly-colored wall or countertop.

Try: Tap markers on the specific floor or wall area where you want the tile, then regenerate with the same prompt

Tip: Being explicit in your prompt — 'apply to the floor only' vs 'apply to the wall' — prevents most surface confusion.

AI changed the wrong area or something I didn't want changed

Why: The AI couldn't determine exactly which area you meant from description alone. This happens with ambiguous requests.

Try: Tap a marker on the specific area you want to change, then regenerate with the same prompt

Tip: Markers tell the AI 'I mean THIS one specifically.' Use them when description alone is ambiguous.

Tile pattern scale looks wrong — tiles are too big or too small

Why: The AI estimated tile dimensions that don't match the real sample proportions relative to the room.

Try: Add scale context: 'apply this 12x12 inch tile sample to the floor' or 'these are large 24x24 tiles'

Tip: Mentioning actual tile dimensions gives the AI a size reference — '12x12' or '3x6 subway' produces correctly scaled patterns.

Grout lines missing or too prominent

Why: The AI rendered the tile as a continuous surface without visible grout, or added unrealistically thick lines.

Try: Specify grout: 'apply tile with visible light gray grout lines at standard spacing'

Tip: Include grout color and width in your prompt — the AI treats 'with thin white grout' very differently from 'with dark grout.'

Composite doesn't match room lighting

Why: The tile sample photo had different lighting than the room photo, creating a mismatch.

Try: Add 'match the room's existing warm/cool lighting' to your prompt and regenerate

Tip: Photograph your tile sample in neutral light (not direct sunlight or fluorescent) for the most accurate composites.

Quick answers

Do I need to mark the floor or wall before describing where to place the tile?

No! Just describe where you want the tile: 'apply this tile to the floor' or 'put this tile on the wall.' The AI understands these surfaces. Only use markers if the AI applies the tile to the wrong surface.

Can I preview different tile samples in the same room?

Yes. Upload your room photo once, then swap in different tile sample reference images with each edit. Run separate composites for each sample and compare results side by side before purchasing.

Is there a free tile sample visualizer that doesn't require login?

Yes. EditThisPic is free to try with no account needed. Upload your room photo and tile sample, describe where to apply it, and get a realistic preview in 30 seconds. One free edit per week, credit packs from $1.99 for comparing multiple samples.

How do I upload the tile sample photo?

Use the reference image feature. Upload your room as the main photo, then upload the tile sample as a reference image. The AI uses the reference as source material and composites it onto the surface you specify in your prompt.

Does it work with small tile samples from the store?

Yes. Photograph the tile sample close-up against a neutral background so the pattern and color are clearly visible. The AI extrapolates the sample into a full floor or wall installation with realistic grout lines and pattern repeats.

Can I preview tile on both floors and walls?

Yes. Specify which surface in your prompt — 'apply to the floor' or 'apply to the wall behind the sink.' The AI handles both floor and wall composites, adjusting perspective and lighting accordingly.

What's the best way to photograph my tile sample?

Photograph the sample flat, straight-on, in even natural light. Avoid shadows, angles, and reflections. A single tile or small group on a plain surface gives the AI the clearest pattern to work with.

Can I use this on my phone?

Yes. EditThisPic works in any mobile browser. Take a photo of your room and tile sample right from your phone, upload both, and preview the composite instantly. No app download needed.

Ready to preview your tile sample?

Free to try. No signup required.

Try it free