Here's something most tile shops won't tell you upfront: the crack that chips off the edge of a "premium" tile in your hallway often reveals the truth about what you actually bought. If the exposed edge shows a different colour or a dull white core, you didn't get a full body tile no matter what the box said.
Full body vitrified tiles are the one category where the surface and the core are the same material, top to bottom. That's not a marketing line. It's the entire manufacturing logic behind them, and it's why architects specify full body tiles for spaces that take a beating malls, hospital corridors, airports, industrial floors while glossy printed tiles quietly wear thin somewhere underneath.
This guide covers what full body vitrified tiles actually are, where they genuinely make sense, where they don't, and what nobody at the counter usually explains about pricing, sizing, and getting genuine material from Morbi.

Full body vitrified tiles are unglazed, homogeneous porcelain tiles where the colour and material composition run consistently through the entire thickness of the tile, not just a printed or glazed top layer. In practice, this means the surface pattern can never wear away, because there's nothing separate to wear away the "surface" and the "body" are one and the same.
You'll also see this material called vitrified full body tiles or, in older trade language, through-body porcelain though in the Indian market, full-body vitrified material is the term you'll hear most from dealers, architects, and Morbi manufacturers.
Compare that to a glazed tile, where a thin printed or coloured layer sits on top of a plain clay base. Chip a glazed tile and you'll usually see white or grey underneath. Chip a genuine full body tile and the same tone continues straight through.

On real projects, buyers rarely ask how the tile is made but it explains almost every buying decision that follows.
Full body tiles start with a refined mix of clay, silica, quartz, and feldspar, sieved down to a fine, uniform grain. This is hydraulically pressed under heavy pressure and fired in kilns between roughly 1200°C and 1400°C. At that temperature, the feldspar melts and fuses the entire mix into a dense, glass-like matrix there's no separate glaze layer bonded on top, just one continuous body from face to base.
That's also the reason full body tiles have almost no internal pores. Water absorption typically comes in under 0.05%, well inside the IS 15622:2017 and ISO 13006 limits for Group BIa unglazed tiles. It sounds like a small technical detail. It isn't it's the single fact that determines what adhesive you're allowed to use, which we'll get to.
One thing many buyers overlook: because color pigment is baked in during firing, not printed on afterward, exact colour replication across separate production runs is genuinely difficult. If you run short mid-project, matching the old batch later is close to impossible which is exactly why batch verification matters more here than with almost any other tile category.


| Size (mm) | Size (ft, approx.) | Common Use |
| 300×300, 400×400 | ~1×1 ft | Utility areas, older layouts |
| 600×600 | ~2×2 ft | Residential floors, most-stocked size |
| 600×1200 | ~2×4 ft | Living rooms, commercial floors |
| 800×800, 1000×1000 | ~2.6×2.6 ft, ~3.3×3.3 ft | Premium residential, showrooms |
| 1200×2400 and above | ~4×8 ft | Large-format commercial, feature walls |
| Step & riser formats (e.g. 1000×300, 1200×300) | ~3.3×1 ft, ~4×1 ft | Staircases, matched nosing profiles |
Heavy-duty and parking-grade full body tiles are also made in thicker 12mm, 15mm, and 16mm profiles worth asking about specifically if the project involves vehicular traffic, since standard 9mm stock won't be offered unless you request it.
This is where most tile blogs get vague. Here's the honest version, with the caveats that actually matter.
| Parameter | Typical Value | Standard |
| Water Absorption | < 0.05% (max 0.5% for BIa) | IS 15622:2017, ISO 13006 |
| Thickness | 8.5–9mm (standard), 12–16mm (heavy duty) | - |
| Modulus of Rupture | ≥ 35 N/mm² (typical 40–45) | ISO 10545-4 |
| Breaking Strength | ≥ 1300 N (premium 1800–2200 N) | ISO 10545-4 |
| Slip Resistance | R9 (dry interiors) to R11–R13 (wet/commercial) | DIN 51130 |
| Wet DCOF | ≥ 0.42 minimum | ANSI A326.3 |
| Apparent Density | 2.20–2.40 g/cc | ISO 10545-3 |
Typical values may vary depending on manufacturer, tile thickness, and production batch. Always confirm final specifications from the supplier's technical data sheet.
