Get answers to common questions about gvt tiles
On bathroom walls, yes, without restriction. For bathroom floors, use only matte or anti-skid tile variants strictly avoid glossy or PGVT finishes on wet surfaces, particularly in homes with elderly users or children.
GVT has a standard digitally printed glaze in matte, glossy, lapato, or sugar finish. PGVT (Polished Glazed Vitrified Tile) has an ultra-glossy, mirror-like surface achieved by polishing the glaze after firing. PGVT looks very premium but shows water marks and micro-scratches more readily and unlike natural marble, it cannot be re-polished once worn.
Honest answer: GVT wins on design. For long-term scratch resistance and polish durability in heavy-traffic areas, double charge vitrified tiles hold up better because their wear layer goes deeper than GVT's glaze.
In most cases, the tile itself is not defective. Cracking is typically caused by hollow bedding under the tile, uneven substrate, missing expansion joints, or impact on an unsupported section. Proper installation with full tile adhesive coverage and a level substrate is the most important preventive measure.
Matte or lapato finish in 600×1200 mm is the most practical choice it hides dust, handles foot traffic better and is safer for homes with children or elderly users than glossy or PGVT.
Check the PEI rating for your application area, surface finish suitability, shade consistency across boxes, batch number, tile calibration (dimensional accuracy), and edge straightness. Always order 10–15% extra material from the same batch to cover cutting wastage and future repairs.
Yes. Lighter GVT tiles are well-suited for bathroom walls, kitchen backsplashes, and feature walls. The wide design range allows matching floor and wall tiles within the same visual theme, and the glazed surface offers good stain and chemical resistance.
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