Proper Expectations and Applications

Not seal -Sealer - Seal-E-R!

Not seal -Sealer – Seal-E-R!

In Tile and Stone Sealers Part 1 I explained how sealers work. If you haven’t yet read that please do so. It will give you a base understanding of how they get into your tile and what they protect against. It will help you understand what you’re looking for and also help decode some of the terms you may find here.

When choosing a sealer the first decision you should make is what you are trying to protect against. Silicone-based sealers protect against water-based stains – coffee, tea, beer Pepsi, stuff like that. Fluoropolymer-based sealers protect against oil-based stains – cooking oil, body oil, shampoo, stuff like that.

Easy enough so far?

One thing to keep in mind is Fluoropolymer sealers will protect against water-based stains to an extent but silicone sealers will not protect against oil-based staining. So you get both types of protection with fluoropolymers, but only water-based protection with silicones. 95% of my residential installations receive fluoropolyer-based sealer.

Although these different sealers will protect against different types of stains there is one thing that they will not protect against – etching. Etching is caused by an acid eating away at the molecular surface of your calcium-based stone. It is caused by things like lemons. Throwing lemon slices onto your marble countertop will etch away the surface of the marble – sealed or not. So there is nothing you can use to prevent etching from acids short of simply taking care not to get any types of acid on your tile.

Okay, time for a little reality check – send away the squeamish! One of the main sources of acid which will ruin any type of calcium-based natural stone is from your pet. You know, the dog that bursts into flames when you don’t properly waterproof your shower? (If you don’t know – you should read my blog more often – just sayin’…) Urine contains Uric acid. Uric acid will etch stone (and grout) and slowly eat away the surface of the stone. This is only on the molecular level, but continued etching will eventually become a macro problem. If you have pets and continue to have a mysterious problem with the surface of your stone in certain areas – that may be the cause. Sealer will not stop this.

Strangely enough this problem may show up around your toilet or on your shower floor. This normally happens when you have males in the house between the ages of five and ninety-five. We don’t aim well – unfortunately sealer will not solve this problem either.

In part one I also discussed the different types of carriers in sealers. The carrier is the vehicle which drives the sealer into the pores of the tile then dissipates. Once the carrier dissipates the sealer is left behind. This is how the sealer cures. The two base types are water and solvent. Solvent carrier-based sealers are better for tile and stone with smaller pores.

To determine which type would be best for your stone you can splash some water onto the surface of your (unsealed) tile. If the water is absorbed quickly then a water-based sealer should work fine for your installation. Stones like travertine, limestone, unpolished marble, unglazed ceramic and all cementitious grouts are suitable for water-based sealers.

Solvent-based sealers are best for tile and stone with smaller pores such as granite, polished marble and other polished stones, glazed ceramic and porcelains. Solvent-based sealers work on porous materials as well as materials with smaller pores!

You may have noticed the word porcelain up there. Yes, porcelains. While porcelain tile is less porous than ceramic (it will absorb less than 0.5% by weight) it still has pores in it. The pores in porcelain, however, are not simply test-tube shaped pits in the surface, they are shaped like little pyramids. They are very tiny at the top and get larger down into the body of the tile, beneath the glaze. It will only absorb that percentage of water, but oil-based substances have smaller molecular structures and will get into the porcelain more easily. So porcelain will still benefit from sealer, although it’s not normally necessary in a residential setting.

Nearly every tile product will benefit to some degree with a good sealer, provided the proper one is used. For the greater part of my time as a tile contractor I have used Miracle Sealant’s products. There are, however, a great many very good sealers available. DuPont and StoneTech are two brands that I’ve used, and still use periodically.

Sealer is another product where you will get what you pay for. So if you choose to seal your tile or stone you need to spend the extra money for a good one! Cheaper sealers, for instance, may not be UV stable (UV transparent), which means they may get a yellow tint to them over time.  Seriously, spend the money for the good stuff.

The Good Stuff

As I stated I like Miracle Sealant’s sealers. Here are the ones I use based on what I’m sealing.

My go to sealer is Miracle Sealant’s 511 Impregnator. It is a fluoropolymer-based (polymerized silicone) impregnating sealer (solvent carrier) which works well for most any application.

