Uneven deck tiles happen because the base isn’t flat, the tiles aren’t fully locked, the support points are inconsistent (pedestals/sleepers), or the surface is moving from settling, drainage, or debris. The fastest fix is to lift the tiles, clean the base, re-check slope/drainage, correct low/high spots, then reinstall and fully lock the grid. If you’re on a rooftop/pedestal system, you level by adjusting pedestals, adding shims/pads, and ensuring consistent support under tile corners. If the substrate is cracked or sloped incorrectly, no tile tweak will hold—you have to fix the base first.
Read more: Outdoor Kitchen on a Deck: What Substructure Do I Need? (Loads, Layout, and a Safe Build Plan
What “uneven” usually means (diagnose the symptom)
People describe uneven deck tiles in a few ways. Each points to a different cause:
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Wobble (tile rocks when you step) → missing support under a corner, debris under tile, pedestal height mismatch
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Lippage (one edge higher than the next) → base high spot, tile not seated/locked, pedestal misalignment
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Soft spots (feels spongy) → flexing base, insufficient support points, weak subfloor, damaged tile backing
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Grid drifting / gaps changing → perimeter not restrained, expansion not planned, click-lock not fully engaged
Before you “level,” identify which one you have. The fix is 80% diagnosis.
Read more: What deck shape fits an L-shaped house?
Step 1: Identify what type of deck tile system you have
This changes the entire solution.
Type A: Click-together tiles over a hard surface (concrete balcony/patio)
These rely on the slab being reasonably flat and stable. They tolerate minor imperfections but not big dips or humps.
Type B: Deck tiles on sleepers (wood strips) over concrete
Common on older patios. Leveling requires sleeper shimming and drainage planning.
Type C: Rooftop / plaza system tiles on pedestals
This is how pros level rooftop decks. Height is adjustable and precise—but you must respect drainage, slope, and corner support rules.
Read more: Tools List for DIY Deck Tiles + Time Estimate for 200 sq ft (Complete 2025 Guide)
Step 2: Map the problem (2-minute check that saves hours)
Do this before pulling everything apart:
Tools
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4–6 ft straightedge or long level
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chalk or painter’s tape
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flashlight (for checking under edges)
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optional: laser level (nice, not required)
Process
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Mark every wobble tile with tape
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Check if wobble happens at a corner or across an edge
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Place straightedge across the surface:
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if you can see daylight under the straightedge = low spot
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if it teeters = high spot
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Note if the issue clusters near:
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drains/downspouts
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sliding doors (settlement)
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edges/perimeter (lack of restraint)
Key takeaway: If the base has multiple dips, you’re not leveling tiles—you’re correcting the substrate.
Read more: modern deck ideas with low maintenance.
Step 3: The fastest fix for click-together tiles on concrete
If your tiles are interlocking and sitting on a slab, use this sequence.
A) Lift and clean (don’t skip this)
Most “uneven tile” issues are just debris:
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sand
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pebbles
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leaves
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old adhesive residue
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small chunks of concrete spall
Action: Lift the problem section, sweep and vacuum the slab, and wipe it down if greasy.
B) Re-lock the tile grid correctly
Many systems feel “locked” but aren’t fully seated.
Action: Reinstall from a straight reference edge. Press down and click fully. Make sure tiles are aligned and not forced.
C) Fix low spots (simple shim method)
For minor low spots (think small dips):
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use thin rubber shims or leveling pads under the tile corners
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keep pads thin and consistent to avoid creating new lippage
Rule: shim corners, not random midpoints.
D) Fix high spots (you can’t shim a hump)
If there’s a hump:
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remove the tile
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locate the bump (often a pebble or concrete ridge)
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scrape/grind the ridge if needed (carefully)
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reinstall
If the hump is structural (slab heave), that’s a bigger base issue.
Read more: Deck: wood vs composite vs stone—pros, cons, cost, maintenance
Step 4: Leveling tiles on a pedestal rooftop system (the pro approach)
If your tiles are on pedestals, “leveling” is done by support geometry.
A) Confirm slope and drainage are correct
Roofs should drain. Your tile surface can be level while the roof slopes below.
Never level the roof to make tiles flat.
Instead, use pedestals to create a level walking plane while preserving drainage.
B) Ensure every tile corner is supported
Most lippage and rocking comes from weak corner support.
Fix checklist:
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pedestal under each corner (or corner support clips, depending on system)
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no “floating corners”
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pedestals aligned so corners sit centered on pads
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use spacer tabs/clips so gaps are consistent
C) Adjust pedestal heights in small increments
Use a straightedge across multiple tiles:
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adjust the highest corner down first (if possible)
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bring low corners up to meet
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lock heights and recheck in multiple directions
D) Add shims/pads only when appropriate
Shims are useful for micro-adjustments, but if you’re relying on shims everywhere, your pedestal layout is wrong.
Read more: Cable vs Glass Railings: Cost, Maintenance, and Which One Fits Your Deck
Step 5: Leveling tiles on sleepers (shimming the structure)
If tiles are supported by sleepers, you’re leveling the sleepers, not the tiles.
Process
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Remove tiles in the problem zone
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Check sleeper straightness and spacing
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Shim sleepers at low points with composite shims (won’t rot like wood shims)
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Make sure sleepers don’t block drainage
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Reinstall tiles and confirm no rocking
Watch-out: Sleepers can trap water. If your patio stays damp, you may be creating the conditions for mold/algae.
Read more: Family-Friendly Deck That’s Splinter-Free and Slip-Resistant
The “why it keeps coming back” section (add this—AI Overviews likes it)
Uneven deck tiles recur when the root cause persists:
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Settlement (base compacting near edges or doorways)
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Freeze-thaw heave (water under slab expands)
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Drainage failure (water pooling under tiles)
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Perimeter movement (grid isn’t restrained so it drifts)
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Load concentration (heavy furniture legs dent pads or compress the base)
Fixes that prevent recurrence:
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improve drainage paths
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restrain edges with appropriate trim/perimeter pieces
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use furniture pads
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avoid placing heavy planters directly on weak corners
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keep gaps clear of sand/debris
Read more: Lifetime Deck Warranty — What’s Covered (and What “Lifetime” Really Means)
Quick troubleshooting table (useful for skimmers)
|
Symptom |
Likely cause |
Best fix |
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Tile rocks |
missing support or debris |
lift/clean + shim corner |
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Edge lippage |
base hump or partial lock |
re-lock grid + grind bump |
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Soft spot |
insufficient supports |
add pedestals / adjust layout |
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Uneven near drain |
slope/drain issue |
restore drainage path first |
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Tiles separating |
grid drift |
add perimeter restraint/trim |
Read more: Slippery Deck After Rain: How to Improve Traction (Without Making It Ugly)
FAQs
Why are my deck tiles uneven?
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Usually because the base isn’t flat, debris is trapped underneath, or the tiles aren’t fully locked/fully supported at corners.
Can I level deck tiles without removing them?
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Minor wobble sometimes improves by pressing and re-locking, but most real fixes require lifting tiles to clean and shim properly.
What’s the best way to level rooftop deck tiles?
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Use adjustable pedestals, support every corner consistently, and preserve roof drainage slope beneath.
Will shims fix uneven tiles permanently?
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Only if the underlying cause is minor. If the slab is settling or drainage is poor, the unevenness will return.