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Heated Floor Installation — Ottawa & Orléans

DITRA-HEAT electric radiant heating under tile, LVP, and hardwood — Mapei Certified installation.

Why Heated Floors in Ottawa?

Ottawa winters are long and cold. A heated floor turns your bathroom, kitchen, or mudroom floor from a cold shock to genuine comfort — warm underfoot from November through April. For tile floors in particular, which feel cold because of their high thermal conductivity, radiant heating eliminates the biggest complaint about tile in a Canadian home.

Electric radiant floor heating is also efficient in the way it delivers heat. Rather than warming the air and waiting for convection to circulate warmth, a heated floor radiates heat upward from the ground where people actually are — meaning you feel comfortable at a lower air temperature, which can reduce overall heating load when the system is used strategically.

The DITRA-HEAT System

Schluter DITRA-HEAT is a polyethylene membrane with a grid of square cavities designed to hold the heating cable, bonded to a fleece underside for adhesion. It serves a dual purpose: it functions as an uncoupling layer for tile (decoupling the tile from the subfloor to prevent cracking from differential movement) while simultaneously housing the electric heating cable in its cable channels.

This dual function is what makes DITRA-HEAT the preferred system for tile installations. Without it, you would need a separate uncoupling membrane under tile regardless — DITRA-HEAT simply adds the heating function at minimal additional height. The total assembly adds approximately 9–11 mm to the floor height including tile, which must be accounted for at transitions and door thresholds.

The system uses a self-regulating thermostat with an in-floor sensor that monitors actual floor temperature, ensuring the surface stays within the safe operating range for the flooring material above it.

Mapei Certification for Radiant Heat

Mapei's professional certification program for radiant heat installation covers the selection of heat-rated mortars and adhesives appropriate for use in systems where the setting bed will be thermally cycled. Not all tile mortars are rated for radiant heat applications — standard mortars can degrade under repeated heating and cooling cycles, leading to bond failure over time.

As a Mapei Certified installer, we use the correct Mapei adhesive system specified for radiant heat: typically an uncoupling mortar for the DITRA-HEAT membrane, and a heat-rated large-format tile mortar for the tile layer. This is not a shortcut that can be taken — the wrong adhesive in a heated floor system voids both the mortar warranty and the membrane warranty.

Installation Process

A proper DITRA-HEAT installation follows a defined sequence:

  • Layout planning: cable coverage area is planned to avoid permanent fixture footprints (under cabinets, toilet, vanity base) where heat would be wasted and potentially harmful. A layout drawing is produced before any cable is ordered.
  • Membrane installation: DITRA-HEAT membrane is bonded to the prepared subfloor with unmodified thin-set using the correct notch trowel. Seams are overlapped and taped.
  • Cable installation: heating cable is laid into the membrane's cable channels at the planned spacing, secured without staples or cuts. Cable is never crossed or bundled.
  • Resistance test: ohm resistance of the cable is measured and recorded before tile installation begins — this confirms the cable is undamaged. A second test is conducted after tile is set and cured.
  • Thermostat rough-in: the thermostat conduit and in-floor sensor are positioned before tile is set, so the sensor wire routes cleanly to the thermostat location.
  • Tile installation: tile is set over the membrane using heat-rated mortar. The system is not activated until the mortar and grout have fully cured — minimum 28 days for most Portland cement products.
  • Final commissioning: thermostat is installed, programmed, and tested. Operating instructions are reviewed with the homeowner.

Flooring Compatibility

Tile: the ideal application. Tile's thermal mass holds heat well and radiates it evenly. All tile types are compatible — porcelain, ceramic, natural stone. DITRA-HEAT was designed for tile.

Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP): most LVP products have a maximum floor surface temperature specification of 27°C (80°F). DITRA-HEAT with a thermostat that limits surface temperature is compatible with many LVP products, but the manufacturer's radiant heat specifications must be checked and honoured. Some lower-cost LVP is not rated for any radiant heat — we confirm this before proceeding.

Hardwood: engineered hardwood is preferred over radiant heat. Solid hardwood is generally not suitable over electric radiant systems due to the temperature and moisture sensitivity of solid wood. Surface temperature must remain below 27°C. We confirm compatibility with the specific flooring product selected.

Best Time to Install Heated Floors

The lowest-cost time to add heated floors is during a bathroom renovation or full flooring replacement — when the subfloor is already exposed and tile or flooring is being installed anyway. Adding a DITRA-HEAT system at that point costs only the material and the marginal time to lay the cable and plan the layout.

Retrofitting heated floors into an existing finished room requires removing the flooring entirely, which is expensive. If you're planning a bathroom renovation or tile installation in Ottawa and are even slightly interested in heated floors, it makes sense to add them now rather than later.

Add heated floors to your next renovation

Mapei Certified. DITRA-HEAT specialists. Free quotes for Ottawa and Orléans homeowners.

Request a Free Quote Call (613) 981-8903

Heated Floor FAQ

What is DITRA-HEAT?
DITRA-HEAT is Schluter's electric radiant floor heating system. It combines an uncoupling membrane (which protects tile from cracking due to subfloor movement) with integrated cable channels for electric heating cable. A single layer does the job of both an uncoupling membrane and a heated floor system — adding minimal height while providing both tile protection and underfloor heating.
Is radiant floor heating expensive to run?
Running costs depend on the square footage heated, how often the system runs, and local electricity rates. A typical Ottawa bathroom heated floor (say 8–10 sq ft of cable coverage) costs a few dollars per month when used strategically on a programmed thermostat. It is not intended as primary room heating — it's comfort heating for the floor surface and the zone immediately above it.
Can heated floors go under LVP?
Many LVP products are compatible with low-temperature radiant heat, but the maximum surface temperature (typically 27°C) must be respected and the specific product's manufacturer warranty checked. We verify compatibility before installation. Some budget LVP products explicitly exclude radiant heat — using them over a heated floor voids the flooring warranty.
When is the best time to add heated floors?
During a bathroom renovation or flooring replacement — when the subfloor is exposed and new flooring is being installed regardless. Adding DITRA-HEAT at that point is a minor addition to an existing project. Retrofitting heated floors after a floor is finished requires full demolition of the existing flooring, which makes it significantly more expensive.
Are you Mapei Certified for heated floor installation?
Yes. Mapei certification for radiant heat installation covers proper adhesive selection and technique for systems where the setting bed is thermally cycled. We use heat-rated Mapei mortars specified for radiant heat applications — not standard thin-set. This protects both the tile bond and the warranty on the system.

Heated Floor Installation Across Ottawa & Area

Ottawa Orléans Kanata Barrhaven Nepean Gloucester Rockland Cumberland Avalon Fallingbrook Chapel Hill Beacon Hill Blackburn Hamlet Vanier Convent Glen