This guide focuses on selecting the right glazed tile type for Indian residential projects not just individual tile products. For specific product listings, see our GVT tile collection and PGVT tile collection.
📌Quick Take
☑️ Matte GVT works best for Indian living rooms hides dust, mop marks, and footprints.
☑️ Anti-skid glazed tiles are the safer choice for bathroom floors.
☑️ 600×1200 mm remains the top-selling format from Morbi godowns.
☑️ Always buy from one shade lot batch differences show under natural light.
☑️ Standard Morbi stock dispatch generally takes 2–7 days depending on shade availability, order quantity, and transport scheduling.
🗂️ Browse by Application
| Application |
Recommended Tile |
Suggested Size |
Finish |
| Bathroom floor |
Anti-skid glazed vitrified |
300×600 mm |
Matte / Anti-skid |
| Bathroom wall |
Glazed ceramic |
300×600 mm |
Matte / Satin |
| Living room floor |
GVT / PGVT |
600×1200 mm |
Matte / Satin |
| Kitchen dado |
Glazed ceramic |
300×600 or 300×900 mm |
Stain-resistant glaze |
| Feature wall |
Digital print GVT |
300×900 or 600×1200 mm |
Textured / Fluted |
| Bedroom floor |
GVT matte |
600×1200 mm |
Matte |
| Commercial floor |
Heavy-duty GVT |
600×1200 mm or 800×1600 mm |
Satin / Matte |
📐 Shop by Size
300×600 | 600×600 | 600×1200
🎨 Shop by Finish
Matte | Glossy / Polished
🏠 Shop by Area
Bathroom | Kitchen | Living Room | Bedroom | Commercial
💎 What Are Glazed Tiles?
Glazed tiles are ceramic or vitrified tiles coated with a protective, decorative glaze layer fired onto the surface at high temperatures typically between 1000°C and 1300°C. This glaze layer determines the tile's visual appearance, stain resistance, surface texture, and ease of cleaning. The design whether it looks like marble, wood, or stone exists on this surface coating, not inside the tile body.
Most buyers miss this distinction: the base body can be ceramic (water absorption 3–10%) or vitrified (water absorption ≤0.5%). This matters significantly when selecting tiles for floors, wet zones, or outdoor areas.
Glazed Vitrified Tiles (GVT) and Polished Glazed Vitrified Tiles (PGVT) represent the premium end of this category combining a near-impervious vitrified body with a high-quality digitally printed glaze surface. Adjacent tile types you may encounter in the same category include nano polished tiles, double charge vitrified tiles, full body vitrified tiles, carving tiles, and porcelain glazed tiles each with different surface and body characteristics suited to specific applications.

⚖️ GVT vs PGVT Quick Comparison
| Feature |
GVT |
PGVT |
| Finish |
Matte / Satin |
High Gloss / Mirror Polish |
| Slip Resistance |
Better safer for floors |
Lower avoid in wet zones |
| Best Use |
Bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchens |
Living rooms, hotel lobbies |
| Maintenance |
Easier hides marks well |
Higher shows smudges more |
| Appearance |
Natural, contemporary |
Luxurious, reflective |
| Price Range (Morbi) |
₹45–₹90/sq.ft |
₹65–₹150+ (varies by design) |

✅ Is This the Right Tile for You?
Glazed tiles work across nearly every project type because they deliver stone and wood looks at a fraction of natural stone prices. Digital printing in Morbi factories now replicates marble veining and timber grain at a detail level impossible a decade ago.
If you're choosing between glazed vitrified and full-body vitrified for a living room floor glazed gives you better design variety at lower cost per sq.ft; full-body gives you better edge durability for heavy commercial traffic.
Glazed tiles suit:
- Homeowners building or renovating 2BHK and 3BHK apartments who want premium appearance without premium stone prices
- Contractors supplying tiles for multiple flats, looking for consistent batch quality at volume pricing
- Interior designers specifying feature walls, bathroom elevations, and kitchen dado work
- Hotel and commercial fit-out teams requiring durable, cleanable flooring and wall surfaces
- Builders under PMAY and affordable housing projects sourcing budget GVT for floor areas
Wall applications in bathrooms and kitchens particularly benefit from glazed ceramic tiles wall surfaces experience little abrasion, and the decorative glaze remains intact for many years.
📞 Contact for bulk dispatch & dealer rates from Morbi.
⚠️ Real-World Problems I've Seen
From Morbi godowns to delivery sites across Gujarat and beyond, most tile-related complaints after installation are not because the tile was bad they're because the wrong tile type was chosen, or installation was done incorrectly.

