Every week I see the same confusion at tile showrooms. A customer walks in asking for "digital tiles" expecting something with LEDs or a screen. What they actually want is a ceramic or vitrified tile printed using digital inkjet technology. That misunderstanding alone has caused buyers to skip the right product or overbuy something unnecessary.
Here is what matters: the printing on a digital tile happens before the glaze is fired. The design is not a sticker or a surface coating. It is baked into the tile during the kiln process at temperatures between 1000°C and 1300°C, depending on the body type. Once fired, that pattern is part of the tile.
Whether you are a first-time buyer, a builder sourcing for a project, or comparing Morbi prices against a local dealer this guide covers what you actually need to know.
In actual Indian home conditions, digital tiles behave very differently depending on the body underneath the print and the finish on top of it. Both matter.

300x600 | 600x600 | 600x1200 | 800x800
Matte | Glossy | Satin | HD Polished
Bathroom | Kitchen | Living Room | Bedroom
Vitrified | Ceramic | Porcelain
Digital tiles are ceramic or vitrified tiles printed using inkjet technology before firing, allowing realistic marble, wood, stone, and concrete designs across multiple body types and finishes. The printing method creates photorealistic patterns marble, wood, stone, cement, basalt, travertine, and decorative graphics across the tile surface.
The Indian market for digital tiles was valued at approximately ₹2,680 crores in 2024 and is expected to grow at around 7.1% annually through 2033. (Market data: Indian ceramic tiles sector, 2024 estimates.) Morbi contributes over 60% of national digital tile production, with factories having adopted Italian and Chinese inkjet printing lines that expanded design catalogues far beyond what older screen-printing technology could produce.
Buyers choose digital tiles because they deliver stone, wood, or marble visuals at a mass-production price. A well-printed marble-effect digital tile on a vitrified body can be visually indistinguishable from actual stone at normal viewing distances.
Before digital printing became affordable at the factory level, buyers had two practical choices: limited screen-printed patterns or plain solid colours. The moment Morbi manufacturers scaled up inkjet lines, the design catalogue expanded to include travertine looks, basalt finishes, walnut wood grains, concrete effects, marble visuals, and detailed decorative patterns all available across multiple sizes and finishes.
Digital tiles also give repeatable pattern consistency that natural stone simply cannot provide across a large area. If you are tiling a 1,000 sq.ft floor, matching natural marble slabs for consistent veining is a real sourcing problem. A digital tile solves that entirely every tile in the batch carries the same design at the same scale.

Digital tiles fix the inconsistent veining problem that natural stone creates across large floor areas. Every tile carries a repeatable pattern which matters enormously when you are covering a living room, lobby, or open-plan kitchen floor.

Matte and satin digital tiles reduce the visibility of cooking fumes, oil splashes, and smear marks in Indian kitchens a very common practical problem with glossy tiles in daily cooking environments. In my experience, this single factor finish choice is responsible for most of the dissatisfaction I see in kitchen tile installations. The tile was fine; the finish was wrong.
Digital tiles are available on ceramic, vitrified, glazed vitrified, porcelain, and double-charge bodies. Durability depends not only on the printed design but on the tile body beneath it. A digital tile printed on a full-body porcelain base performs differently from one printed on a ceramic base with 3–6% water absorption.
For smaller bathrooms, 300x600 mm formats maintain proportion better. Larger living rooms benefit from 800x800 mm or 1200x600 mm because fewer grout lines let the printed pattern read more cleanly across the floor.
Walk into any Morbi showroom in 2025–26 and the display wall tells you the story matte finishes have clearly overtaken glossy in urban residential preference.
| Finish | Best For | Avoid For | Maintenance |
| Glossy | Feature walls, showrooms | Kitchen floors, wet bathroom floors | Shows smears, needs frequent wiping |
| Matte / Textured | Bathrooms, balconies, kitchen floors | Premium glossy spaces | Better wet-area grip; forgiving with daily Indian cooking habits |
| Satin | Living rooms, bedrooms | N/A | Balance of both |
| HD Polished | Premium lobbies, drawing rooms | Wet zones | Shows scratches over time |
Anti-skid finishes are a subcategory of matte and textured tiles with additional surface grip ratings, typically specified by R-value (R9–R12). Use the Anti-Skid filter to browse this range.

