I've been working with tiles out of Morbi for over two decades, and one thing I see constantly: buyers walk into a showroom, hear the words "digital glazed vitrified," and assume every shiny floor tile qualifies. They don't.
Plenty of lower-grade ceramic gets sold under that label, and I've visited sites where homeowners realised the problem only after their floors started showing stains, chips, and wear within two years of laying.
Digital Glazed Vitrified Tiles are manufactured by firing a vitrified body made from clay, quartz, feldspar, and silica at around 1200°C, then applying a digitally printed glaze layer that fuses to the surface during the same kiln process. That combination of a dense body and a high-definition surface is what separates genuine DGVT from standard printed ceramic.

If you are comparing the broader vitrified tile category, see our complete vitrified tiles guide here.
☑️ Water absorption ≤0.08% separates genuine DGVT from ceramic sold under the same label.
☑️ For wet areas and balconies, minimum R11 slip resistance glossy finish is a safety risk on wet floors.
☑️ Shade numbers must match across boxes this is the most common site mistake in India.
☑️ Thickness, tiles-per-box, and calibration quality matter more than brand name at Morbi pricing
600×1200 mm | 800×1600 mm | 1200×1200 mm
Glossy DGVT | Matte DGVT | Rustic Finish Tiles
Living Room Tiles | Bathroom Tiles | Kitchen Tiles | Commercial Tiles
Digital Glazed Vitrified Tiles are vitrified tiles where the surface design marble, granite, wood, slate, terrazzo, stone is applied using inkjet digital printing and fused into the glaze layer during firing. Unlike older screen-printed tiles, digital printing produces sharper detail and better design depth.
Because the glaze is kiln-fused rather than painted on, it is highly resistant to peeling or fading under normal Indian conditions.
Water absorption in a genuine DGVT tile stays at or below 0.08% (GVT grade), which is significantly lower than standard ceramic tiles that can absorb between 5% and 10% water. This matters in Indian kitchens, bathrooms, and monsoon-exposed areas where moisture is a constant concern.
| Type | Surface | Water Absorption | Design Quality | Typical Use |
| DGVT | Digital inkjet glaze, kiln-fused | ≤0.08% | High-resolution, realistic | Floor & light commercial |
| GVT | Glazed surface, older print tech | ≤0.08% | Standard | Residential floor |
| Ceramic | Glazed, surface coating | 5–10% | Basic | Wall tiles, low-traffic |
[As per standard tile classification BIS/IS 15622 and IS 13753]

Indian homes are not gentle on flooring. Coastal humidity, dry dusty climates, heavy monsoon exposure, oil-heavy cooking, and daily wet mopping most imported tile categories are not designed with these conditions in mind. DGVT tiles handle this environment reasonably well because the glaze is part of the fired body, not a coating applied separately.
What makes this category actually useful in Indian homes is that the same tile family can work across living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, covered balconies, and light commercial spaces without needing separate flooring products in each zone. Breaking strength on quality DGVT tiles meets the ≥1700 N standard, and Mohs hardness typically runs between 5 and 6.
For homes: Living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, foyers, passages, and covered balconies. For balconies and wet areas, a minimum R11 anti-skid finish is strongly advisable.
For commercial projects: Showrooms, retail stores, offices, restaurants, hotel lobbies, and corridors. Hospital and healthcare spaces generally call for R12 slip-resistant options due to stricter safety requirements.
For budget-conscious buyers: DGVT tiles offer marble and stone aesthetics at 60–70% lower cost than natural materials, without the maintenance obligations like polishing, sealing, or regrouting that natural stone requires.
Shade variation between boxes is the most common problem on Indian job sites. Digital tiles are manufactured in production lots tiles from different batches can show visible colour tone differences. Mixing boxes without checking shade numbers causes patchy-looking floors that are extremely difficult to fix without re-laying.

Glossy tiles in wet areas is the second most consistent mistake. A glossy finish looks strong in a showroom under artificial lighting. On a wet bathroom floor or an open balcony after rain, the same tile becomes a slip hazard. Wet glossy surfaces are genuinely dangerous for senior citizens, children, and anyone who doesn't expect a slippery floor.
Grout line staining is frequently ignored during purchase. The tile body resists stains well, but white cement grout in kitchen and wet zones stains within months. Epoxy Grout or darker grout shades are the practical choice for heavy-use spaces.
Glossy Finish: Reflects light well, makes rooms feel brighter and larger. But footprints, water marks, and oil haze show quickly especially in kitchens and dust-heavy Indian cities. Best suited for formal living spaces and low-traffic interiors that are cleaned regularly.
Matte and Satin Finish: Hides daily dust, footprints, minor surface haze, and micro-scratches much better. In my experience, these finishes are more practical for working families, busy kitchens, and high-footfall areas. Polished and glossy surfaces consistently show scratches and dirt more visibly than matte options.