If you have an extremely porous stone, like tumbled travertine, I prefer the 511 Porous Plus.

If you need or prefer a water-based sealer you want the 511 H2O Plus.

If you want to enhance your stone installation so it has a deeper, richer color (like when it’s wet – but not as ‘shiny’) you want the Seal & Enhance.

They also have basic grout sealer and a few other types of specialty sealers. Most really good sealer companies carry a sealer with comparable abilities, just call the company’s tech support line and tell them what you’re looking for. They’ll know what you’re talking about – and now you do too!

When sealing your tile installation put some thought into it, figure out what you really need and what benefits you are looking for and decide on one with realistic expectations. They are not a magic product, there is a LOT of research behind tile and stone sealers and they have specific benefits based on specific needs. As long as you know what to expect and choose the proper product for your application a good sealer will make your maintenance chores much easier.

They DO NOT, nor are they designed to, waterproof your installation! They do not waterproof your tile and stone. They are not an acceptable fix or magic cure for improper or non-existent waterproof substrates for your shower or other wet areas. They will, however, prevent cherry Kool-Aid from ruining your marble countertop – as long as you clean it up quickly enough. They will help keep nasty stuff from staining your beautiful tile and stone.

And who doesn’t want that?

{ 321 comments… add one }

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  • trisha

    Hi Roger, we just installed travertine installed just installed travertine on our bathroom floor and sealed it twice as per sealant instructions. We used Superior’s Premium Gold Travertine & Sandstone Water based Premium Gold formula. We have a small dog that urinated on the floor overnight and left a small puddle. I blotted it up but can still see the outline. Any suggestions? Should I use a different sealer? Now that I used waterbased — can I use a solvent sealer –and would that be protection against urine stains — since it is in the bathroom ! Please help :)

    • Roger

      Hi Tricia,

      No sealer is going to protect against urine. Uric acid is an acid – travertine is a calcium-based stone. The acid will etch the stone by eating away the calcium. No sealer is going to prevent that.

  • cody

    Yesterday I sealed a flagstone floor with behr wet look and it didn’t leave the stone wet looking like an enhancer as u mentioned, what would be the best way to remove it and how long after removing can I use an enhancer and sealer.
    Thanks

    • Roger

      Hi Cody,

      Was the behr product specifically indicated for use on flagstone? I have no idea how to remove it, the tech department at behr can likely tell you that. The amount of time between that and sealing depends on how it’s removed and what products are used.

  • Gloria

    Hi roger
    Whats a good grout cleaner if it gets dirty? Its my kitchen floor with travertine tiles and sand colored grout. Thanks

    • Roger

      Hi Gloria,

      Any stone-specific cleaner will work fine. You need a stone cleaner because normal cleaners may etch the stone. Oxy-clean also works very well, you just have to REALLY rinse it off.

  • Edward

    Will 511 Impregnator protect the black slate tile mounted on the exterior walls of my house and not change the color (make it brighter). I noticed a few spots have started to show rust. Thanks

    • Roger

      Hi Edward,

      511 impregnator, once cured, should not change the appearance of your slate.

  • Gloria

    Hi i just had a travertine floor installed by lowes . Its beautiful. He told me in a week to just seal the grout not the entire floor. I have miracle products already. Which is the best sealer for grout? Its my kitchen and dining room floor. Thanks

    • Roger

      Hi Gloria,

      The miracle sealant works fine on grout as well.

  • Julie

    Hi. I just installed a light gray travertine backsplash in two bathrooms. We tested the 511 Impreganator and it darkened it quitr a bit which I definitely don’t want. Is there a sealer that won’t change the color and do I really need to seal it? The sinks are just used for hand washing. Thanks!

    • Roger

      Hi Julie,

      It was still darker after the sealer cured? Because I’ve never see 511 change the color of a natural stone, so that’s strange to me. Maybe an aquamix product would give you better results.

