Most buyers searching for 500x500 mm tiles already know what size they want. What they don't know what nobody tells them upfront is that this format behaves very differently depending on the body type, thickness, and finish they choose. Get those three wrong, and you'll be dealing with cracked parking, hollow-sounding floors, or discoloured tiles six months after laying.

500x500 mm tiles also written as 20x20 inch tiles or 50x50 cm tiles are a medium-square floor format that sits between compact 400x400 mm and the now-popular 600x600 mm size. They measure exactly 500 millimetres on each side, typically in 8 mm to 12 mm thickness depending on the application.
Definition (for Overview / Featured Snippet):
500x500 mm tiles are medium-format ceramic, vitrified, or full-body vitrified floor tiles manufactured to 500×500 mm (20×20 inch) dimensions as per IS 15622:2017 and ISO 13006:2018. In real-world application, each tile covers approximately 0.25 square metres (2.69 sq. ft.), and they are widely used for commercial floors, driveways, parking, and high-traffic living rooms where structural load-bearing and finish durability are both required.
These tiles are classified in India as a "floor-best" format meaning their body density, weight, and load-bearing capacity are optimised for floor use, not walls. Architects specify them for commercial basements, entry lobbies, and heavy-duty parking precisely because the geometry holds up under repeated load better than narrower rectangular formats.
| Parameter | Standard Value |
| Nominal Size | 500 × 500 mm (20 × 20 inches) |
| Thickness | 8 mm (residential), 10–12 mm (commercial/parking) |
| Water Absorption | Vitrified: ≤0.5% (Group BIa per IS 15622) / Ceramic: 4–6% |
| Breaking Strength | ≥1300 N minimum for all 500×500 mm format tiles per IS 15622:2017 / ISO 13006:2018. Thicker tiles (12 mm) substantially exceed this minimum under load testing. Request manufacturer test certificates for application-specific vehicular load compliance confirmation. |
| PEI Rating | Class 3–4 (residential to heavy commercial) |
| DCOF (wet slip) | >0.42 recommended for outdoor/wet use |
| Slip Resistance | R9–R10 (interiors), R11–R12 (outdoor/parking/ramps) |
| Grout Joint | Min 2–3 mm (non-rectified: 3 mm; rectified: 1.5–2 mm) |
| Coverage (per tile) | Approximately 0.25 sq. metres (2.69 sq. ft.) per tile |
| Coverage (per box) | Typically 4–6 tiles per box = approximately 1–1.5 sq. metres per box. Confirm pieces-per-box and exact coverage with your dealer at time of ordering. |
| IS/ISO Reference | IS 15622:2017, ISO 13006:2018, IS 15477 (adhesives) |
One specification most buyers overlook: the 12 mm thickness isn't decorative. It's structural. A standard 8 mm tile will fracture under the sustained dynamic load of an SUV or commercial vehicle. If you're tiling a parking bay, 12 mm full-body vitrified material is non-negotiable.

The 500x500 format comes in three main material bodies in India:

The strongest option. Water absorption ≤0.5%, uniform body throughout no glaze layer to chip or wear away. This is what gets specified for parking, commercial floors, and high-traffic corridors. Morbi factories produce these in large volumes for both domestic and export supply.
Vitrified base with a decorative glaze layer on top. Excellent design range marble, stone, geometric, and wood looks with solid durability for residential floors and living rooms. Not ideal for outdoor environments where the glaze layer can wear under vehicle or sustained foot abrasion.
Water absorption typically 4–6%. More affordable, widely available, and fine for dry interior spaces and walls. One thing many buyers overlook: standard ceramic in the 500x500 format should not be specified for heavy vehicular parking. Group BIII ceramic will crack under sustained mechanical load. This isn't an opinion it's a material classification matter under IS 15622. If you're still comparing material types before committing to a size, our vitrified tiles buying guide covers the full spectrum from ceramic to full-body vitrified.
| Finish | Best For | Avoid In |
| Matt / Satin | Living rooms, bedrooms, office lobbies | Not for outdoor wet zones alone |
| Glossy / High Gloss | Indoor showrooms, dry commercial interiors | Outdoor, bathroom floors, parking |
| Punch / 3D Anti-Skid | Parking, driveways, ramps, outdoor | Indoor residential (texture feels rough underfoot) |
| Rustic / Stone Texture | Garden paths, outdoor patios, industrial floors | High-sheen interior spaces |
| Lappato / Semi-Polished | Upscale living rooms, hotel lobbies | Wet outdoor surfaces |
| Nano Polish | Premium residential interiors | Wet areas without white C2TE adhesive |
A note on glossy vs anti-skid: the terms are often confused in dealer conversations. Anti-skid is not just "rough surface." Genuine anti-skid performance relies on engineered micro-grip texture at R11 rating and a DCOF value above 0.42 not random surface roughness. If a supplier can't cite the R-rating or DCOF on their parking tile, that's a red flag.
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In practice, this format has unusually wide application range more than most buyers realise when they first look it up.
One design point architects mention: the 500x500 format is particularly well-suited for checkerboard patterns. The square geometry simplifies the visual field, avoids "visual noise" in large open kitchens or entrance lobbies, and creates a clean rhythm across the floor. It's why you still see it so often in high-ceilinged commercial spaces built in the 2000s and why it's having a quiet comeback in contemporary residential projects. For a curated range of design options in this format, the PGVT floor tile collection offers the widest decorative variety available from Morbi.

This is one of the most searched comparison questions and one where almost no competitor gives a straight answer.
| Factor | 500x500 mm | 600x600 mm |
| Size in inches | 20×20 inches | 24×24 inches (approx.) |
| Tiles per sq. metre | ~4 tiles | ~2.7 tiles |
| Wastage (straight lay) | 10% buffer recommended | 10% buffer recommended |
| Wastage (diagonal/pattern) | 15–20% buffer | 20%+ buffer |
| Parking suitability | ✅ Yes (12 mm version) | ✅ Yes (12 mm version) |
| Checkerboard pattern | ✅ Excellent 2-colour works well | 🟡 Works but requires more planning |
| Joint count (visual) | More joints, subtle grid | Fewer joints, cleaner look |
| Adhesive cost | Standard C2TE | Standard C2TE |
| Availability in Morbi | Very High | Very High |
| Installation complexity | Moderate | Moderate–High |
| Price range | Comparable to 600x600 | Comparable to 500x500 |
Here's the thing the 600x600 mm doesn't automatically look "better" than 500x500 mm. In smaller to mid-size rooms, the 500x500 mm format actually looks more proportionate. The 600x600 mm starts showing its advantage in large open spaces above 300 sq. ft. where fewer grout joints create a cleaner visual sweep.

