
How Often Should You Replace Your Toilet? Complete Guide
Buying GuidesMost toilets last 25 to 50 years, but the smart replacement window is usually the 20-year mark. Here is what the signs,…
Read the guideGrout and caulk look similar in the bag but behave completely differently on the wall. This guide explains where each material belongs, why mixing them up leads to mold and cracked tile, and how to apply both correctly the first time.
Research updated June 2026.
Use grout between tiles on flat, stable surfaces. Use caulk everywhere two planes meet, wherever surfaces flex, and around the toilet base and tub perimeter. Mixing them up traps moisture and cracks within months. Match the right material to the right joint every time.
Grout is a cement-based filler that bonds rigidly between tiles on the same plane. Caulk is a flexible, silicone- or latex-based sealant designed to absorb movement between surfaces that expand, contract, or meet at an angle. Grout cannot flex without cracking; caulk cannot handle the compressive load between tightly laid tiles without oozing or failing.
Both products exist to seal gaps, but they address fundamentally different problems. Grout is mixed from Portland cement, sand, and sometimes polymer additives, then packed into the uniform joints between tiles. Once cured it forms a hard, porous (unless sealed) barrier. It resists compressive force well but has essentially zero tensile flexibility.
Caulk, by contrast, is a single-component sealant that cures by reacting with atmospheric moisture (silicone) or by drying (latex/acrylic). The cured material remains permanently elastic, stretching and compressing with the substrate without delaminating. That elasticity is exactly what you need at transitions between a tile wall and a tub, between a toilet base and a floor, or at inside corners where two walls meet.
The tile industry's Tile Council of North America (TCNA) Handbook specifically prohibits grout at change-of-plane joints and movement joints. Their standard EJ171 requires a flexible sealant at all inside corners, perimeter joints, and any joint where different substrates meet. That single guideline eliminates most grout-versus-caulk confusion.
Use grout between tiles on any continuous flat surface: floor fields, shower walls, backsplashes, and countertops where tile meets tile in uniform joints. Grout is the correct choice whenever both tiles are on the same plane and no differential movement is expected between them. Standard joint widths between 1/16 inch and 3/8 inch are typical grout territory.
Grout categories matter for choosing the right product for the location.
| Grout Type | Composition | Best Use | Joint Width | Stain Resistance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epoxy Grout | Epoxy resin + hardener | Wet areas, heavy traffic floors | 1/16" and wider | Excellent (non-porous) |
| Unsanded Grout | Cement + fine fillers | Wall tile, joints under 1/8" | 1/16" to 1/8" | Poor unless sealed |
| Sanded Grout | Cement + sand aggregates | Floor tile, joints 1/8" and wider | 1/8" to 3/8" | Poor unless sealed |
| Polymer-Modified Grout | Cement + polymer additives | Moderate wet areas | 1/8" to 1/2" | Moderate |
| Furan Grout | Furan resin | Industrial/chemical exposure | 1/8" and wider | Excellent |
For residential bathrooms, the real choice is almost always between sanded grout (floor fields with wider joints), unsanded grout (polished stone or glass tile where sand would scratch), and epoxy grout (shower floors and kitchen backsplashes where staining is a concern). Brands like Custom Building Products (Polyblend), Mapei Keracolor, and Laticrete PermaColor are widely stocked and have consistent color libraries that hold up over time.
One important detail: cement grouts are porous. Unsealed sanded or unsanded grout in a wet zone absorbs soap scum, mineral deposits, and biologicals within weeks. Apply a penetrating grout sealer 48 to 72 hours after curing, then reseal annually in shower stalls and every two years on dry bathroom floors.
Caulk belongs at every change-of-plane joint (where wall meets floor, wall meets tub, or two walls meet at an inside corner), around the toilet base perimeter, along the tub or shower pan perimeter, and at any joint where different materials come together. These locations experience movement that would crack rigid grout within a single season of normal use.
The list of mandatory caulk locations in a bathroom is longer than most homeowners expect:
A common callback complaint among tile setters is homeowners who fill inside shower corners with grout because it color-matches their tile joints. Within six to eighteen months that grout fractures due to thermal cycling and substrate flex, leaving an open channel for water infiltration behind the tile assembly. The proper repair is removing all grout from the inside corner to full depth and replacing it with color-matched silicone. Many caulk manufacturers publish color lines that coordinate with major grout color systems precisely because this is a known problem.
