Get answers to common questions about border tiles
The standard width for bathroom dado border tiles in India is between 75 mm and 150 mm. The most common installed formats are 300×75 mm and 250×75 mm strips, typically run horizontally along the wall at dado height or as a decorative break between tiled and painted sections.
Most wall border tiles are ceramic with a glossy or polished glaze surface and are not designed for floor traffic loads. Using them on floors causes faster surface wear, edge chipping, and creates a safety concern because glazed ceramic surfaces become slippery when wet, particularly in bathrooms and kitchens.
Heavily decorative floral border tiles have become uncommon in modern home projects as neutral and minimal design preferences have taken over urban markets. Most current bathroom projects either skip borders entirely or use a plain solid-color strip. Floral and traditional motif borders are still relevant in pooja rooms, heritage-style homes, and interior courtyards.
Border tiles are available from approximately ₹30 per sq.ft for standard ceramic formats up to ₹300 per sq.ft and above for premium vitrified or porcelain options. Pricing depends on material, surface finish, design complexity, and order quantity. Dealer rates from Morbi godowns are available on request and include freight and GST calculation based on dispatch destination.
Use a polymer-modified tile adhesive rated for the specific tile weight and wall substrate. Standard cement slurry is the most common reason border strips fail on walls, particularly in wet areas like bathrooms. Apply with a notched trowel to achieve consistent coverage across the full back face of the narrow strip, and allow full curing time before grouting. For orders from Morbi, confirm the tile body type with your supplier before selecting adhesive grade.
For textured and relief surfaces, use a stiff-bristled brush with mild detergent solution worked directly into the grooves. For hard water deposits, diluted white vinegar applied with a brush and rinsed thoroughly is effective without damaging the glaze. When removing old border strips, score the grout joints fully with a grout saw before using a flat chisel — working too fast without releasing the joints is the main cause of adjacent tile damage. Always keep 5–10% extra main tiles in reserve for this situation.
Border tiles can serve as a low skirting alternative along the floor-wall junction in dry interior areas. A 300×75 mm or 300×100 mm strip laid horizontally at the base of a wall covers the cut tile edge and gives a finished appearance similar to a skirting board. For wet areas like bathrooms, use a vitrified body with water absorption below 3% rather than a standard ceramic strip. Thickness must match the main floor tile to avoid a raised lip at the junction.
Add some products to get started
Add some products to get started