I'm tackling my first major DIY home improvement project by installing a tile backsplash in my kitchen. I've watched a ton of tutorials and feel confident about the tiling process itself, but I'm getting stuck on the prep work. Specifically, I'm unsure if I need to apply a primer or sealer to my painted drywall before applying the thinset, and what type of grout is best for a kitchen environment where it will face steam and splashes. Any advice on these preparatory steps or common mistakes first-timers make would be incredibly helpful before I commit.
Short version: if your drywall is painted, you’ll get a better tile bond by applying a bonding primer first (think BIN or Zinsser 1-2-3 with bonding). Lightly scuff the surface after priming, wipe clean, then apply thinset. Do not seal the drywall before tiling.
If you can swing it, consider a backer board instead of tiling straight to drywall. A cement backer (HardieBacker, Durock, or a Kerdi/Ditra system) gives you moisture resistance and a solid substrate. If you stay with drywall, make sure the surface is clean, very dry, and lightly abraded after priming for the thinset to grab.
Grout choice for a kitchen splash: epoxy grout is the least maintenance (stain and water resistant) but trickier to work with; polymer-modified cement grout with a good latex additive is a solid, easier option if you don’t want epoxy. Whatever you choose, seal cement grout after it cures and re-seal as recommended by the product, especially in steamy areas.
Common rookie mistakes: skipping wall prep or tilting on glossy paint, using mastic or non-modified thinset on painted drywall, not letting adhesive cure fully before grouting, and not sealing edges or corners properly. Also avoid big temperature swings during install and double-check that you’ve allowed for small expansion gaps around edges.
Edge care matters: caulk the transitions where tile meets the wall, around the sink, and at the countertop edge rather than trying to grout those joints. It keeps water out and prevents hairline cracks.
If you want, tell me your wall type (painted drywall or already tiled? gloss level?), tile size, and whether you’re comfortable adding a cement backer board. I can tailor a step-by-step prep plan and the exact product suggestions to your situation.