| Myth | Reality |
| "Ceramic tiles are fine for parking." | Standard ceramic (Group BIII) cracks under vehicle loads. 12 mm full-body vitrified is mandatory. |
| "Anti-skid just means rough texture." | True anti-skid requires R11 rating and DCOF >0.42 engineered micro-grip, not random roughness. |
| "Zero-joint installation is fine for rectified tiles." | Wrong. Minimum 1.5–3 mm grout joint is required. Zero-joint causes thermal expansion chipping. |
| "Sand-cement mortar works for laying vitrified tiles." | Vitrified tiles have <0.5% water absorption there's nothing for cement mortar to grip. C2TE polymer-modified adhesive is required. |
| "Outdoor tiles need zero maintenance." | Outdoor grouting must use epoxy grout to prevent weed growth and water seepage under the tile bed. |
Price varies by brand, body type, finish, and location. Verify with your local tile dealer.
A few pricing realities worth knowing before you approach a dealer:
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This is the section most tile guides skip entirely. Here's what experienced installers actually tell buyers on site:
Back-buttering is not optional for vitrified tiles. When an installer skips back-buttering applying adhesive to both the tile back AND the substrate you get adhesive coverage of 50–70% instead of the required 95%+. The result: hollow sounds when you tap the tile three months after laying, followed by delamination. You can hear it. Then you have to fix it.
Grey adhesive discolours white tiles permanently. This is the most under-discussed disaster in residential tile projects. Light-coloured, nano-polished, and cream vitrified tiles are slightly translucent. Standard grey cement adhesive bleeds through, creating permanent patchy discolouration you can see from across the room. Always specify white C2TE adhesive for light-coloured 500x500 mm floor tiles.
Movement joints every 3–4 metres. Installers who skip perimeter and intermediate movement joints produce floors that "tent" where tiles pop up in a ridge especially in Indian summers when surfaces hit 50°C+. Tenting isn't an adhesive failure. It's a thermal expansion failure. Silicone-filled movement joints at the perimeter and every 3–4 metres of floor area prevent this entirely.
The 3-4-5 rule for checkerboard. If you're doing a two-colour checkerboard in 500x500 mm, your installer must use the 3-4-5 rule to establish a perfectly square starting line. One degree of angular error in the centre compounded across a 200 sq. ft. floor creates 40–50 mm of pattern drift at the walls. You'll see it immediately.
C2TE adhesive needs 24–48 hours before grouting. Time-pressed contractors often grout the same day. Early grouting displaces the tiles while the adhesive is still setting. Always confirm cure time with your installer before they start grouting.

A straight lay needs 10% extra. Checkerboard, diagonal, or herringbone layouts need 15–20%. Buying exact quantities almost always forces a second purchase from a different batch, meaning visible colour variation across your floor. Use a tile calculator before ordering to determine the correct quantity including wastage allowance.
Tiles are fired in batches. Even the same design from the same factory can show visible shade differences between production runs. Always check all three: the lot number, caliber code, and shade variation code on every box. If codes don't match, don't mix.
A glossy 500x500 mm floor tile in a bathroom or outdoor patio is a safety hazard when wet. Soap film and water on a smooth glaze surface are a known hazard combination in Indian bathrooms. Match finish to wet/dry risk rustic, punch, or R-rated finishes for wet zones.
Always keep at least one sealed box from the original manufacturing batch after installation. Batch designs are discontinued quickly. If you need to replace two broken tiles a year later, that sealed reserve box is the only guaranteed match.
8 mm residential tiles in a parking bay will crack not immediately, but under repeated vehicle load cycling over 6–12 months. Specify the right thickness for the intended load. It costs more upfront. Replacing a cracked parking floor costs vastly more.

Contrarian View: The 500x500 mm format isn't always the smarter choice over 600x600 mm just because it's traditional. In an open-plan living-dining area above 400 sq. ft. with standard ceiling height, the 600x600 mm delivers cleaner visual impact with fewer grout lines. The 500x500 holds its advantage in smaller rooms, checkerboard applications, heavy-duty commercial floors, and parking where load-bearing geometry and installation flexibility matter more than visual minimalism. In 2026, 800×1600 mm and 1200×2400 mm large-format slabs are gaining share in open-plan Tier 1 interiors but the 500×500 mm format retains a structural and practical edge in parking, raised access floors, and two-colour pattern work where large-slab installation geometry creates significantly greater installer risk and wastage.
Professional Debate Grout joint width: There's genuine disagreement in the installation trade about 2 mm vs 3 mm grout joints for 500x500 mm floors. Buyers often request 2 mm for a "seamless" look. Experienced installers in India increasingly push for 3 mm, arguing that Indian floor substrates which typically run at ±3 mm flatness tolerance across 2 metres need the extra joint allowance to absorb unevenness and thermal expansion. On real projects, I've seen 2 mm joints crack within 18 months in ground-floor applications exposed to seasonal temperature shifts. The visual difference between 2 mm and 3 mm is barely noticeable. The structural difference isn't.
Morbi manufacturing reality: Factory calibration tolerances mean a nominal 10 mm tile can actually measure anywhere from 9.2 mm to 10.8 mm. For standard single-colour floors, this is manageable. For checkerboard two-colour installations, you need both colours from batches with matching caliber codes ideally from the same factory firing cycle. A caliber mismatch of just 0.8 mm creates visible lippage at every colour transition joint.
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Small apartment, 2BHK under 700 sq. ft.: Stick with 500x500 mm GVT in a matte or lappato finish. The size suits room proportions well. Avoid 600x600 mm it won't give you the visual upgrade you expect in compact rooms, and cut wastage will be higher.
Builder floor / rental property: 500x500 mm ceramic (Group BIII) for dry interior areas keeps project costs manageable. Use a rustic or structured finish to hide wear. Don't invest in nano-polish here the maintenance requirements don't suit rental environments.
Luxury home / independent villa: Consider 500x500 mm full-body vitrified for living areas and matching parking tiles in 12 mm punch finish. This gives visual coherence across indoor and outdoor spaces with matching colour families from the same factory source.
Commercial floor retail or office: 500x500 mm full-body vitrified or GVT in PEI Class 4–5 rating. For procurement documents, specify that tiles must carry manufacturer test certificates confirming compliance with IS 15622:2017 and ISO 13006:2018 for the intended load classification. Get that confirmation in writing before ordering.
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If you're not sure which finish or thickness suits your space, share your floor plan and application type with a tile consultant before confirming your order.

