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