I've been working with Digital Glazed Vitrified Tiles since the format started picking up in the Indian market. In those years, I've seen these tiles installed well in premium living rooms and I've seen them fail badly in the wrong locations not because the tile was poor quality, but because the buyer didn't understand what DGVT actually is and what it isn't. This guide puts that right.

☑️ Best for: Living rooms, bedrooms, dining areas, and light commercial floors.
☑️ Most popular size: 600×1200 mm (2×4 ft) among the most commonly dispatched formats from manufacturer stock.
☑️ Price range: ₹18–₹130/sq.ft depending on quality and sourcing channel.
☑️ Key limitation: Glossy finish not suitable for high-footfall or wet areas.
☑️ Compliance: IS 15622-2017 | BIa water absorption group.
DGVT stands for Digital Glazed Vitrified Tile. The body is a vitrified base clay, quartz, feldspar, and silica fired at approximately 1200°C which gives you a dense, low-porosity structure.
Over that body sits a digitally printed glazed layer, generally less than 1 mm thick depending on manufacturer and production process, which carries the design: marble, stone, wood, terrazzo, cement look. The glaze is what you see and what you walk on every day.
This is the key difference from a double-charge vitrified tile where the colour and pattern are pressed 3–4 mm deep into the body. DGVT trades that depth for much greater design flexibility. The result is a tile that can realistically replicate Statuario marble, Carrara white, or a walnut wood plank designs that double-charge tiles simply cannot match.
DGVT tiles comply with IS 15622-2017 standards and fall under the BIa water absorption group, meaning absorption is kept below 0.5%. That makes them suitable for floors in kitchens, living areas, bedrooms, and light commercial spaces. Most export-oriented manufacturers also align production with ISO 13006 requirements. Where rectified edges are available, confirm calibration tolerance with your supplier before dispatch shade variation (V1–V4) should also be checked per production batch.
| Feature | DGVT | Double Charge |
| Design Variety | Excellent | Limited |
| Marble-Look Designs | Excellent | Moderate |
| Surface Layer | Digital glaze | Through-body colour layer |
| Residential Flooring | Excellent | Excellent |
| Heavy Traffic Areas | Good | Better |
| Visual Realism | Excellent | Limited |
| Commercial Wear Resistance | Good | Better |
The honest reason DGVT tiles dominate the Indian residential market is value. A homeowner gets a premium marble-look floor at a fraction of what natural stone costs and without the maintenance headaches of natural stone. The vitrified body means low porosity, resistance to household cleaning chemicals, and straightforward day-to-day cleaning.
In the Morbi market, this combination of price and design is exactly what's driven DGVT to dominate residential flooring specs over the last 3–4 years.
Large-format DGVT tiles 600×1200 mm, 800×1600 mm also create a cleaner visual effect in rooms because there are fewer grout lines. I've seen this make a mid-size living room look significantly more open. It's a real practical benefit, not just a selling point. Based on dealer enquiries and dispatch observations from Morbi manufacturers during 2026, 600×1200 mm DGVT remains one of the most commonly specified and dispatched floor tile formats from the Morbi ceramic cluster.
DGVT tiles work well for:
Dealers and distributors sourcing directly from Morbi manufacturers can typically negotiate better rates on full-truck dispatch orders minimum 500–1,000 sq.m depending on the supplier.
Avoid specifying DGVT for heavy industrial applications or outdoor areas with constant exposure to harsh weather. Full-body porcelain or outdoor-grade tiles are more appropriate in those conditions.
The most common problem I encounter on-site is lippage where adjacent tiles sit at slightly different heights after installation. This almost always comes down to two things: the screed wasn't flat enough, or the installer used inconsistent adhesive coverage. With large formats like 600×1200 mm or 800×1600 mm, the margin for error is much smaller than with 300×300 mm tiles. You need a proper tile adhesive bed and a flat base. No shortcuts here.

From site visits, I find installation quality affects long-term performance more than brand selection in many cases. I've seen projects save money on material but lose more later due to poor installation practices.
The second problem is buyers choosing high-gloss DGVT and then being disappointed within six months. Glossy surfaces on a floor will show footprints, water marks, dust, and mop streaks constantly. The tile hasn't failed it's doing exactly what a glossy surface does. If the homeowner isn't committed to frequent cleaning, point them toward a satin matt or full matte finish from the start. Based on dealer enquiries and dispatch observations from manufacturers during 2026, satin matt finishes are seeing stronger demand than high-gloss variants in premium residential projects.
The third issue is batch mismatch. This happens on larger projects where material is sourced in multiple rounds. Even a small shade variation between production batches becomes visible once the floor is laid. Always confirm batch numbers when ordering and ensure the full required quantity leaves the supplier's stock in a single dispatch. Splitting an order across two separate freight runs introduces batch mismatch risk that no amount of careful laying can fix.
The thin digital glaze layer is what gives DGVT its design richness, but it also sets the limit on how much surface wear it can absorb over time. In corridors, entrances, and commercial areas with constant abrasive foot traffic, fine particles of sand and grit will gradually create micro-scratches on a glossy surface.
This is a material reality, not a defect. Matte and satin finishes are far more forgiving in these areas because the surface texture masks light scratches naturally.