  • Carolina

    Thank you, thank you, thank you Roger, for an amazing site!
    Do you have a product you recommend for a Clear Travertine filler?
    I have tumbled veincut ivory and red unfilled travertine tiles and they have cool details in the holes that I want to protect from chips and debris build up.
    I guess extra sealant in those holes wouldn’t work? What can I do if I don’t want to use travertine colored filler?
    Thanks for any suggestions!
    You rock :rockon:

    • Roger

      Hi Carolina,

      Laticrete plasma grout is available in clear. It’s fairly new so it may be a bit difficult to find, but it is available.

  • Nancy

    I just had a mosaic tile installed in my new white shaker kitchen. The stone is light beige and I think it’s pretty but my husband is upset because there is absolutely no “pop”. If he says that word one more time….. anyway, I put on your sealer and now I am going to put on your sealer with vibrance. I kinda wish the stone would stay the wet look. I know it helps but just by the one I experimented on, it does dry and still my stone looks soft and possibly boring…lol. As my husband said… backSPLASH… There is no splash to this tile. First time remodel and I thought it would look great. A lot of money and I’m sad :( Would love to hear back.

    • Roger

      Hi Nancy,

      Some stones will simply look uniform. That may mean no ‘pop’, but if you’ve used the enrich-n-seal on it then that’s about as ‘pop’ as you’re gonna get.

  • Rosie

    Hi Roger; We have installed glazed ceramic white subway tile on shower walls, 2×2 honed travertine on/in shower floor and tumbled? It is shiny, travertine floor tile on the bathroom floor. We used ‘Superior Premium Gold’ water based sealer before the grouting on the Travertine -both types. Problem is the tiler used the beige sanded grout with water on the shower walls on the glazed ceramic & on the travertine shower floor. We have the ‘Superior’ unsanded white product with flexible grout admixture still sitting there. We think we must REGROUT all of that area. Q#1a: Do we only regrout the glazed ceramic tile with the grout product I just mentioned and proceed to reseal twice the shower floor with the same water based sealer used prior to grouting? Q1b: Does the glazed ceramic subway tile require a sealer? Q#2: Do you suggest different than unsanded grout with flexible admixture for the polished Travertine Bathroom Floor Tile that has not yet been grouted?

    • Roger

      Hi Rosie,

      No, glazed ceramic tile does not require a sealer.
      The ONLY thing that the admix does for grout is prevent it from soaking in stains, making it easier to clean. Sealer over regular sanded or unsanded grout does the same thing. It’s essentially eliminating a step, sealing the grout with the admix in the grout, rather than with sealer over it. Whey do you want to change the grout?

  • Tammi

    Hi Roger. We built our house 2 years ago and used a lighter travertine. We sealed it at that time but it is wearing away. W want to seal it again but I was wondering if there is a sealer that make it shiny and a little darker? ;)

    • Roger

      Hi Tammi,

      Miracle sealant’s seal-n-enhance (or seal-n-enrich) should get the look you want.

  • Jenny

    Hi Roger,
    This post has been very informative. Thank you!! We have just built a shower with honed marble 3×6tiles and marble mosiac shower floor. The tile is up but has not been grouted. Any suggestions on what to seal the tile with? Do we seal, grout, then seal again? Also, any suggestions on how what to clean it with? (I know nothing acidic). Thank you in advance for any feedback.

    • Roger

      Hi Jenny,

      I use miracle sealant’s 511 impregnator. Yes, seal, grout, then seal. There are MANY marble specific cleaners available, any of them would work well.

  • A.Carroll

    Great info, thanks for sharing! What is the best sealer to use on a new pebble stone shower floor that is already grouted? My tile installer suggested a semi-gloss sealer but the one I purchased, Du Pont Semi-Gloss Sealer and Finish, says not for use in a shower…
    Your advice would be greatly appreciated!

    • Roger

      Hi A,

      If you want an enhancing sealer Miracle Sealant’s enhance-n-seal is a very good one. You can use it on your shower floor.

  • Tracy

    Hi Roger! We don’t use our nice pebble- floor shower because the water soaks into the grout, even though the installer says he properly sealed. My sister’s shower doesn’t do this. Can’t stand the wet look that lingers for days because we live in high humidity. Help!