The strongest-performing design categories in Morbi showrooms and export dispatch orders right now are:

These are the errors I see most often, and most of them are avoidable.
The surface cannot be re-polished after installation. Unlike full-body vitrified tiles, if the surface of a digital tile is scratched or damaged, the only option is replacement.

[As per IS 15622 and ISO 13006 vitrified tile classification standards]
| Feature | Value / Standard |
| Water absorption | Ceramic body: 3–10%; Vitrified/Porcelain body: ≤0.5% |
| Surface property | Stain resistance and surface glaze durability; matte finishes reduce surface smear visibility |
| Tile thickness | 5–8 mm for wall tiles; 8–10 mm for floor and vitrified formats |
| Hardness | Mohs 6–8 depending on body type |
| Firing temperature | 1000°C–1300°C depending on substrate |
| Standards | IS 15622, ISO 13006, ISO 10545-3, ISO 10545-17, EN 14411, ASTM C373 |
BIS Certification: IS 15622 is the relevant Indian standard for vitrified tiles. Ask your supplier for the BIS licence number when sourcing in bulk.
Values vary slightly across export and domestic grades. Confirm with your supplier at time of order. [Based on Morbi dispatch and packing standards, 2025–26]
| Size | Thickness | Tiles/Box | Area/Box (sq.m) | Area/Box (sq.ft approx.) | Approx. Weight/Box | Packing |
| 300x600 mm | 7–8 mm | 8–10 pcs | ~1.44–1.80 sq.m | ~15.5–19.4 sq.ft | 18–22 kg | Corrugated box; palletised for bulk dispatch |
| 600x600 mm | 8–9 mm | 4–5 pcs | ~1.44–1.80 sq.m | ~15.5–19.4 sq.ft | 22–28 kg | Corrugated box; palletised for bulk dispatch |
| 600x1200 mm | 9–10 mm | 2–4 pcs | ~1.44–2.88 sq.m | ~15.5–31.0 sq.ft | 28–38 kg | Corrugated box; palletised for bulk dispatch |
| 800x800 mm | 9–10 mm | 3–4 pcs | ~1.92–2.56 sq.m | ~20.7–27.6 sq.ft | 26–32 kg | Corrugated box; palletised for bulk dispatch |
Single-carton retail orders ship without pallets. Packing varies by manufacturer and export grade.
| Quality Segment | Retail Price (₹/sq.ft) | Morbi Ex-Godown Price (₹/sq.ft) |
| Budget | ₹20–40 | ₹15–25 |
| Mid-Range | ₹40–90 | ₹25–60 |
| Premium | ₹90–300+ | ₹60–150+ |
Installed cost including labour and tile adhesive for large-format digital tiles typically runs ₹100–₹180 per sq.ft depending on city, installer rates, and floor preparation required.
Note: Morbi ex-godown prices are exclusive of 18% GST, freight charges, and loading/unloading costs. Add freight charges of approximately ₹2–5 per sq.ft depending on your destination city and truck load size. Final landed cost varies by location. (As per standard vitrified tile specs and current Morbi factory output volumes.)
For bulk orders, Morbi dealers typically dispatch through established freight networks. Standard Morbi dispatch timelines range from 2–7 working days depending on stock availability, pallet quantity, and transport scheduling. Large-format tiles (600x1200 mm and above) may require stronger packing and carry marginally higher freight costs per box due to weight. Minimum order quantities and dealer rates are available on inquiry. Full-truck dealer loading generally reduces landed cost per sq.ft compared to small mixed dispatch orders.