100% silicone caulk is the most durable choice for wet zones like shower stalls and tub surrounds because it is permanently waterproof, mold-resistant, and maintains flexibility for decades. Siliconized-latex (hybrid) caulk is easier to tool and paintable, making it better for dry bathroom transitions like toilet bases and window trim. Avoid plain acrylic latex caulk in wet areas since it absorbs moisture and degrades rapidly.
| Caulk Type | Waterproof | Paintable | Mold Resistance | Ideal Location | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100% Silicone | Yes | No | Excellent | Shower stalls, tub surrounds | 20+ years |
| Siliconized Latex (Hybrid) | Good | Yes | Good | Toilet base, trim transitions | 10-15 years |
| Acrylic Latex | Poor | Yes | Poor | Dry interior trim only | 3-5 years |
| Polyurethane | Excellent | Yes | Good | Exterior tile, heavy-traffic floors | 15-20 years |
GE Sealants 100% Silicone Kitchen and Bath, DAP Kwik Seal Ultra, and Custom Building Products Polyblend Sanded Tile Caulk are among the most commonly specified products in residential bathroom tile work. The Polyblend Sanded Caulk line is specifically formulated to color-match Polyblend grouts, which reduces the visual discontinuity at inside corners and change-of-plane joints.
One practical note on 100% silicone: it will not adhere to a surface that has any silicone residue or many release agents. Surface preparation is non-negotiable. The substrate must be clean, dry, and free of old caulk before a fresh bead is applied. Attempting to caulk over old caulk creates a bond that fails in less than a year.
Old caulk must be physically cut and peeled away using a utility knife or oscillating tool, then residue removed with a silicone-dissolving solvent before new caulk will bond. Old grout is removed with an oscillating multi-tool fitted with a grout blade or a manual grout saw, cutting to full joint depth without scoring adjacent tile edges. Attempting to apply new material over old without full removal is the single most common reason for premature failure.
Grout removal is more labor-intensive than caulk removal. An oscillating multi-tool with a carbide or diamond grout blade removes most of the material quickly, but the tool requires a steady hand to avoid chipping tile edges. For small repairs, a carbide-tipped manual grout saw does the job with less risk of tile damage. The goal is removing grout to full joint depth and vacuuming all dust before applying new material.
For caulk, a razor blade scraper or utility knife cuts the outer skin, and the bulk of the bead usually peels away in strips once the bond edges are cut. Remaining residue -- especially silicone residue -- requires a silicone solvent such as Goo Gone, WD-40, or a dedicated product like DAP Caulk B Gone. Apply, let dwell for the time specified on the label, then scrub with a stiff plastic brush. Never use steel wool in a shower, as it leaves ferrous particles that rust and stain tile permanently.
The most common DIY mistake is rushing the drying time on a freshly cleaned surface. Even if a surface looks dry, residual moisture in grout lines or in porous tile can prevent silicone from curing correctly. In a high-humidity bathroom, use a fan to accelerate surface drying and wait at least 24 hours after thorough cleaning before applying new caulk. Silicone caulk exposed to moisture during cure will have a chalky, weak bond.
Clean and dry the floor surface around the toilet base completely. Apply masking tape along both sides of the gap for a clean edge, then lay a continuous bead of siliconized latex caulk around the front and sides of the base, leaving the back two to three inches uncaulked. Tool the bead smooth with a wet finger, remove the tape immediately, and allow 24 hours to cure before the toilet is used.
The instruction to leave the back of the toilet base uncaulked is frequently misunderstood. The reason is practical: if the wax ring seal fails, water will leak at the floor. If the entire base is caulked, that water has nowhere to go and will migrate under the floor covering and into the subfloor, causing rot and mold. Leaving a gap at the back allows any leak to become visible immediately, which limits damage and prompts timely repair. This is consistent with guidance from major manufacturers including Kohler and American Standard.
For porcelain toilets on tile floors, both TOTO Drake II and Kohler Highline installation guides specify this partial caulk method. If you are installing a new toilet from any of these brands -- TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge, Swiss Madison, or Gerber -- check the manufacturer's installation sheet since some explicitly state the back-gap requirement. See the best flushing toilets guide for installation notes by model.
There is a related question about whether to caulk at all versus leaving the base completely open. Local building codes vary. Some jurisdictions require the base to be caulked (to prevent sewer gases from seeping out around the base if the wax ring is slightly imperfect). Others do not require it. In practice, a partial caulk bead on the front and sides satisfies both concerns: it reduces gas infiltration and still allows leak detection at the back.
If you need step-by-step help, see how to caulk around a toilet for a full photo-based walkthrough, or toilet installation guide for the complete process from wax ring to final bolt-down.
Grout cracks most commonly because flexible joints were filled with rigid grout instead of caulk, because the tile substrate (backer board or mortar bed) was not rigid enough, or because insufficient polymer modification left the grout brittle. Preventing cracks requires using the right material at movement joints, installing adequate substrate, mixing grout to the correct water ratio, and sealing cement grout within 72 hours of cure to reduce water intrusion.