Here's the thing about PEI ratings: you'll see some dealer catalogs slap a "PEI IV" label on full body tiles. Technically, that's a misapplication. PEI ratings (ISO 10545-7) measure glaze wear and unglazed full body tiles have no glaze layer to wear. The correct metric is Deep Abrasion Volume Loss under ISO 10545-6. If a supplier can't quote that figure, it's a fair sign they're copy-pasting specs from a glazed-tile template rather than testing the actual product.
| Factor | Full Body | Double Charge | GVT / PGVT |
| Design layer | Colour runs through entire body | Colour layer 2–4mm deep | Thin printed/glazed surface |
| Design range | Solid tones, salt-and-pepper, subtle grain | Broader patterns, marble-like | Photorealistic marble, wood, concrete |
| Long-term wear | Design never fades | Visible wear possible after decades of heavy traffic | Surface can chip/scratch through to base |
| Typical cost | Higher | Mid-range | Lower to mid |
| Best fit | Heavy commercial traffic, industrial, staircases | Mid-premium residential/commercial | Aesthetic-first residential |
| Myth | Reality |
| "Full body tiles are 100% waterproof" | Absorption is near-zero, not literal zero under 0.5% by standard, typically under 0.05% |
| "Any cement will hold it down" | Zero-porosity backs need chemical bonding via polymer adhesive; cement crystals have nothing to grip onto |
| "PEI rating tells you the durability" | Not applicable to unglazed tiles deep abrasion resistance is the correct metric |
| "It's scratch-proof because it's unglazed" | Matte full body can be more sensitive to micro-scratches than a polished double-charge surface, since there's no compressed wear-glaze on top |
Surprisingly, that last point is one professionals genuinely disagree on more on that further down.
✔️ Good Application
❌ Where NOT To Use
That sounds like a small caveat, but on real projects it's usually the deciding factor between full body and GVT not price, not durability claims.

Price varies by brand and location. Verify with your local tile dealer.
What we can tell you: expect Metro pricing (Mumbai, Delhi NCR, Bangalore) to run noticeably higher than Tier-2 city or direct-from-Morbi pricing, largely due to distribution layers. On top of the base rate, factor in:
Never trust a quote that skips GST or dispatch timelines it's usually an incomplete picture, not a better deal.
Here's the field test dealers rarely mention: place a drop of water on the unglazed back of the tile. On a genuine full body vitrified tile, the water beads up and sits on the surface because there's essentially no porosity to absorb it. On a duplicate often a sand-filled matrix dressed up to look like the real thing the water soaks in and visibly darkens the material within seconds.
Pair that with a simple weight check. Genuine full body tiles feel noticeably dense for their size, a direct result of that 2.20–2.40 g/cc apparent density. A lighter, hollow-feeling piece of the same dimensions is a red flag.
What Most Installers Will Tell You: ask for the lot number, calibre code, and shade code on every carton before it leaves the dealer's shop not just on the first box you inspect. Boxes from mismatched batches, even under the same product name, are the single most common cause of visible patchiness after installation. Mixing caliber codes causes uneven grout line width across the floor; mixing shade codes causes visible colour banding between tiles laid side by side.

This section causes more post-installation regret than almost any other part of the buying decision, so it's worth reading slowly.
Adhesive is not optional-grade. Because full body tiles have near-zero porosity, cement can't form its usual mechanical grip there are no pores for it to key into. The bond depends entirely on a polymer-modified chemical adhesive, minimum Type 2 (C2TE) for tiles up to 600×600mm, and Type 3 (C2TES1) for anything larger, for wet areas, or for exterior walls. This corresponds to IS 15477-compliant polymer-modified adhesive not sand-cement, which has nothing to grip onto on a zero-porosity surface. Skipping this even with a "we'll just add extra cement" workaround is the leading cause of hollow-sounding, debonded floors within 12–18 months.
100% back-buttering is not a luxury step. A standard notched trowel on the floor alone typically achieves only 50–70% adhesive coverage. Skimming adhesive on the tile back as well pushes that to over 95%, which is what actually prevents edge fractures under point loads.