Here's what you'll find ready for dispatch at a Morbi godown or dealer inventory right now: Glossy, Satin Matt, Full Matte, Rocker Finish.
| Feature | Glossy DGVT | Satin Matt DGVT |
| Appearance | High shine | Soft premium look |
| Footprint visibility | More visible | Less visible |
| Water marks | More visible | Less visible |
| Daily maintenance | Higher | Lower |
| Slip resistance | Lower | Better |
| Residential use | Good | Excellent |

✔️ Best for living room floors: 600×1200 mm satin matt marble or warm ivory look.
✔️ Best for bedrooms: 600×600 or 600×1200 full matte warm beige or wood plank design.
✔️ Best for wet areas / bathrooms: 600x600 mm full matte or rocker finish (Avoid glossy due to slip risk).
✔️ Best dealer choice for volume: 600×1200 mm glossy marble-look among the most commonly dispatched formats from manufacturer stock.
✔️ Best for light commercial: 600×1200 full matte grey concrete look practical and design-forward.
✔️ Best for low-maintenance households: Full matte or satin finish over glossy for all floor applications.
Current design demand in DGVT is concentrated in:
From what I'm seeing in dispatch orders and dealer inquiries out of Morbi, the rocker finish in warm ivory is seeing strong demand across premium residential projects in 2026. Glossy finish demand has softened somewhat in the premium segment. Buyers in that range are moving toward satin matt and lappato surfaces that feel premium but are more practical to live with.

Common mistakes worth flagging to your customer or contractor:

As per IS 15622-2017 vitrified tile standards, BIS India.
| Feature | Value / Standard |
| Water Absorption | Less than 0.5% (BIa group, IS 15622-2017) |
| Bending Strength | Not less than 32 N/mm² |
| Breaking Strength | Not less than 700 N |
| Deep Abrasion Resistance | Not more than 175 mm³ |
| Thermal Expansion | Less than 9 × 10⁻⁶ K⁻¹ |
| Chemical Resistance | Minimum Class B |
| Tile Thickness Range | 7 mm to 9.5 mm |
| PEI Rating | PEI 3 to PEI 4 (medium to heavy traffic) |
| Standards | IS 15622-2017 / ISO 13006 (export-grade plants) |
| Size (mm) | Thickness | Tiles per Box | Area per Box (approx.) | Approx. Box Weight |
| 600×600 | 8–9 mm | 4 pcs | ~15 sq.ft / 1.44 sq.m | ~25–28 kg |
| 600×1200 | 8–9.5 mm | 2 pcs | ~15.5 sq.ft / 1.44 sq.m | ~28–32 kg |
| 800×1600 | 9–9.5 mm | 1–2 pcs | ~13.8–27.5 sq.ft | ~35–45 kg |
| 1200×2400 | 9.5 mm | 1 pc | ~28 sq.ft / 2.88 sq.m | ~55–65 kg |
Packing configuration, box weight, and area coverage can vary by manufacturer, thickness, and production batch. Confirm actual packing details before dispatch.
[Based on standard packing norms observed across Morbi manufacturers, 2026.]
By the time a tile leaves a factory and reaches a retail showroom in Delhi or Bengaluru, expect the price to be 40% to sometimes 100% higher distribution margin, freight, and brand positioning all add up.
| Quality Segment | Retail Price (₹/sq.ft) | Ex-Factory Price (₹/sq.ft) |
| Budget | ₹20 to ₹40 | ₹18 to ₹30 |
| Mid Segment | ₹45 to ₹75 | ₹32 to ₹52 |
| Premium | ₹85 to ₹130 | ₹55 to ₹75 |
[Pricing reference: Ex-factory dispatch data from Morbi manufacturers, Q1–Q2 2026. Excludes freight and GST.]
Larger formats, premium finishes, and thicker tile bodies command the higher end of pricing in each segment. Freight from the Morbi cluster to major cities typically adds ₹2–5/sq.ft depending on distance and truck load size factor this into your landed cost before comparing dealer rates. Dealer rate is separate from MRP; always ask specifically for ex-factory pricing with GST breakup before comparing across suppliers.
Freight costs vary by destination, order volume, and truck utilisation. Confirm current freight before finalising landed cost calculations. Size, finish, glaze quality, and freight all affect the final landed price the gap between ex-factory and retail can be significant. Request current dealer rates, freight estimates, GST breakup, and dispatch availability before placing a bulk order.