Same mistakes keep coming up on sites: a homeowner selects a high-gloss PGVT tile for their bathroom floor because it looks beautiful in the showroom. Six months later, it's dangerously slippery when wet. This is completely avoidable. High-gloss finishes belong in living rooms and dry decorative areas not wet zones.
On large apartment projects, matte finishes consistently generate fewer post-handover complaints than polished floors. Other recurring problems:
- Glaze crazing (fine surface cracks) usually caused by thermal shock or a tile body that doesn't match the glaze expansion coefficient
- Grout discoloration within six months almost always from grouting too soon after laying, or using cement grout in wet zones instead of epoxy grout
- Edge chipping during cutting more common with harder vitrified bodies; requires a diamond blade cutter, not a basic angle grinder
- Shade mismatch across boxes a batch number difference from the manufacturer results in visible colour variation under natural light; I've seen this ruin entire living room floors
From Morbi dispatches to Hyderabad projects: matte 600×1200 mm inventory moves faster than polished stock, particularly during monsoon periods when contractors prefer low-maintenance finishes.
📐 Material, Size & Finish Logic
The choice between glazed ceramic and glazed vitrified comes down to application.
For walls bathroom dado, kitchen backsplash, feature walls glazed ceramic tiles are practical, lower cost, and available in a wide range of digital-print designs. For floors living rooms, bedrooms, commercial areas glazed vitrified tiles (GVT or PGVT) are the correct choice. Their near-zero water absorption and harder body handle daily foot traffic, cleaning loads, and weight far better than ceramic-body options.
Common sizes available from Morbi godowns:
- 300×600 mm standard bathroom wall and kitchen dado
- 300×900 mm increasingly preferred for wall elevations, more contemporary look
- 600×1200 mm most popular format for living room and bedroom floors
- 800×1600 mm large format for open-plan living and dining areas
- 200×1200 mm wood-plank format for bedrooms and balconies
- Mosaic and small formats shower niches, backsplash accents, decorative borders
Finish guide:
- High Gloss / Polished (PGVT) best for living rooms and show areas; shows smudges more easily
- Matte Finish preferred for kitchens, bedrooms, and high-traffic floors; hides footprints and water marks well
- Satin Finish moderate sheen; practical for most spaces
- Sugar Finish slight texture and sparkle; used in premium residential flooring
- Anti-skid Glazed Finish surface texture built into glaze; recommended for bathroom floors and balconies
- Digital Printed Finish stone-look, marble-look, wood-look designs on both ceramic and vitrified bodies
✔️ Best for bathroom walls: 300×600 mm matte glazed ceramic.
✔️ Best for living room floors: 600×1200 mm GVT or PGVT, matte or satin finish.
✔️ Best for kitchen dado: 300×600 mm glazed ceramic, chemical-resistant finish.
✔️ Best for wet bathroom floors: Anti-skid glazed vitrified, matte or textured finish.
✔️ Top dealer/contractor choice: 600×1200 mm matte GVT consistent Morbi supply, broad design availability
🔥 Trending Designs 2026
Matte finish glazed tiles have dominated the Indian market for two to three years and that preference continues. A matte grey or beige 600×1200 mm tile in a living room looks contemporary, hides daily dust and mop marks, and doesn't demand the upkeep a polished floor requires.
Marble-look and Bianco-tone designs remain the top-selling visual formats in Morbi's domestic and export lines. Beige, taupe, warm grey, and off-white tones dominate current housing project specifications. [Based on Morbi dispatch data 2026]

Trending directions currently visible in Morbi factory outputs:
- Terrazzo-look glazed vitrified tiles for bedrooms and children's rooms
- Dark charcoal and slate-look matte tiles for feature walls and commercial floors
- Fluted and 3D surface textured tiles for bathroom feature walls and TV backdrops
- Large-format 600×1200 mm and 800×1600 mm tiles reducing grout lines for a cleaner floor finish
- Wood-plank digital print tiles (200×1200 mm) replacing actual wood in bedrooms and balconies
⚠️ Buying and Installation Mistakes
- Using wall-grade glazed ceramic tiles on floors wall tiles have a softer body and thinner glaze; they chip, crack, and degrade quickly under foot traffic
- Selecting high-gloss PGVT for wet bathroom floors polished surfaces become hazardous when wet
- Buying from multiple production batches even from the same brand and design, different batches show colour variation under natural light; buy the full required quantity from one shade lot
- Underestimating quantity a 5–10% wastage buffer is standard; diagonal layouts need more
- Rushing the grout grouting before tile adhesive has cured causes tile displacement and uneven joints
- Using standard cement grout in wet areas epoxy grout is the correct specification for shower zones and kitchen dado; it also prevents grout joint discoloration over time
- Ignoring tile thickness variation across SKUs mixing 8 mm and 9 mm tiles in the same area creates visible and felt height differences
- Large-format tiles without polymer-modified adhesive 600×1200 mm and above require polymer-modified tile adhesive for full-contact bonding; standard sand-cement mortar creates hollow spots and eventual cracking