| Factor | Matt / Satin | Glossy |
| Wet area safety | ✅ R11+ available | ⚠️ Slip risk when wet |
| Daily dust & footprints | ✅ Hides well | ❌ Shows quickly |
| Light reflection | Soft, diffused | Bright, room-enlarging |
| Kitchen suitability | ✅ Recommended | ❌ Oil haze visible |
| Formal living room | Good | ✅ Preferred |
| Maintenance effort | Low | Medium to high |
Large formats reduce visible grout lines and lower long-term grout maintenance, but they require proper substrate levelling. Improper levelling creates lippage visible height differences between adjacent tiles which is a permanent problem once the floor is set.
[Based on Morbi godown dispatch volumes and residential project demand, 2026]
Looking at what's moving in the market right now, strong demand is coming for:
Finish formats currently moving in the market include matt, glossy, rustic, metallic, and polished glaze. From what moves out of Morbi godowns in current dispatch cycles, large-format DGVT tiles particularly 600×1200 mm now account for an estimated 35% of market demand in India, a figure that has grown steadily over the last few years. [Based on Morbi godown dispatch mix and India tiles industry demand data, 2025–26]

Glossy tiles in wet areas or heavy-traffic commercial spaces will show wear and become a maintenance problem. Select the finish based on the functional use of the space, not just the showroom appearance.
DGVT tiles carry a PEI (Porcelain Enamel Institute) rating of 3 to 5. A PEI 3 tile is suitable for medium foot traffic; PEI 4–5 handles heavier commercial use. Buying a PEI 3 tile for a busy retail space causes surface wear that shows within months.
Large-format vitrified tiles need full Tile Adhesive coverage under the body not patchy or corner-only application. Partial adhesive creates hollow spots, weak support points, and surface cracking under load.
I've walked sites where entire large-format floors had to be re-laid because the adhesive wasn't applied correctly. Full-bed application is not optional on any tile 600×1200 mm or larger.
In Morbi, many factories use similar production lines but differ in calibration, sorting, and edge finishing. Buyers who focus only on branding often miss size inconsistency and edge variation that causes poor joint alignment on site.
Tile quality over the long term is far more connected to surface calibration and edge flatness than to brand name. Always inspect sample tiles from the actual production lot before confirming a bulk order.

| Feature | Value / Standard |
| Water Absorption | ≤0.08% (GVT grade, BIS/ISO standard) |
| Breaking Strength | ≥1700 N |
| Mohs Surface Hardness | 5–6 |
| PEI Rating | 3–5 (medium to heavy foot traffic) |
| Slip Resistance | R9–R13 depending on finish selected |
| Tile Body Composition | Clay, Quartz, Feldspar, Silica |
| Firing Temperature | ~1200°C |
| Standard Sizes | 600×600 mm, 600×1200 mm, 800×1600 mm, 1200×1800 mm |
| Design Layer | Digitally printed glaze, ~1 mm, kiln-fused |
| Standards | BIS / IS 15622 vitrified tile specifications |
[As per standard vitrified tile specifications BIS/IS 15622]
| Size (mm) | Thickness | Tiles / Box | Area / Box | Weight / Box |
| 600×600 | 9–10 mm | 4 pcs | ~1.44 sq m (~15.5 sq ft) | ~22–25 kg |
| 600×1200 | 9–11 mm | 2 pcs | ~1.44 sq m (~15.5 sq ft) | ~26–30 kg |
| 800×1600 | 10–12 mm | 1–2 pcs | ~1.28–2.56 sq m | ~30–40 kg |
| 1200×1800 | 12 mm | 1 pc | ~2.16 sq m (~23.2 sq ft) | ~50–60 kg |
A standard 9-ton truck from Morbi safely accommodates roughly 300–320 boxes of 600×1200 mm tiles. Check with godown for exact freight load calculations.
Packing specifications vary by manufacturer. Confirm box specs with your Morbi supplier before finalising order quantities.
[Based on standard Morbi DGVT dispatch specifications verify at godown before bulk order]
| Quality Segment | Retail Price (₹/sq ft) | Morbi Dealer Rate (₹/sq ft) |
| Budget | ₹20–35 | ₹18–28 |
| Mid-Range | ₹35–110 | ₹25–50 |
| Premium | ₹150–250 | ₹50–100 |
| Luxury Slabs | ₹400–800+ | Contact for dealer rate |
In practice, retail markups range from 10% to over 50% depending on tile size, finish type, freight cost, packaging, dealer margin, and brand positioning.
📝 All prices listed are ex-Morbi godown, excluding GST and freight. Dealer rates and bulk dispatch pricing available on request. Current shade lots change frequently during dispatch cycles confirm stock availability before payment.
[Based on Morbi dispatch data 2026 pricing exclusive of 18% GST and freight charges]