The specific failure modes for grout include:
If grout is cracking repeatedly in the same location -- particularly at inside corners or along the tub line -- it is almost always because grout is in a joint that should have caulk. The fix is to remove the grout in that specific joint completely and replace it with a color-matched caulk. Patching grout over existing cracks does not address the root cause and will fail again.
For related bathroom tile decisions, see bathroom tile buying guide for substrate and layout considerations that affect grout joint performance.
Cement grout in shower stalls should be resealed annually with a penetrating silicone-based grout sealer. Silicone caulk in high-use showers typically lasts 10 to 20 years before replacement, while siliconized-latex caulk at the toilet base or tub perimeter may need replacement every 5 to 10 years depending on cleaning chemical exposure and movement. Visual inspection twice a year catches failures before water infiltration occurs.
The fastest way to check whether grout sealer is still effective is the water-bead test. Drop water onto a dry grouted surface. If it beads up and rolls off, the sealer is intact. If it soaks in and darkens the grout within a minute, the sealer is depleted and should be reapplied.
Caulk inspection is visual. Look for:
Surface mildew on caulk is common in poorly ventilated bathrooms and does not require full replacement. A paste of baking soda and bleach applied to the surface for 30 minutes, then scrubbed and rinsed, removes most mildew from silicone. If the discoloration returns within two weeks, the mold has penetrated the caulk body and full replacement is the correct solution. A bathroom exhaust fan running for 20 minutes after every shower significantly extends caulk life by reducing surface humidity. See bathroom exhaust fan guide for ventilation recommendations.
Cleaning chemicals are a major but overlooked factor in caulk degradation. Bleach-based bathroom cleaners -- even diluted household bleach -- accelerate silicone breakdown over repeated exposure. If you apply bleach cleaners regularly in a tiled shower, switch to an oxygen-based (peroxide) cleaner or a pH-neutral tile cleaner for routine cleaning, reserving bleach for periodic disinfection. This single change can double the interval between recaulking jobs.
No. Caulk is too flexible to bear compressive load between tiles and will ooze out under foot traffic or the weight of tile. It also lacks the color stability and hardness needed for tile-to-tile joints. Use grout between tiles and caulk at joints that flex or change plane.
No. Grout will not bond to silicone caulk residue. The old caulk must be completely removed and the surface cleaned before either grout or new caulk is applied. Even a thin film of silicone prevents adhesion.
Most major grout manufacturers publish coordinating caulk lines. Custom Building Products Polyblend Sanded Caulk matches Polyblend grout colors. Mapei Keracolor matches the Mapei grout line. DAP and GE Sealants offer neutral tones (white, almond, gray, biscuit). If an exact match is unavailable, choose a caulk one shade lighter than the grout, as caulk tends to look slightly darker when wet.
Most silicone caulks require 24 to 48 hours at room temperature and 50% relative humidity before water exposure. Siliconized-latex products vary between 2 and 24 hours. Always check the product label. High-humidity bathrooms slow cure; using a fan accelerates it. Do not rush this step.
Black discoloration on shower caulk is Cladosporium or Aspergillus mold growing inside the caulk body, not just on its surface. This happens when caulk is applied over a damp or inadequately prepared surface, when the bathroom has poor ventilation, or when the caulk bead has cracked and allows moisture behind it. Surface cleaning does not solve the problem permanently; the affected caulk must be removed and replaced after addressing ventilation.
Local codes vary, but most plumbing professionals recommend caulking the front and sides of the toilet base while leaving the back open. Leaving the entire perimeter uncaulked can allow sewer gases to escape if the wax ring is not perfectly sealed. A partial caulk bead is the practical compromise most manufacturers recommend.
Cut the caulk tube nozzle at a 45-degree angle slightly smaller than the joint width. Apply steady pressure and move the gun at a constant speed. Immediately wet your finger with water or isopropyl alcohol and draw it along the bead in one smooth stroke. Remove tape before the caulk begins to skin. Avoid going back over a tooled bead, as this pulls material and creates an uneven surface.
Epoxy grout is the best choice for shower floors because it is non-porous, stain-resistant, and does not require sealing. It costs more and requires more exacting application technique than cement grout, but its performance in wet, high-traffic areas justifies the investment. Laticrete SpectraLOCK Pro and Mapei Kerapoxy are widely available epoxy options with good color selection.