In Indian summer conditions, screed surfaces can reach 55–60°C, which causes adhesive to skin over in minutes. Installers need to work in small 0.5–1 sq.m sections rather than spreading a large area at once.
Leave a minimum 2–3mm spacer joint, with intermediate expansion joints every 3–5 metres on large floors, and don't skip perimeter joints where tiles meet walls or columns. Skipping this is the most common cause of tenting and cracking on large installations exposed to heat.
Wait 24 hours before grouting. Rushing this traps hydration moisture under the tile and weakens the adhesive bond long-term.
Wastage: budget 5–10% extra for standard layouts, but 15–20% for large-format tiles (800×1600mm and above) or layouts with heavy cutting the tighter, denser material is harder to cut cleanly than standard ceramic. Use a tile quantity calculator to convert your floor area into exact box counts before ordering, factoring in this wastage percentage.
Maintenance: clean with pH-neutral detergents. Avoid strong acidic or alkaline cleaners on textured/matte finishes, and skip steel wool pads on grip-finish surfaces they leave microscopic iron fibres in the texture that rust over time.

Buying full body vitrified tiles from Morbi, Gujarat cuts out one or two distribution layers compared to buying through a metro retail showroom which is usually where the price gap between Metro and Tier-2 comes from in the first place.
What direct sourcing from a manufacturer-partner like Morbitaa Buildmart LLP typically gets you: consistent batch/lot documentation on every carton, size and finish options beyond what a local showroom stocks, and dispatch timelines you can actually plan a project around (3–10 days, depending on order size).
Morbi remains India's dominant tile manufacturing cluster, and full body vitrified tiles from Morbi are actively shipped to UAE, Africa, and Southeast Asian markets regions where infrastructure and commercial projects specifically call for long-lifecycle, low-maintenance flooring.
For international buyers, the practical questions usually come down to container loading capacity, palletisation, and export documentation details that are worth confirming directly with the manufacturer rather than assuming standard domestic packaging applies. Export-grade batches from established Morbi units also typically go through tighter dimensional and shade-consistency checks than purely domestic runs, since return shipping on a mismatched export order is a far bigger cost than it would be locally.
Full body vitrified tiles earn their premium in exactly one way: by removing the wear layer as a point of failure entirely. That's genuinely valuable for high-traffic commercial floors, staircases, and long-lifecycle projects and largely wasted if what you actually want is a photorealistic marble look on a tight budget, where GVT will serve you just as well for less money.
If you're not sure which option suits your space, share your layout with a tile consultant before confirming your order.
Confirm your full body vitrified tile order with genuine batch documentation.+91 75677 75672
Get answers to common questions about full body tiles
Yes, ideal for living rooms, staircases, and parking.
Yes, Textured tiles with correct thickness perform well when screed and adhesive are properly installed.
Polished variants can be. Matte and textured finishes provide better grip.
Yes, Low water absorption makes them suitable for sun and rain exposure.
Regular wet mopping with neutral cleaners is sufficient. To prevent staining, always use epoxy grout in commercial flooring.
Cracking typically traces back to uneven subfloors or poor adhesive coverage, rather than the tile itself.
Choose polished for dry indoor areas, matte for general circulation, and textured for parking, ramps, and outdoor zones.
Yes. Buyers can request IS 15622:2017 compliance certificates from Morbi suppliers at the time of dispatch. Government and institutional buyers should confirm grade requirements with their project consultant before placing bulk orders.
They can be used in light to medium industrial environments, but the base design, load distribution, and movement type must be evaluated. For heavy forklifts or point loads, flooring specifications should be planned with structural guidance.
Full body vitrified tiles are unglazed porcelain tiles where the colour and material composition are consistent through the entire thickness, not just printed on the surface. This is defined under IS 15622:2017 and ISO 13006 as Group BIa unglazed tiles, with water absorption under 0.5%.
Full body tiles start with a refined mix of clay, silica, quartz, and feldspar, hydraulically pressed and fired in kilns between roughly 1200°C and 1400°C. The feldspar melts and fuses the entire mix into a dense, glass-like matrix, so there's no separate glaze layer — just one continuous body from face to base.
Regular ceramic tiles have a plain clay base with a thin printed or glazed layer on top, so chips reveal a different colour underneath. Full body vitrified tiles have colour running through the entire thickness, so the same tone continues straight through even when chipped.