    • Roger

      Hi Tracy,

      If you read the article under which you posted this question, as well as part 1, you will see that I plainly stated, several times, that sealer DOES NOT waterproof anything. The only solution for a pebble floor, if you don’t like the look of wet grout, is to grout it with an epoxy grout, which does not soak in water. There is nothing you can do with regular cementitious grout that will prevent this.

  • Lora

    Hello Roger,

    I just did a commercial install in an apartment entry lobby with a 24×24 unglazed rectified colored body-porcelain floor tile. It has a texture to it and it seems to hold the dirt! We chose the tile thinking the texture would make it less slippery and Matte finish is more modern. But, We have used heavy elbow grease scrubbing and I cant assume the cleaning company will want this much effort each time! I cant tell if is from some of the grout powder left behind (it is the first real cleaning since grouting a couple weeks ago), or if dirt just really is going to be tough to clean out of this texture (linear groove lines to look like linen). The grout has not been sealed yet-we were waiting to clean I guess. This is a porcelain tile and I have always heard it will not take sealers, but recently have read that it may help. Should I seal tile and grout or just grout? Is that the same as “impregnating”? What cleaner do you recommend? Thanks!

    • Roger

      Hi Lora,

      Unglazed tile is a HORRIBLE choice for a commercial installation. But you already knew that. :D It will always grab the dirt like that. It’s unglazed and textured. You can seal the tile, it’ll work just fine on unglazed porcelain. Seal the hell out of it. :D

  • Joanne

    Hi Roger, I have outdoor steps that are flagstone imbedded in coated steel framing. It rusts on the inner edges where the mortar meets the steel (and rust continues on if not ground away). I wonder if I can coat the treads of the steps with anything to stop what I think is rain soaking the mortar and keeping the steel case wet even after the rain dries away.

    • Roger

      Hi Joanne,

      A good penetrating sealer like 511 impregnator will slow down the water absorption, perhaps enough to prevent, or at least drastically slow, the rusting.

  • Craig

    Hi Roger,
    I took your advice and got the 511 Porous Plus Sealer, it says in the instructions not to get any into the grout lines. I am putting 2-3 inch pebble on my shower floor and I was wondering how to avoid getting it in the grout lines without having to rub it on each individual stone. Or will it not matter. Thanks

    • Roger

      Hi Craig,

      It won’t matter.

  • Anita

    i used impregnator on my travertine will it hurt to apply enhance and seal I would like the color to be a bit more bold

    • Roger

      Hi Anita,

      Yes you can.

  • Kim

    Hi Roger,

    I am attempting to restore a 600 sq ft area of old (25yrs) saltillo tile in my kithchen/lvingroom. It has some damaged areas, pitted, and a topcoat sealer that is literally peeling off. I am removing the top coat sealer via hand scraper, as after numerous trials with various chemicals have proven this to be the only way to get the stuff off. (Yeah…this is a grueling process). Anyway, once I get this down to the regular surface, I want to remove all the wax and strip it down to the base tile. I am planning to do this with a orbiter and cleaner. After that point what should I do? I will have some off-colored, and some porous areas. I will also need to seal prior to doing finish coasts of wax. Is 511 the “stuff” for this? Any pointers you have would be greatly GREATLY appreciated!!!!

    • Roger

      Hi Kim,

      I don’t know much about saltillo. I believe once stripped there is a filler you can get for it to even it out, then 511 impregnator would work, but the porous plus would likely be better. The Miracle Sealant’s tech help line would be able to help you out more than I can.

  • Juliette Leonhardt

    Hi Roger. We bought white kitchen floor tiles from Topps Tiles. Their homepage said they were porcelain tiles and the shop confirmed that they were good for a kitchen floor. Our tiler grouted with BAL Micromax 2. Microban Ebony, as suggested by Topps. The tiles were damaged by the black grout and turned grey. The kitchen floor was ruined. We were also sold FILA. Polished Porcelain Protector but not told when to use it, but suddenly Topps said it should have been used before the tiling, and that the damage was the tiler’s fault alone (he has 33 years’ experience.) for not sealing the tile. We contacted Winckelmans in France who produce the tiles and they told us our tiles were ceramic! and should have been treated a totally different way. They should be impregnated (they did not say with what) before grouting and a “milder” grout – Ardex – should be used.) We went on Topps’ chat where we were told that a ceramic tile does not require any sealing. We feel it is unfair to solely blame the tiler when Topps Tiles have misled us regarding the tile and not sold us a sealer but an after polish.
    Which impregnator do you suggest we use? Our utility room has not been grouted but has been coated 4 times with FILA. Polished Porcelain Protector. Do you think it is to late to impregnate them before grouting?