❓ Want current Morbi godown rates for DGVT tiles ?
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📝 Prices vary by size, finish, and dispatch quantity. GST at 18% applicable as per current slab. Freight calculated based on destination and lot size.
✔ Matte or satin finish with minimum R11 slip resistance. Glossy tiles show oil haze, footprints, and water marks heavily in kitchen conditions and become slippery when wet.
📄 Evidence: [Based on Morbi dispatch patterns and site feedback kitchens account for the highest finish-related complaint rate on glossy DGVT floors]
✔ Yes, it is the most practical choice for mid-to-large rooms in current Indian residential construction. It reduces grout lines, makes rooms feel larger, and is available across all price segments from Morbi.
📄 Evidence: [As per residential tile sizing practice and current Morbi godown dispatch volumes 600×1200 is the highest-velocity size segment in 2026]
✔ Tiles are manufactured in kiln batches called shade lots. Even within the same design, different production runs produce slight colour tone shifts. Always verify shade numbers on box labels and mix boxes from multiple batches during laying to average out the variation.
📄 Evidence: [Based on Morbi godown dispatch patterns and site observations, 2026]
✔ For large-format tiles (600×1200 mm and above), full-bed tile adhesive application is strongly recommended over traditional sand-cement mortar. Partial adhesive creates hollow spots that fail under load, particularly in commercial spaces with heavy foot or trolley traffic.
📄 Evidence: [As per standard vitrified tile installation guidelines and direct site observations Morbi cluster, 2024–2026]
✔ Physically check size consistency (calibration), edge flatness, glaze uniformity, and shade number matching across boxes. Also confirm water absorption certificate (≤0.08%) and request a BIS/IS 15622 compliant test report.
📄 Evidence: [Based on direct godown inspection experience, Morbi cluster 2024–2026]
[Based on Morbi dispatch data 2026 all specifications subject to manufacturer variation. Verify at godown before confirming bulk orders.]
In Morbi, many factories produce tiles for multiple brands on the same production line. The real differences come in surface treatment, calibration quality, sorting, and edge finishing not always in the brand name on the box.
I've seen identical-looking tiles sold at ₹35/sq ft under one brand and ₹90/sq ft under another, with the core body coming from the same factory.
From my experience inspecting Morbi godowns before dispatch, I've seen 600×1200 mm matte finishes moving faster than glossy in metro apartment projects over the last two years builders and housing society buyers consistently prefer matte for high-footfall common areas.
If you're buying in bulk for a builder project, a housing society, or a commercial development it makes more sense to physically check size consistency, edge flatness, and glaze uniformity than to make decisions purely on branding.
For outstation buyers, freight from Morbi typically adds ₹2–6/sq ft depending on destination and lot size. GST at 18% applies on the taxable value. Dealer rates at godown level differ from retail MRP always ask for the ex-factory or ex-godown rate when buying in bulk.
Most Morbi manufacturers dispatch DGVT tiles within 3–7 working days depending on stock availability and loading schedules. A Morbi sourcing partner can help you navigate this directly including checking stock at the godown, confirming dispatch timelines, and providing a GST invoice with accurate freight calculation for your delivery location.
[Based on Morbi godown dispatch patterns and direct factory sourcing experience, 2026]
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✔️ We supply directly from Morbi godowns. Freight estimate, packing details, and GST-compliant invoice provided. Available for pan-India dispatch.
Get answers to common questions about digital glazed vitrified tiles
No. Standard vitrified tiles have a glazed or polished surface but typically use older printing technology. DGVT tiles use high-resolution inkjet digital printing fused into the glaze layer, which produces sharper, more realistic designs with better surface consistency and design depth. For a broader comparison across the vitrified tile category.
For flooring, look for water absorption at or below 0.08% (GVT grade). This is the standard for genuine vitrified tiles under BIS/IS 15622 specifications. Tiles with higher absorption even if sold as vitrified carry greater risk of staining and moisture-related damage in Indian conditions.
Yes, but finish selection matters. For bathrooms, balconies, and utility areas, select a minimum R11 slip resistance rating. Glossy DGVT tiles with an R9 rating are not appropriate for wet floors and create a safety hazard when wet.
No. The digital glaze is kiln-fired at approximately 1200°C, not painted on. Colour and design remain stable under normal Indian conditions including UV exposure, cleaning chemicals, and regular mopping.
600×600 mm suits smaller rooms and standard apartments. 600×1200 mm is the most practical choice for mid-to-large rooms in current residential construction. 800×1600 mm and larger slab formats are for premium spaces and require experienced installation teams due to levelling demands.
DGVT offers the visual appearance of marble and stone at 60–70% lower material cost, with no need for polishing, sealing, or the ongoing maintenance that natural stone requires. Stain resistance is also better on a glazed vitrified surface than on porous natural stone in Indian kitchen conditions.
Yes. Regular wet mopping with a mild detergent is sufficient. For grout joints in kitchens and wet zones, use [Epoxy Grout] or darker grout shades rather than white cement grout, which stains quickly in those conditions.
PEI (Porcelain Enamel Institute) rating measures surface wear resistance. DGVT tiles typically range from PEI 3 to PEI 5. PEI 3 handles moderate residential traffic; PEI 4–5 suits heavier commercial use. Selecting a PEI 3 tile for a high-footfall retail or commercial space will lead to visible surface wear within a short period.
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