In my experience sourcing and specifying from Morbi, the quality difference between a ₹35/sq.ft DGVT and a ₹65/sq.ft DGVT from the same factory often comes down to glaze quality, print resolution, and edge finishing not the body. The vitrified base is largely consistent across manufacturers at a given thickness. Where cheaper tiles cut costs is on the surface layer and the calibration process. When a buyer complains about tiles that look fine in the showroom but look average after installation, that's usually the print resolution or the glaze depth.
Ask your supplier for a large sample panel at least 2×2 tiles before finalising. One tile in a box tells you very little.
From what I see month on month in Morbi, the 600×1200 marble-look in satin matt is still the default specification for most mid-to-premium residential projects. Freight becomes a meaningful cost factor for destinations beyond 800 km from the cluster for those projects, it's worth consolidating the order into a single full-truck dispatch rather than splitting it, both for cost and batch consistency reasons. Dealer rates shift with order volume and destination, so always get a freight-inclusive quote before comparing across suppliers.
Before confirming dispatch, verify the following with your supplier:
✔ GVT (Glazed Vitrified Tile) is the broader category; DGVT refers specifically to tiles with a digitally printed glaze. All DGVT tiles are GVT, but not all GVT tiles use digital printing. DGVT enables far more realistic marble and stone designs due to high-resolution inkjet printing on the glaze surface. If the DGVT tile is run through a polishing machine to achieve a high-gloss, mirror-like finish, it is then referred to as PGVT (Polished Glazed Vitrified Tile).
🧾 Evidence: [Based on manufacturer specifications and IS 15622-2017 classification]
✔ Glossy DGVT tiles can show micro-scratches in heavy-traffic areas over time, while matte and rocker finishes mask surface wear effectively. This is a material property of the glaze surface, not a manufacturing defect.
🧾 Evidence: [Based on dealer feedback and installation observations across residential projects, 2026]
✔ Most manufacturers pack 2 tiles per box for 600×1200 mm size, with each box covering approximately 1.44 sq.m and weighing 28–32 kg depending on thickness. Confirm actual packing with your supplier before dispatch.
🧾 Evidence: [Based on standard packing norms observed across Morbi manufacturers, 2026]
✔ Print resolution, glaze quality, calibration accuracy, finish type, and freight all contribute to price differences between budget and premium segments within the same tile category.
🧾 Evidence: [Based on factory pricing observations and dealer procurement trends, Morbi cluster 2026]
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Get answers to common questions about dgvt tiles
DGVT stands for Digital Glazed Vitrified Tile. It is a vitrified tile with a digitally printed glaze layer on top, which enables high-resolution marble, stone, wood, and decorative designs on a strong, low-porosity body.
Yes. DGVT tiles are one of the most commonly specified options for living rooms, dining areas, and bedrooms in Indian residential construction. Large formats like 600×1200 mm are particularly popular for the clean, open appearance they create with minimal grout lines.
DGVT tiles have water absorption of less than 0.5%, placing them in the BIa vitrified category under IS 15622-2017. This makes them suitable for floors in kitchens, living areas, and light commercial spaces.
Glossy DGVT tiles can become slippery when wet. For bathrooms and other wet areas, matte finish variants or tiles with higher surface texture ratings are more appropriate. Always confirm the surface property of the specific tile before specifying it for a wet area.
They serve different priorities. DGVT offers far greater design variety through digital printing, making it the preferred choice where aesthetics matter. Double-charge vitrified tiles have a thicker colour layer pressed 3–4 mm deep into the body, giving better long-term surface durability in very high-traffic zones. Choose DGVT for design-first residential and commercial spaces; choose double-charge where surface wear is the primary concern.
Satin matt or full matte finish is the most practical choice for Indian living rooms. Glossy finishes look striking in showrooms but show footprints, dust, and mop streaks in daily use. Satin matt gives near-gloss visual depth while being far easier to maintain.
For standard rooms, 600×600 mm works well. For larger living and dining areas, 600×1200 mm is the most popular choice currently. For premium residential or commercial projects, 800×1600 mm and 1200×2400 mm formats are available but require an experienced installation team and a properly prepared flat base.
Key pricing factors are tile size, surface finish, tile body thickness, print quality, brand positioning, freight and logistics, and GST. Larger formats, premium finishes, and thicker bodies sit at the higher end of the price range. Sourcing directly from Morbi manufacturers versus purchasing through retail distribution can mean a 40% to 100% difference in landed cost.
Dealer rates for 600×1200 mm DGVT tiles vary based on quality segment, order quantity, and dispatch destination. Mid-segment tiles typically fall in the ₹32–₹52/sq.ft range ex-factory. Contact your supplier directly for current rates with GST breakup and freight estimate to your location.
Always order a minimum of 5–8% over your calculated requirement. This accounts for cuts, breakage during installation, and future tile replacement needs especially important when sourcing from a single production batch to avoid shade variation risk.
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