I Took Down My Kitchen Backsplash and Wasn’t Prepared for What Came Next
I assumed removing a kitchen backsplash would be a clean, contained job. Pry off the tile, clean the wall, move on. That assumption lasted exactly until the first tiles came off. What followed wasn’t just tile removal. It was drywall removal, whether I wanted it or not. What I Expected to Happen My plan was simple. Remove the tile carefully, keep the drywall intact, and prep the wall for a new backsplash. I expected dust and broken grout, but nothing structural. In my head, this was a surface-level update. That expectation shaped how I started the project, and that was the mistake. What Actually Happened As soon as the first tiles came off, chunks of drywall came with them. Not small tears or paper damage, but full sections pulled loose behind the tile. The adhesive and mortar were bonded so tightly that tile and wall behaved like a single layer. At that point, removing tiles one by one stopped making sense. Each tile I pried off created more uneven damage and made the wall ha...