Full body tiles are better suited to heavy traffic since the design never fades or wears off, while glazed vitrified tiles (GVT/PGVT) offer photorealistic marble, wood, or concrete looks at a lower cost. The right choice depends on whether durability or aesthetics is the priority for your space.
Not literally waterproof, but close to it. Water absorption is typically under 0.05%, well inside the ≤0.5% ceiling set for Group BIa unglazed tiles under IS 15622:2017 and ISO 13006.
Matte full body finishes can actually be more sensitive to micro-scratches than a polished double-charge surface, since there's no compressed wear-glaze on top to resist surface marks. This is one point professionals genuinely disagree on.
Yes, they're low maintenance once installed correctly. Clean with pH-neutral detergents, avoid strong acidic or alkaline cleaners on textured/matte finishes, and skip steel wool pads on grip-finish surfaces since they leave microscopic iron fibres that rust over time.
Full body vitrified tiles have a long lifespan with minimal surface wear, since there's no thin wear-glaze layer to erode over time. This makes them genuinely suited to 24/7 foot traffic in airports, malls, and hospital corridors without needing re-polishing or resurfacing.
Slip resistance depends on the finish chosen, ranging from R9 for dry interiors to R11–R13 for wet or commercial areas under the DIN 51130 standard. As a practical action tip, always confirm the R-rating and Wet DCOF value (minimum 0.42 per ANSI A326.3) before selecting a finish for wet zones.
Yes, full body vitrified tiles can be used on both walls and floors, though floor use is far more common given their durability advantage. Matching mitred edges also make them suitable for countertop profiles and staircase nosing where wall-to-floor colour continuity matters.
They perform best in commercial flooring (airports, malls, hospital lobbies, school corridors), industrial settings (factories, warehouses, loading docks), and staircases where nosing must match the tread colour exactly. Heavy-traffic residential entrance lobbies are another strong fit.
Yes, this is exactly where full body vitrified tiles are genuinely suited 24/7 foot traffic in airports, malls, and hospital corridors, where the surface can't wear thin because there's no separate wear layer to fail.
Yes, in the right thickness and finish. Standard 9mm interior-grade tiles aren't meant for vehicular loads heavy-duty 12mm, 15mm, or 16mm variants with a textured or matte finish (R11 or higher) are the correct spec for outdoor and parking applications.
Full body vitrified tiles come in matte, sugar/lapato, satin, structured/grip, and carving finishes, with polished versions being rarer since polishing works against slip resistance. Carving and sugar-finish variants are seeing rising demand across both Tier 1 metros and Tier 2 cities.
Common sizes range from 300×300mm and 600×600mm for residential floors up to 600×1200mm, 800×800mm, and 1200×2400mm for premium and large-format commercial use. Step and riser formats like 1000×300mm are also available for staircases, along with heavy-duty 12–16mm profiles for parking-grade applications.
Full body vitrified tiles are limited to solid tones, salt-and-pepper patterns, and subtle grain designs, since colour is baked into the body during firing rather than printed on afterward. For photorealistic marble, wood-grain, or concrete-look designs, GVT/PGVT tiles serve that need better.
Morbitaa Buildmart LLP sources full body vitrified tiles direct from Morbi's manufacturing cluster, including standard residential sizes, large-format commercial variants, step-and-riser sets, and heavy-duty parking-grade tiles in 12mm, 15mm, and 16mm profiles.
Sizes range from 300×300mm residential formats up to 1200×2400mm large-format commercial tiles, with finishes spanning matte, sugar/lapato, satin, structured/grip, and carving. Call +91 75677 75672 to confirm current stock across sizes and finishes.
Buying direct from Morbi through Morbitaa Buildmart LLP cuts out one or two distribution layers compared to metro retail showrooms, which typically closes the Metro-vs-Tier-2 price gap. It also gets you consistent batch/lot documentation and dispatch timelines you can plan a project around (3–10 days).
Morbi remains India's dominant tile manufacturing cluster for full body vitrified tiles, with established units supplying both domestic and export markets across UAE, Africa, and Southeast Asia. As a practical action tip, always verify lot number, caliber code, and shade code on every carton before confirming a bulk order from any supplier.
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