Tiling RAMS: a complete guide for UK tilers and tiling contractors (2026)
How to write a RAMS for tiling work in the UK. Covers silica dust from cutting, adhesives and grout, kneeling and musculoskeletal injury, manual handling of large-format tiles, the wet tile saw, working at height and slips - with a worked example, a checklist and a free RAMS builder for tilers.
Why tilers and tiling contractors need a RAMS
A RAMS is a Risk Assessment and Method Statement combined into one document. For tiling work it is the document that proves you have thought through the dust, the adhesives, the heavy tiles and the cutting before you start.
Tiling looks like a clean, precise trade, and that is exactly why its hazards get overlooked. Cutting porcelain and stone releases silica dust that scars the lungs, cement adhesives and grout burn skin, large-format slabs are heavy enough to need mechanical lifting, and the wet saw combines electricity with water. A main contractor or commercial client will still ask for your RAMS before you start.
If you are a sole-trader tiler on small domestic jobs, you are not always legally required to produce a formal written RAMS for every bathroom. But on any commercial site, new build, refurbishment, or work running under a principal contractor and CDM 2015, a written RAMS is expected and usually mandatory before you can start.
Who asks for a tiling RAMS?
The people who will want to see it include main contractors and principal contractors, shopfitting and fit-out contractors, facilities managers in commercial and public buildings, housing associations and local authorities, and any project manager running several trades at once. A clear, trade-specific RAMS keeps your team safe and gets you through the approval gate without delay.
Answer a few questions, get a complete RAMS
Complys asks the right questions for your trade and project, then drafts a full Risk Assessment and Method Statement around your answers - proper RAMS, not generic templates, with live UK legislation cited. Start free: 90-day trial, 150 credits (around 13 full RAMS), no card needed.
The hazards a tiling RAMS must cover
A generic RAMS will not pass a competent contractor's check, because it will not address the hazards that are specific to tiling. These are the ones that matter.
Silica dust from cutting
Cutting and grinding porcelain, natural stone and ceramic tiles releases respirable crystalline silica, the fine dust that scars lungs permanently and causes silicosis and lung cancer. This is the most serious health hazard in tiling, and the one assessors look for. The HSE's guidance on construction dust sets the standard.
Your RAMS should set out cutting wet on a wet saw wherever possible to suppress dust at source, on-tool extraction for any grinding, RPE with the correct protection factor and face-fit testing where dust is unavoidable, and cutting away from others. "Operatives will wear a dust mask" is not enough for an assessor who takes silica seriously - and porcelain in particular generates significant dust.
Adhesives, grout and sealants
Cement-based tile adhesives and grout are alkaline and cause cement burns and dermatitis, epoxy grouts are skin and respiratory sensitisers, and sealants and solvents add to the COSHH picture. This is governed by the COSHH Regulations. Your RAMS should cover gloves and skin protection, washing facilities, ventilation in small enclosed rooms like bathrooms, and the safety data sheets for the products used, with particular care for epoxy products.
Manual handling and large-format tiles
Boxes of tiles are heavy, bags of adhesive and screed are awkward, and large-format porcelain tiles and slabs are heavy enough that they cannot be handled safely by one person. The trend toward big-format slabs has made this a defining hazard. Manual handling is governed by the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992. Your RAMS should set out team lifts and suction frame lifters for large slabs, good handling for boxes and bags, and the awkward postures the work involves.
Kneeling and musculoskeletal injury
Floor tiling is done on the knees, and the work loads knees, backs and wrists over a career. Your RAMS should cover knee pads or knee protection, task rotation, and posture and breaks to manage the kneeling and repetitive work, in the same way flooring does.
The wet tile saw and power tools
The wet saw is the machine that defines the trade, combining electricity with water - so it needs proper electrical protection - and its blade causes lacerations. Angle grinders used for cutting bring dust, hand-arm vibration and noise. These fall under PUWER and the vibration and noise regulations. Your RAMS should cover RCD protection for the wet saw, guarding and safe use, blade safety, and trigger-time limits and hearing protection for grinders.
Working at height and slips
Wall tiling, splashbacks and high-level work mean working at height, usually from hop-ups or a small platform, under the Work at Height Regulations 2005. And tiling is wet work - water from the saw, wet adhesive and grout - so slips are a constant risk, made worse where someone is on a hop-up. Your RAMS should cover the access for height and keeping the floor managed against slips.
A worked example: RAMS for tiling a commercial wet room
It helps to see how the hazards turn into an actual method statement. Take a common job: tiling the walls and floor of a commercial wet room with large-format porcelain, including cutting on site. Here is how a sound RAMS would walk through it.