✔ Vitrified or full-body porcelain digital tiles with matte finish are the correct choice for Indian bathroom floors. Ceramic-body digital tiles with 3–6% water absorption are not suitable for permanent wet-area floor use.
📄 Evidence: [Based on Morbi dispatch standards and IS 15622 water absorption classifications]
✔ Morbi ex-godown prices typically run 30–50% below standard retail depending on quality segment and order quantity.
📄 Evidence: [Based on Morbi dealer price comparisons, 2025–26 domestic market]
✔ Full-body porcelain digital tiles can be used in covered outdoor spaces and balconies. Extended direct sunlight exposure may cause minor surface dulling on ceramic-body options over several years.
📄 Evidence: [As per ISO 10545-17 UV resistance classification and Morbi export specification standards]
✔ 600x600 mm and 600x1200 mm remain the highest-volume formats for floor applications. 300x600 mm is the most stocked format for wall applications.
📄 Evidence: [Based on Morbi dispatch patterns and dealer inventory movement, 2025–26]
After time spent around the Morbi production belt, one pattern stands out: many mid-range and premium digital tile factories also run export dispatch lines supplying to markets with stricter dimensional and surface quality requirements than the average Indian retail buyer demands. The production line discipline in those factories is often better than the domestic retail price suggests.
The post-kiln sorting and grading process determines what goes to export dispatch, what goes to premium domestic supply, and what goes to the budget trade channel. The lowest grade is genuinely inferior product.
But everything above that grading threshold which represents most of what a careful buyer will find in a reputable dealer's godown stock tends to be a better value than the retail price implies. If you are comparing prices between a reputed Morbi-sourced brand and an unknown import at a similar price, the Morbi tile will almost always have more consistent dimensional tolerances. [Based on Morbi production floor and dispatch observations, 2025–26]
Digital tiles are no longer just a budget alternative to natural stone. With modern Morbi manufacturing, buyers can now choose from premium marble, wood, cement, and stone visuals across multiple finishes and vitrified bodies dispatched directly from the production belt at dealer rates.
The right choice depends on:
Always compare body type, finish, and dispatch grade before finalising your order. [Based on Morbi dispatch trends and grading standards, 2026]
🏠 Planning a renovation?
🧮 Use our tile quantity calculator before ordering.
📞 Contact us for a tile quantity estimate, current godown pricing, and freight quote for your location.
🎧 Contact for bulk dispatch details, current dealer rates, and freight estimates from Morbi godowns
Get answers to common questions about digital tiles
Matte and textured digital tiles on vitrified or porcelain bodies are appropriate for bathroom floors. Glossy finishes are not recommended for wet-area floors because they show soap marks and water spots continuously and have lower grip on wet surfaces compared to matte finishes.
Mop with a mild detergent solution and a soft mop. Avoid strong acids, abrasive cleaners, or bleach-based products that can dull the glaze surface over time. Avoid repeated acid washing on polished digital vitrified surfaces as it may gradually dull the glaze layer. Satin and matte finishes are more forgiving with everyday Indian kitchen and bathroom cleaning habits compared to glossy finishes.
Digital tiles are not a separate body type "digital" refers to the printing method. A digital tile can have a ceramic, vitrified, or porcelain body. The distinction matters when choosing for a specific use: always confirm the body type and not just the printed surface.
Indoors, the printed design does not fade because it is fired into the glaze during kiln processing. On exterior or balcony applications with prolonged direct sun exposure, minor surface dulling can occur over several years. Full-body porcelain-based digital tiles perform better in outdoor conditions than ceramic-body options.
It depends entirely on the body. Ceramic-body digital tiles carry 3–10% water absorption. Vitrified and porcelain-body digital tiles carry ≤0.5% water absorption. Always ask the supplier to confirm the body type, especially when buying for wet areas or floors.
For bathrooms: 300x600 mm wall formats in matte or textured finish work well in standard Indian proportions. For kitchens: 600x600 mm matte or satin vitrified digital tiles are the practical choice they do not show cooking fume deposits, oil splashes, and water smears as visibly as glossy surfaces.
600x1200 mm or 800x800 mm glazed vitrified digital tiles with HD polished or satin finish are the most common choice for living rooms. The larger format reduces grout lines and allows the printed pattern to read across the floor more cleanly.
Polished and glossy finishes can be slippery when wet and are not recommended for bathroom floors. Matte and anti-skid textured finishes on vitrified bodies offer better grip and are the appropriate choice for wet-area floors.
Add some products to get started
Add some products to get started