    • Roger

      Hi Juliette,

      I’m not familiar with FILA, so I don’t know what it does. I would try 511 impregnator on the tile before grouting. And you’re correct, this lies with Topps, not the installer.

  • KK

    Hi, I need a little help.. I have pebble tile on my shower walls and floor. I grouted before I sealed and I cannot get the haze off. Any ideas? When I splash water on the pebbles they look great and then it dries and goes hazy again. Please help if you can!

    • Roger

      Hi KK,

      Go the the tile section and get some grout haze remover. It’s normally the best way to eliminate it.

  • P.Loyd

    Hi Roger. I do have males in my household between 5-95-ha! I just found to suspicious round spots on my new ceramic tile in the bathroom. The tile is varying shades of gray-kind of a marble effect. The spots are white. Almost like it has been bleached. Any suggestions of what I can do. I’m not sure if the tile was sealed or not. If not, would that be beneficial in the bathroom?

    • Roger

      Hi P,

      Yes, it would be beneficial. The spots may be uric acid, in which case the sealer will not stop that. But you can clean it off with a light muriatric acid rinse. You can find muriatric crystals in the tile or chemical section.

  • Maurizio

    I need a WATERPROOFING sealer for exterior vertical application over travertine facade. Any ideas?

    • Roger

      Hi Maurizio,

      OVER travertine? No such product exists. Sorry.

  • jim k.

    can any of :whistle: the sealers be added to the grout on new jobs. we seem to always be out of additive.

    • Roger

      Hi Jim,

      No. Buy more additive.

  • Bradley L

    Thanks for your site and sharing of information. I find it very helpful. I recently purchased a year old house self contracted home with filled and honed 12×12 travertine walk in shower and tub surround. The shower was never sealed except for the aerosol grout sealer. It has been used for the last year with some soap and hard water build up near the bottom Should I still seal it and if so which sealer? Also some of the corner grout lines are cracked vertically, how should I address that? Thank you again for what you share.

    • Roger

      Hi Bradley,

      Yes, but you need to clean it well first. I would use miracle sealant’s 511 impregnator. Your corners (and all changes of plane) need to be caulked or siliconed. Different planes (walls) will expand and contract in different directions, silicone can compensate for that, grout just cracks (as you well know :D ).

  • Alastair Riach

    Your site is clearly very helpful to many people — thank you! I have just had Avenzo Silver Natural Stone Mosaic tiles installed in a new shower. Since it’s pitted and porous, that may be the wrong tile for a shower, but I like the shapes and, above all, the colors. At another site in the house, I found Laticrete grout subdued the colors in the stone and, much worse, it changed them. In the hope of preserving the colors, I’m now thinking of first sealing the tiles with a sealer that doesn’t darken (if I can find one) and then having the Laticrete applied with a grout bag and tip to keep it off the tile faces as far as possible, relying on the sealer to keep mold out of the pits and holes. I’d be very grateful for your advice. Again, thanks!

    • Roger

      Hi Alastair,

      Most sealers will not darken. It will assist in making the grout easier to clean out of those pits, but it will not ‘keep it out’. Just taking time and paying close attention while grouting is the best bet.

      • Alastair Riach

        Alastair Riach again: In my earlier request for advice, I forgot to mention that the Avenzo Silver Natural Stone tiles are on the (3) walls of the shower, not on the floor. And when I mentioned relying on the sealer to keep mold out of the pits and holes, I meant that the sealer would (I ignorantly hope) make the pits and holes less receptive/hospitable, less crusty and more slippery, causing the mold spores to slide out of the crevices, fall to the shower floor and break their necks or drown in the Lysol. Thank you for reading all this!

        • Roger

          That’s correct.