Before work starts
The RAMS records that cutting will be done wet on a wet saw set up with RCD protection in a ventilated area, that large-format slabs will be handled by two people with suction lifters, that knee protection is provided for the floor work, and that adhesive and grout handling controls are in place for the enclosed room.
Sequence of work and controls
Set up: establish the wet-saw cutting station with RCD protection and ventilation, away from others, and protect the area. Cut: cut tiles wet to suppress silica dust, with RPE for any unavoidable dry cutting or grinding, handling sharp cut edges with care. Handle slabs: lift large-format porcelain with two people and suction frame lifters, never single-handed. Apply adhesive: spread cement adhesive with gloves and skin protection, ventilating the enclosed wet room, managing the wet floor against slips. Tile the floor: work on knee protection with task rotation. Tile the walls: work from a stable hop-up for higher areas. Grout and seal: apply grout and sealant with skin protection and ventilation, extra care with any epoxy grout. Clear up: remove waste and offcuts, manage slurry and water, leave the area safe.
Why this reads as competent
The assessor sees the silica risk controlled by wet cutting, large slabs handled mechanically, the wet saw given electrical protection, and the kneeling, adhesive and slip risks managed. That is the difference between a RAMS for this job and a template with the name changed.
A pre-work checklist for tiling RAMS
Before you submit a tiling RAMS, or before the team starts on site, run through a short check. A RAMS that can answer yes to these is one that will pass and, more importantly, keep people safe.
- Cutting controlled - is wet cutting on a wet saw specified to suppress silica dust, with on-tool extraction and RPE for grinding?
- Wet saw electrics - is RCD protection set out for the wet saw given it combines water and electricity?
- Adhesive and grout - are gloves, skin protection, ventilation and the epoxy-grout sensitiser risk covered?
- Large-format handling - are team lifts and suction lifters specified for large slabs rather than single-person handling?
- Kneeling - are knee protection and task rotation addressed for floor tiling?
- Working at height - is a stable hop-up or platform specified for high wall tiling?
- Slips - is the wet floor from the saw, adhesive and grout managed?
- Vibration and noise - are trigger-time limits and hearing protection set out for grinders?
Common reasons a tiling RAMS gets rejected
Knowing why documents get sent back is the fastest way to write one that does not. These are the failings an assessor sees most often on tiling RAMS.
Silica is waved through. The most common serious failing - "a dust mask will be worn" with no wet cutting, no extraction and no face-fit testing, despite porcelain and stone generating significant silica dust.
Large-format handling is ignored. Assuming big slabs are handled by one person, with no team lifts or suction lifters, overlooks a real injury risk.
The wet saw electrics are missed. Using a wet saw with no mention of RCD protection ignores the water-and-electricity combination.
It is obviously generic. A template that does not name the actual work - wall, floor, porcelain, natural stone, large-format, wet room - or the building is a frequent rejection.
Kneeling and slips are missed. Saying nothing about knee protection or managing the wet floor overlooks injuries tilers commonly suffer.
How to write a tiling RAMS that passes
A RAMS that gets approved first time shares a few features whatever the trade.
Make it specific to the job
The fastest way to get a RAMS rejected is to submit something obviously generic. Name the site, the tiling type and tile material, whether large-format slabs are involved, the cutting method, and the access. An assessor can tell within seconds whether the document describes this job or is a template with the name changed.
Follow the sequence of work
The method statement should walk through the job in order: setting up the cutting station, cutting, handling and applying adhesive, tiling floor and walls, grouting and sealing, and clearing up. Each stage links to the hazards it creates and the controls that manage them.
Rate the risks honestly
The risk assessment side rates each hazard by likelihood and severity, then again after your controls are in place. This residual-risk approach follows HSE's risk assessment guidance and is what a competent assessor expects, with silica and manual handling rated seriously.
Keep it readable
The people who need to follow a RAMS are the tilers on site, not just the assessor. Plain language, a clear sequence and a short list of real controls beat pages of boilerplate nobody reads.
Doing it the fast way
Writing a full tiling RAMS by hand for every job is exactly the paperwork that eats evenings. That is the problem Complys was built to solve: answer a few questions about the job and the trade, and it generates a complete, tiling-specific risk assessment and method statement you can edit, download and share. The hazards above - silica dust, adhesives, large-format handling, the wet saw, kneeling - come built into the templates, so you start from a document that already knows the trade rather than a blank page.
If you want the wider picture first, our guide to what a RAMS is and how to write one covers the fundamentals, and the difference between a RAMS and a risk assessment clears up the most common confusion. You can also see every trade we cover on the RAMS builder hub.
However you produce it, the goal is the same: a RAMS that keeps your team safe, gets you onto site without delay, and stands up when a contractor checks it.
Our AI RAMS builder generates complete, trade-specific risk assessments and method statements from a few answers. Edit, download and share - all in one place.