I've been visiting tile sites and factories in the Morbi cluster for over two decades, and the single question I hear most often from homeowners today is this: "I want a wood-look floor, but I don't want the headache of real wood." That is exactly where wooden plank tiles fill a genuine need. These aren't decorative gimmicks they're a practical, proven solution for Indian homes where wet mopping is daily routine, monsoon humidity is real, and termites are a legitimate concern.
Wooden plank tiles are wood look ceramic, vitrified, or porcelain tiles designed for Indian homes where moisture, wet mopping, and durability matter more than real timber maintenance.

☑️ Wood look without termites, warping, or maintenance headaches.
☑️ Available in budget ceramic to premium porcelain, with 200×1200mm dominating the market.
☑️ Matte finishes outperform glossy in Indian humid conditions.
☑️ Ex-factory pricing is 50–70% lower than retail showroom rates.
Wooden plank tiles are ceramic, vitrified, or porcelain tiles with a digitally printed surface that replicates the grain, texture, and tone of natural timber. The body is entirely tile no wood content which is the whole point. They are produced in elongated plank proportions (typically 150×900mm to 300×1200mm) to mimic real floor boards.
The real difference that matters on site: wood finish tiles do not swell, warp, or attract termites, regardless of humidity, daily mopping, or temperature. In Indian conditions where real hardwood flooring fights a losing battle against moisture and insects this matters far more than it sounds.
Most homeowners who come to me want a warm, earthy floor but have already seen what happens to laminate or real wood after two monsoons. Wood look tiles solve this by combining a natural surface aesthetic with ceramic or vitrified durability that handles everything Indian daily life throws at it.
Key practical reasons buyers choose them:
| Feature | Wooden Plank Tiles | Laminate Flooring |
| Water Resistance | High | Low |
| Termite Risk | None | Moderate |
| Wet Mopping | Safe | Risky |
| Lifespan | 15–20+ years | 5–10 years |
| Maintenance | Low | Medium |

Wooden plank tiles are suitable for:
They are not the right choice for outdoor areas with direct rain exposure unless specifically rated for it, or for buyers expecting the tactile feel of actual timber underfoot.
I'll be honest about what goes wrong on site, because nobody talks about this enough.
The most common complaint I hear is lippage where long plank tiles sit unevenly after installation. This happens almost entirely because the adhesive bed is applied poorly or because tiles have a slight bow from manufacturing. In my experience, the longer the plank format, the less forgiving it is of a careless installer.

The second issue is hollow spots. When Tile Adhesive coverage is incomplete underneath a large-format tile, you get a hollow pocket.
That tile eventually cracks under foot pressure and it almost always happens six months after installation, not immediately. By then, the contractor is gone and the homeowner is calling the tile brand.
Print fading on cheaper digital tiles is also real. Very low-cost ceramic wooden tiles with thin print layers show wear in high-traffic corridors under direct sunlight within two to three years. This is a material quality issue, not an installation issue.
There are three body types in this category, and the right choice depends on where you're installing:
Ceramic wooden tiles are the entry-level option. They have higher water absorption, are suitable for low-traffic dry residential areas, and are the most affordable. Not recommended for bathrooms or any area with consistent moisture.
Vitrified wooden tiles are the practical mid-range choice for most Indian homes. Water absorption typically ranges between 0.5–3%. They hold up well for living rooms, bedrooms, and corridors, and matte finishes are widely available in this segment. [As per standard vitrified tile manufacturing specifications.]
✔️ Best for high-traffic living rooms: 200×1200mm matte vitrified wooden plank tiles.
Porcelain wooden tiles are the premium option with water absorption below 0.5%. These are the only type I'd confidently recommend for bathroom floors, kitchen areas near the sink, or balconies. For wet area applications, look for tiles with a PEI rating of 4 or above and a minimum R9 slip resistance classification. [As per EN ISO 10545 porcelain classification standards.]
✔️ Best for bathroom floors and wet areas: porcelain wooden planks with R10 anti-slip rating.

