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Expansion joint profiles

7 Products

Aluminum cover profile Aluminum cover profile – View 2
Available

Aluminum cover profile

B 60-120mm / L 250cm

32,34 €

incl. 19% VAT plus shipping

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DURAL aluminium joint profile DURAL aluminium joint profile – View 2
Available

DURAL aluminium joint profile

L 250cm / H 3-30mm

25,36 €

incl. 19% VAT plus shipping

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DURAL stainless steel joint profile DURAL stainless steel joint profile – View 2
Available

DURAL stainless steel joint profile

L 250cm / H 3-30mm

49,31 €

incl. 19% VAT plus shipping

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Stainless steel joint profile Stainless steel joint profile – View 2
Available

Stainless steel joint profile

L 250cm / H 3-12,5mm

43,14 €

incl. 19% VAT plus shipping

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Expansion joint profiles – protection for tiled surfaces:

Expansion joint profiles are essential to protect your tile coverings from cracks. They are used when two components with different properties are connected. The need for expansion joints is caused in particular by the natural movements of floor coverings. These can be caused by changes in humidity or temperature in the room. Without joint profiles this could quickly cause cracks in the tile covering.

Advantages of expansion joint profiles for tiles:

  1. Protection against cracks in the tile covering
  2. optically more beautiful solution than silicone
  3. Movements and tensions are absorbed by the profiles.

Expansion joint profiles are installed in the joint between two adjacent surfaces to absorb tension and movement. Our profiles are the safest solution for protecting your tiles from stress damage.

Movement joint profiles and the different materials:

Joint profiles are available in a wide variety of materials and shapes. You can choose between aluminum, stainless steel and PVC. The different materials have a number of advantages depending on your needs:

Aluminum expansion joint profiles for tiles:

These are particularly suitable for areas with medium loads. Aluminium is the cheaper option compared to stainless steel. We also offer an aluminium cover profile which can be subsequently installed over existing silicone joints. There is no easier installation possible. The joint is covered in an elegant and visually appealing way.

Stainless steel expansion joint profiles:

These are very resilient and have a high corrosion resistance. The material makes them the most robust option. You can find the stainless steel profiles with heights of up to 30 mm. This makes them possible to use in combination with floor coverings that have a very high material thickness. The stainless steel cover profile which, like its aluminum counterpart, is particularly easy to install.

PVC movement joint profiles:

The expansion joint profiles made of PVC with punched legs for tiles are naturally the cheapest alternative. However, due to the material, they are not suitable for high loads, which is why we do not offer them in the shop. Instead, you can find PVC joint profiles. These have a height of 30 mm to 50 mm.

The heights of our expansion joint profiles:

The height should be 1-2 mm higher than the thickness of the tile or panel to ensure a flush finish.The tile adhesive always adds a little extra. Only a flush result protects the edges of the covering and ensures that there are no tripping hazards.

Our profiles specifically for use with tiles are available in heights from 3 - 30 mm. We also have PVC joint profiles in heights of 30 mm, 40 mm and 50 mm.

When do you need a movement profile?

Expansion joint profiles are necessary when tiles are laid on different substrates or existing expansion joints need to be adjusted. Our joint profiles with punched legs prevent deformations caused by moisture or shrinkage on wood and chipboard surfaces. On balconies or terraces, fluctuating temperatures and weather influences can lead to cracks in the tiles. With our expansion joint profiles you are protected from these damages.

In general, expansion joint profiles indispensable in large-scale applications such as in shopping centers, halls or airports to absorb movements between tiles and ensure the stability of the covering.

For processing directly in screed or concrete, our PVC joint profiles are the best solution.

FAQs

Questions and answers

The most professional solution is a cover profile made of aluminium or stainless steel, which is retrofitted onto the joint by gluing or screwing it down without intervention in the flooring. The joint underneath remains fully functional and can continue to move — the profile itself is not anchored in the adhesive bed.
At tirocco there are three variants: the aluminium cover profile (W 60 – 120 mm) for indoor use with an elegant look, the stainless steel expansion joint cover profile with a black rubber casing (W 200 – 250 mm) for industrial and warehouse surfaces also driven on by forklifts, and the T-shaped brass divider profile as a design solution for terrazzo floors.
An expansion joint must never be filled in with grout or concreted over — the movement must be able to be absorbed, otherwise the covering next to it will crack. Silicone alone is only sufficient for narrow structural joints up to about 10 mm wide.