Get answers to common questions about 500x500 mm tiles
They're used for residential living rooms, commercial office floors, vehicle parking (12 mm version), driveways, entry lobbies, and outdoor patios. The 500x500 format is classified as "floor-best" meaning its structural properties are optimised for floor load-bearing, not wall applications. The 20x20 inch size also makes it popular for checkerboard two-colour floor patterns, especially in entries and large kitchens.
Price varies by body type (ceramic vs vitrified), finish (matt, glossy, punch), thickness (8 mm vs 12 mm), brand, and location. All tile prices in India attract 18% GST. Metro-city dealer prices typically run higher than ex-Morbi factory rates. For current wholesale pricing and box quantities, verify directly with your tile dealer or contact a Morbi-based manufacturer. Don't rely on outdated price listings online factory rates shift seasonally.
Depends on the location. For living rooms and lobbies: matte or lappato finish. For parking and driveways: punch anti-skid finish with R11 rating and DCOF >0.42. For outdoor patios: rustic or stone texture. Glossy finish works well for dry commercial interiors but should not be used on bathroom floors, ramps, or outdoor surfaces it becomes a slip hazard when wet.
The 600x600 mm tile covers more area per tile with fewer grout joints, giving open spaces a cleaner appearance. The 500x500 mm is better proportioned for compact rooms, is the preferred size for checkerboard patterns, and works better in applications where load distribution across more tiles (4 tiles per sq. metre vs 2.7 tiles) provides structural stability. For parking, both sizes are available in 12 mm; choice then depends on the pattern preference and available stock.
Yes — but only the 12 mm thick full-body vitrified version. Standard 8 mm tiles, whether vitrified or ceramic, are not rated for sustained vehicular load and will fracture under repeated pressure cycles. For SUV parking and commercial vehicles, always specify tiles with breaking strength ≥1300 N per IS 15622:2017 and request the manufacturer's test certificate confirming compliance before ordering. Practical tip: always request a sample piece and check the tile body a genuine full-body vitrified tile will show consistent colour through the cross-section, not just on the surface.
Morbi is India's tile manufacturing hub factory-gate prices there reflect direct production costs without retail layers. By the time the same tile reaches Mumbai or Bengaluru, it carries transport costs, state-level dealer margins, and local handling charges. The gap typically runs 10–25% above ex-Morbi rates depending on the city, tile grade, and supplier relationship. Dealers in metro cities also hold higher inventory costs than stockists closer to Morbi. If you're procuring in bulk for a housing project or dealer stocking — sourcing directly from a Morbi manufacturer can significantly reduce your landed cost per box.
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