The market has shifted clearly toward longer plank formats. Here's what the current size landscape looks like:
The 200×1200mm format dominates because it creates a more convincing continuous wood-floor effect with fewer visible grout lines.
| Size | Best For | Finish Options | Price Segment |
| 150×900mm | Herringbone layouts, compact rooms | Matte, Brushed | Budget–Mid |
| 200×600mm | Bedrooms, budget builds | Matte, Glossy | Budget |
| 200×1200mm | Living rooms, corridors, open spaces | Matte, Honed, Satin | Mid–Premium |
| 300×1200mm | Large open-plan floors, lobbies | Matte, Honed | Premium |
Glossy finishes are declining in this category for a good reason they look slippery in wet conditions and show every footprint and smudge. In my experience, buyers who choose glossy wooden tiles in living rooms regret it within a year.
Matte, honed, brushed, and satin finishes are all growing. They hide dust and footprints better, look more like actual wood, and are safer underfoot when wet. For any residential floor, matte or textured finish is always the right choice over glossy in this category.
Current demand from the residential and hospitality market is moving in these directions:
Layout patterns are also evolving. Herringbone and chevron installations are no longer just for premium projects I'm seeing them in mid-range apartments regularly. The most practical layouts remain:
For colour pairing: warm-toned wood look tiles work well against light beige or cream walls. Grey wood textures pair better with concrete-look finishes or dark accent walls.

✔️ Best for living rooms: 200×1200mm matte vitrified tiles in warm brown or honey oak shades
✔️ Best for bathrooms: 300×600mm porcelain tiles with anti-slip matte finish
✔️ Best value for budget builds: 200×600mm vitrified wooden tiles, ₹40–50/sq.ft from direct factory dispatch
These are the most common mistakes I see both buyers and contractors make:
Matching grout shades are the right choice for this category. They reduce visible grout lines and maintain the continuous wood-floor effect that is the whole reason for choosing these tiles.

Installation cost for wooden plank tiles varies by layout complexity, plank size, and levelling requirements. Herringbone layouts generally require higher labour charges than straight-lay patterns.
| Feature / Metric | Ceramic Planks | Vitrified Planks | Porcelain Planks |
| Water Absorption | Above 3.0% | 0.5% to 3.0% | Below 0.5% |
| Standard Thickness | 7.5mm to 8.5mm | 9.0mm to 10.0mm | 10.0mm to 12.0mm |
| Tiles Per Box | 8 pcs (200×600mm) | 6 pcs (200×1200mm) | 4 pcs (300×1200mm) |
| Area Per Box | 10.33 sq.ft avg. | 15.50 sq.ft avg. | 15.50 sq.ft avg. |
| Average Box Weight | 14–16 kg | 28–30 kg | 32–35 kg |
| Standard Packing | Corrugated box with strap | Palletised options available | Heavy-duty strapped pallets |
| Recommended Grout Gap | 2–3mm | 2–3mm | 2–3mm |
| Finish Options | Matte, Glossy | Matte, Honed, Satin, Brushed | Matte, Anti-slip, Honed |
| Compliance | BIS IS:13630 | BIS IS:13630 | EN ISO 10545 Series |
[As per standard vitrified tile specifications BIS IS:13630 and EN ISO 10545 series.]
📞 Contact for bulk dispatch details and dealer pricing from Morbi godowns. All rates are ex-factory; GST and freight charged separately.
Current Morbi ex-factory wholesale pricing (May 2026): Direct factory sourcing offers significant savings compared to retail showroom rates.
| Quality Segment | Retail Price (₹/sq.ft) | Ex-Factory Price (₹/sq.ft) |
| Budget ceramic wooden | ₹40–85 | ₹20–25 |
| Mid-range vitrified | ₹83–151 | ₹40–70 |
| Premium porcelain | ₹151–379+ | ₹80–150 |
The gap between retail and direct factory sourcing is substantial. The same vitrified wood finish tile that sells at ₹120/sq.ft in a city showroom can often be sourced at ₹45–55/sq.ft ex-factory from the Gujarat manufacturing belt, with Morbi being the primary cluster, plus GST and freight charges.