Expansion joints compensate for movements caused by temperature changes, moisture, or mechanical loads in the floor. Without these joints, material tension builds up and causes the tile covering or the screed beneath it to crack.
An expansion joint is mandatory for surfaces larger than 40 m² (according to DIN 18560), for underfloor heating, at transitions to other building components, in door openings, and at room boundaries. On terraces and balconies, a joint must be planned more frequently due to the large temperature fluctuations; indoors, a perimeter joint at the walls is often sufficient for small rooms.
Rules of thumb from practice: every 6 – 8 m one expansion joint in the screed, every 25 – 40 m² one field boundary in the tile covering, and one in every door or at every room boundary. If the joint is ignored when tiling, the covering will crack after a few months or years.

In new installations, the profile is laid directly with the tiles in the thin-bed method. For retrofitting a cover over an existing joint, a surface-mounted cover profile is used instead. The two methods differ fundamentally.
New installation in six steps: First, plan the joint position (field sizes, room boundaries, door openings). Second, cut the profile to height of flooring + 1 – 2 mm. Third, apply the adhesive bed on both sides of the joint. Fourth, press the profile with the perforated legs into the adhesive. Fifth, lay tiles on both sides with a 2 – 3 mm gap. Sixth, close the profile joint with flexible silicone or flex grout.
Retrofit cover: Clean the old joint, place the cover profile on both sides of the joint with MS polymer adhesive or assembly adhesive, fix for 24 hours. The profile is not rigidly fastened across the joint, so that the movement is preserved.

The choice depends on the laying system: thin-bed, thick-bed, or floating floor covering. Each variant needs a different profile type.
For tiles in the thin-bed method (3 – 12 mm build-up), aluminium or stainless steel expansion joint profiles with perforated legs and EPDM insert are the right choice. The EPDM insert absorbs the actual movement, the metal legs secure the tile edge. For thick-bed installation directly in screed or concrete (30 – 50 mm build-up), there are PVC expansion joint profiles for thick-bed, which are inserted wedge-shaped into the fresh screed. For floating floors like laminate or vinyl, no profiles with adhesive leg are suitable — here surface-mounted transition profiles or cover profiles are correct, which are screwed or glued onto the perimeter joint.
Never fill laminate with grout: moisture expansion will blow out the filler immediately. Laminate needs about 10 mm expansion distance all around to the wall.

Silicone alone does not replace an expansion joint profile. It is only suitable for narrow movement joints between two tiles or as an elastic perimeter joint at the wall — and even there only as supplementary sealing.
For wide structural joints from about 10 mm, an expansion joint profile with EPDM or rubber insert is the only durable solution. The insert cushions mechanical movement, while pure silicone is torn out of the joint at the third or fourth movement. In addition, silicone ages due to UV radiation, cleaning agents, and water; it must be renewed every 2 – 5 years.
The best solution combines both approaches: an expansion joint profile absorbs the mechanical movement, a silicone perimeter joint on both sides provides watertight sealing. This is the standard procedure in wet areas and on balconies.

An expansion joint (also called a movement joint) absorbs movements from temperature, moisture, or load and separates building components so they can move independently of one another. A construction joint (also called a working joint) arises when two sections of concrete meet with a time delay during pouring — for example on day 1 and day 2 of a base slab.
The functional difference: The expansion joint is active, it moves. The construction joint is passive, it only marks a separation without a movement function. What both have in common is that they must be transferred 1:1 into the tile covering — never tile over them, otherwise the covering will crack.
The sealing differs accordingly: Expansion joints need a profile with elastic insert plus elastic grouting; construction joints are sealed with a joint tape or injection hose in the concrete and can be laid over with a simple divider profile.

Aluminium is the cost-effective standard solution for indoor areas with normal load. Stainless steel V2A is more robust, corrosion-free, and the right choice for wet areas, outdoor areas, or heavily loaded industrial surfaces (forklifts). PVC is only intended for thick-bed installation directly in screed or concrete.
An important note on tile-joint profiles: The EPDM or rubber insert absorbs the actual movement, not the metal itself. Aluminium and stainless steel profiles therefore differ primarily in corrosion resistance and stability of the visible edge, not in expansion performance.
Brass profiles in T-shape, like the divider profile for terrazzo, are a special case — they are primarily intended as a design and dividing line, not as a classic expansion joint. For industrial and forklift-driven surfaces, tirocco offers the stainless steel cover profile with 200 – 250 mm width and rubber casing.

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