🛠️ Technical Specifications
Material & Standard Reference [As per IS 15622:2017 and ISO 10545 Series]
| Feature |
Value / Standard |
| Water absorption (GVT) |
≤0.5% (BIa classification) |
| Water absorption (Ceramic) |
3–6% (BIIb) or above 10% (BIII) |
| Surface property |
Stain resistance and chemical resistance from fired glaze layer |
| Tile thickness |
5–6 mm (wall), 8 mm (floor), 9–10 mm (heavy-duty/large format) |
| Hardness (Mohs scale) |
6–8 for GVT and PGVT |
| Indian standards |
IS 504:2020, IS 15622:2017 |
| International references |
ISO 10545 Series, EN 14411 |
💎 Tile Grade & PEI Wear Rating
Tiles sold in India are graded under IS standards as Grade 1 (best dimensional accuracy and surface quality), Grade 2 (minor variations acceptable), and Grade 3 (significant variation suitable only for rough or industrial applications). For residential projects, always specify Grade 1.
The PEI (Porcelain Enamel Institute) wear rating indicates surface durability under foot traffic. For Indian residential floors, PEI 3 is the minimum acceptable rating; PEI 4 is recommended for living rooms and kitchens; PEI 5 is used for heavy commercial and retail floors. Wall tiles typically carry PEI 0–2 as abrasion resistance is not required. [As per standard vitrified tile specifications]
Standard Packing Specification [As per standard Morbi supply, 2026. Specifications may vary slightly by manufacturer and batch.]
| Size |
Thickness |
Tiles/Box |
Area/Box |
Box Weight |
Packing |
| 300×600 mm |
5–6 mm |
8 pcs |
~1.44 sq.m / 15.5 sq.ft |
18–22 kg |
Corrugated box |
| 600×600 mm |
8 mm |
4 pcs |
~1.44 sq.m / 15.5 sq.ft |
22–26 kg |
Corrugated box |
| 600×1200 mm |
8–9 mm |
2 pcs |
~1.44 sq.m / 15.5 sq.ft |
27–34 kg |
Corrugated box, strap & corner protection |
| 800×1600 mm |
9–10 mm |
2 pcs |
~1.28 sq.m / 13.7 sq.ft |
32–40 kg |
Foam-wrapped, strapped box |
Always confirm per-box area and shade lot number at time of dispatch from Morbi godown.
💰 Price & Market Reality
| Quality Segment |
Retail Price (₹/sq.ft) |
Morbi Ex-Godown Price (₹/sq.ft) |
| Budget |
₹20–₹40 |
₹20–₹30 |
| Mid-Range |
₹40–₹70 |
₹25–₹45 |
| Premium (GVT) |
₹70–₹150 |
₹45–₹90 |
| Ultra-Premium (PGVT) |
₹107–₹368 |
₹65–₹150+ (varies by design & finish complexity) |
Installed cost including tile adhesive and labour typically falls between ₹120–₹180/sq.ft depending on tile size, site location, and contractor rates. Retail markup over Morbi pricing ranges from approximately 20% to 80% depending on brand, showroom overhead, freight, and dealer margin.
Note: All Morbi prices are ex-godown and vary based on Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ) requirements for direct factory dispatch. Add 18% GST, freight (approx. ₹3–₹8/sq.ft depending on distance and Full Truck Load (FTL) size), loading charges, and transit breakage insurance to calculate your final landed cost. Dealer rates available on volume inquiry. Standard Morbi stock dispatch generally takes 2–7 days depending on shade availability and order quantity.

✅ Get latest Morbi factory price list GVT, PGVT & ceramic wall tiles.
📞 Contact for dealer rates & bulk dispatch.
💬 Q+A with Evidence
❓ Which glazed tile finish is safest for wet bathroom floors?
✔ Matte and anti-skid glazed tiles provide better grip in wet zones. Polished PGVT surfaces become slip hazards when wet and should not be specified for bathroom floors.
📄 Evidence: Based on recurring post-installation complaints observed in Morbi dealer dispatch projects serving residential bathroom applications.
❓ Why are 600×1200 mm tiles preferred over smaller formats today?
✔ Larger formats reduce the number of grout joints, create a cleaner and more continuous visual appearance, and give rooms a more spacious feel. They are also easier to maintain as there are fewer grout lines to clean.
📄 Evidence: Current Morbi godown dispatch demand heavily favours 600×1200 mm matte vitrified formats for living room and bedroom floors. [Based on Morbi dispatch data 2026]
❓ Is there a real quality difference between branded and unbranded Morbi glazed tiles?
✔ The tile body quality is often comparable across price tiers. Meaningful differences lie in consistency of glaze thickness, shade lot control, and BIS certification documentation not always the brand name itself.
📄 Evidence: Based on direct Morbi godown sourcing experience and factory-level supply chain observation across multiple manufacturing units in the cluster.
💡 Expert Insight
From Morbi godowns, I've seen the same tile body supplied under three or four different brand labels, each at a different price point. The manufacturing happens in the same cluster. What you pay extra for in a branded product is largely the packaging, the warranty card, and the showroom experience not always a fundamentally different tile body.
When advising builders or contractors sourcing in bulk, I tell them to ask for the water absorption certificate and the BIS standard reference directly from the factory or distributor. That tells you more about actual tile quality than the brand name does. For direct purchases from Morbi, always inspect tiles under both artificial and natural light before finalising a shade lot glaze colour shifts more than people expect between showroom lighting and actual site conditions.
❓ Sourcing glazed tiles directly from Morbi?
📧 Send your room dimensions and we'll recommend the right size, finish and quantity.
✅ Sample dispatch available. [Get a free recommendation]