That gap covers showroom overhead, brand premium, logistics, packaging, and sales margins none of which change the tile you're installing. Full truck dispatch from the cluster generally reduces landed cost significantly compared to local retail sourcing. Wooden tiles price per sq.ft also varies by dispatch state and order volume, so always confirm freight separately before finalising quantities.
[Based on Morbi dispatch patterns and dealer sourcing trends, May 2026.]
✔ Lippage occurs when the installer layout pattern exceeds a 33% stagger offset or uses a traditional cement slurry instead of a polymer-modified adhesive bed.
🧾 Evidence: One of the most common contractor complaints on 1200mm formats stems from using 50% brick-bond layouts without levelling clips a pattern consistently observed across residential project site inspections. [Based on factory dispatch data and contractor feedback, 2026.]
✔ Porcelain wooden plank tiles with matte or anti-slip finish are the safest choice for wet areas, with water absorption below 0.5% making them genuinely suitable for daily moisture exposure.
🧾 Evidence: Ceramic or standard vitrified variants are not recommended for bathroom floors due to moisture absorption risks. [As per EN ISO 10545 porcelain classification standards.]
✔ The 200×1200mm matte vitrified wooden plank tile is the highest-volume format dispatched currently, accounting for the majority of residential project orders.
🧾 Evidence: [Typical ranges observed across Gujarat tile factories and Morbi dealer dispatch records, 2026.]
✔ Poor adhesive coverage and uneven levelling are the most common causes. Large-format planks from 200×1200mm onwards require polymer-modified Tile Adhesive with full bed coverage.
🧾 Evidence: Frequently observed across residential projects in Gujarat and Maharashtra where thin cement bedding was used under plank formats.
From my regular interaction with dispatch managers in the Morbi cluster, I've seen massive batch variations across low-tier lines. The ex-factory price range for wooden plank tiles is wide specifically because the print quality and body density vary enormously at the budget end.
From Morbi godown visits, I've seen two tiles priced at ₹22/sq.ft. ex-factory look identical in samples yet perform very differently in three years of real use. The depth of the digital print layer and the vitrification quality of the body are not visible to the naked eye.
This is where buying from a known factory with consistent batch quality matters more than chasing the lowest per-tile price. For a detailed comparison of body types, check our vitrified vs porcelain tiles guide.
Based on Morbi factory dispatch data (2026): Batch consistency from a reliable source is the single most important factor when sourcing at the budget end of this category.
✔️ Get current prices and dealer rates direct from our Morbi godown:
📞 Contact for bulk pricing & dispatch details.
✔ Typical dispatch: 7–10 days to site.
✔ Standard packing: 1.5–2.5 sq.mt per carton.
✔ All quotes are ex-factory GST and freight charged separately
📧 Request tile samples by size and finish available for direct dispatch from Morbi.
❓ Need help calculating box quantity and wastage for your floor plan?
🎧 Contact for tile coverage estimation before dispatch.
Get answers to common questions about wooden plank tiles
The 200×1200mm format is the most widely used in current residential projects. It creates a convincing continuous floor effect and is available across all price segments. For larger open-plan spaces, 300×1200mm gives a premium wide-plank look.
Yes, but only porcelain variants with matte or anti-slip surface finish. Porcelain wooden tiles have water absorption below 0.5%, which makes them genuinely suitable for wet areas. Ceramic or standard vitrified wooden tiles with higher water absorption are not recommended for bathroom floors.
Glossy finish wooden tiles can become slippery when wet near kitchens, bathroom entrances, and during mopping. Matte, honed, and anti-slip textured finishes have better surface grip and are the safer choice for any residential floor.
A grout shade that closely matches the tile background colour works best. This reduces visible grout lines and maintains the wood-floor effect. Dark contrasting grout lines collect dust more visibly and tend to look dirty faster in corridor applications.
Yes. Large-format planks particularly 200×1200mm and 300×1200mm require proper polymer-modified Tile Adhesive with full bed coverage. Using thin cement bedding underneath these formats is one of the leading causes of hollow spots, cracking, and tile failure within the first year.
Matte and brushed finishes hide dust, footprints, and minor surface marks significantly better than glossy finishes. In corridor and high-traffic applications, honed matte finishes are the most practical choice.
Yes, porcelain wooden plank tiles with a PEI rating of 4 or above are highly suitable for commercial spaces like lobbies, cafés, and corridors. Their high density and wear resistance handle heavy foot traffic much better than real wood or laminate.
Add some products to get started
Add some products to get started