Allow cement grout to cure for a minimum of 48 to 72 hours (72 hours is better in humid conditions). Apply a penetrating silicone-based or fluoropolymer grout sealer with a small foam brush or applicator bottle, working it into the grout lines while avoiding excessive contact with tile surfaces. Wipe excess from tile within 5 minutes. Apply a second coat after 30 minutes. Allow the sealer to cure for the time specified before water exposure.
100% silicone caulk cannot be painted; paint simply peels off it. Siliconized-latex and acrylic-latex caulks are paintable and accept latex paint well. If you need a paintable caulk for bathroom trim or where tile meets drywall in a low-moisture area, choose a product labeled "paintable." Never use plain paintable latex caulk in a wet zone like a shower.
Joint width depends on tile size and type. Small mosaic tiles (1x1 or 2x2) typically use 1/16 to 1/8 inch joints filled with unsanded grout. Standard 12x12 ceramic or porcelain floor tiles typically use 3/16 to 1/4 inch joints with sanded grout. Large-format tiles (18x18 and up) require a minimum of 1/8 inch joints but often use 3/16 to 1/4 inch to accommodate lippage and substrate irregularities.
No. Epoxy grout is non-porous by nature and does not absorb staining agents or water. Sealing it with a penetrating grout sealer provides no benefit since there are no capillaries for the sealer to penetrate. This is one of epoxy grout's significant long-term maintenance advantages over cement-based products.
No. The tank-to-bowl connection is sealed by rubber gaskets and brass bolts, not caulk. Applying caulk to the tank-to-bowl joint can prevent proper seating of the rubber gasket and may make future repairs significantly more difficult. If the tank-to-bowl joint is leaking, the cause is almost always a deteriorated rubber spud gasket or loose bolts that need replacement.
Score the caulk bead along both edges with a utility knife or oscillating tool set to the minimum depth needed to cut through the caulk. Peel the bulk away. Apply a silicone remover solvent and let it dwell for 30 minutes. Scrub residue with a stiff nylon brush -- never steel wool. A plastic razor blade can remove stubborn residue from glazed tile without scratching. Rinse thoroughly before applying new caulk.
Some cement grout products incorporate a built-in sealer that activates on the surface during cure. These "pre-mixed" or "stain-free" grouts from brands like TEC and Custom Building Products reduce but do not fully eliminate moisture absorption. They still benefit from a topical sealer application, especially in shower enclosures, because the built-in protection degrades with cleaning chemical exposure over time.
Unsanded caulk is a flexible sealant formulated without sand aggregate, making it suitable for joints under 1/8 inch wide and for use with polished stone and glass tile where sand particles would scratch the surface. It color-matches unsanded grout product lines. Use it at inside shower corners where tile joints are narrow and sand would leave visible scratches on polished surfaces.
Standard drywall should never be used as a substrate behind a tub surround or in any wet area. Cement backer board or a bonded waterproof membrane system is required. If tiles are installed over standard drywall in a wet zone, water infiltration is a matter of when, not if, regardless of how well the grout is applied or sealed. Grout and caulk performance cannot compensate for an inadequate substrate.
Allow cement grout to cure for a minimum of 72 hours before applying caulk in adjacent joints. This ensures the grout has achieved sufficient hardness and that residual moisture in the grout joints will not contaminate the caulk bond line. Applying caulk too soon traps moisture and creates an adhesion failure at the grout-caulk boundary.
Brand matters more than many homeowners realize. Bargain silicone products often use lower-purity silicone compounds that lose flexibility within a few years. Established products from GE Sealants, DAP, Dow (formerly Dow Corning), and Sashco have long track records for tensile strength and mold resistance. For the toilet base and dry bathroom transitions, any quality siliconized-latex from these brands will perform well. For shower stalls, stick with 100% silicone from a recognized manufacturer.
Sanded and unsanded grout are rigid cement-based products for filling joints between tiles. Sanded and unsanded caulk are flexible sealants that happen to incorporate (or omit) fine sand for color-matching purposes and slight texture, but they remain elastomeric regardless of the sand content. The sand in caulk does not make it function like grout. Use whichever caulk (sanded or unsanded) matches your grout color and the joint width, but never substitute either for grout between tiles.
Grout and caulk are not interchangeable. Grout fills joints between tiles on the same plane; caulk seals every joint that flexes, changes direction, or meets a different material. Getting this distinction right -- especially at shower corners, tub perimeters, and the toilet base -- is the single most reliable way to prevent moisture damage in a bathroom. Choose epoxy grout for wet-area floors, 100% silicone caulk for shower stalls, and a quality siliconized-latex for the toilet base, then reseal and inspect regularly to keep everything performing for years.
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Researched by Marcus Bell · Last updated April 27, 2026 · Our review method

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