Tiling SWMS
Floor tiling, wall tiling, wet area tiling, and large-format tiles
Tiling Complete Pack
8 documents — everything you need for tiling compliance.
Tiling work involves significant silica dust exposure from cutting tiles, chemical exposure from adhesives and grouts, and ergonomic hazards from prolonged kneeling and manual handling of heavy tiles.
Our tiling SWMS pack covers 8 activities including floor tiling, wall tiling, wet area waterproofing and tiling, large-format tile installation, tile cutting operations, and grouting. Documents address hazards such as crystalline silica dust from tile cutting, manual handling of heavy large-format tiles, chemical exposure from epoxy grouts, and slip hazards on wet surfaces.
Key Hazards Covered
- Crystalline silica dust from tile cutting
- Manual handling of heavy large-format tiles
- Chemical exposure from epoxy grouts and adhesives
- Prolonged kneeling and ergonomic strain
- Slip hazards on wet tiling surfaces
- Electrical hazards from wet cutting equipment
Relevant Australian Standards
- AS/NZS 3740 Waterproofing of domestic wet areas
- AS/NZS 1715 Respiratory protective devices
- AS/NZS 2161 Occupational protective gloves
- AS/NZS 4586 Slip resistance classification
Individual Documents — $67.96 each
Tiling SWMS — Common Questions
Do tilers need SWMS?
SWMS are required when tiling work involves high-risk activities, particularly tile cutting that generates crystalline silica dust (a serious respiratory hazard) or working at heights. Most commercial tiling projects require SWMS.
Is silica dust from tile cutting addressed?
Yes. Every tile cutting SWMS includes crystalline silica dust controls: wet cutting methods, local exhaust ventilation, P2 respiratory protection, atmospheric monitoring triggers, and housekeeping to prevent secondary dust exposure.
Do these cover wet area tiling?
Yes. Our tiling pack includes a dedicated wet area SWMS covering waterproofing membrane application, surface preparation, wet area tiling techniques, and compliance with AS/NZS 3740 for domestic wet areas.
Last updated: March 2026