Walk into any tile showroom in India today and ask for "GVT," and there's a decent chance the salesperson will point you toward whatever's shiniest on the wall. That's not entirely their fault GVT has become shorthand for "good quality vitrified tile" in most retail conversations, even though the term actually describes a very specific manufacturing process. Get the definition wrong, and you can end up specifying the wrong tile for a wet bathroom floor or paying a premium for a finish your space doesn't need.
Here's the thing GVT isn't one product. It's a category that spans matte anti-skid floors, mirror-polished showpieces, and everything in between. This guide breaks down what GVT actually is, where it genuinely performs, where it doesn't, and what the price tag actually includes once you factor in GST, freight, and installation.

☑️ Best For: Living rooms, bedrooms, dry-to-moderate traffic residential and commercial floors; matte/carving finishes for wet areas too.
☑️ Avoid If: You need a wet bathroom/kitchen floor and are eyeing polished PGVT go matte or textured instead.
☑️ Budget: Price varies by brand and location; factor 18% GST + Morbi lead time of 3–10 days.
☑️ Maintenance: Easy neutral pH mop; avoid acid cleaners and abrasive scrubs.
☑️ Durability: 50+ year lifespan for the tile body; glaze layer on printed GVT wears thinner under 10–15 years of heavy commercial traffic.
GVT (Glazed Vitrified Tile) is a fully vitrified ceramic tile with less than 0.5% water absorption under ISO 13006 Group BIa / IS 15622:2017, finished with a digitally printed liquid glaze layer on top. In real-world application, this means you get the density and durability of a near-zero-porosity tile body, combined with a design surface that can replicate marble, wood, or stone with genuine visual accuracy.
The body clay, silica, and feldspar gets pressed and fired at temperatures crossing 1200°C. That firing is what makes the tile vitrified: dense, glass-like, essentially immune to water penetration. The glaze sits on top as a separate, much thinner layer, printed digitally and fused onto the surface. This two-part structure dense body plus printed glaze is the single most important thing to understand about GVT, because it explains almost every strength and weakness the tile has.
One thing many buyers overlook: GVT and PGVT are not different materials. PGVT (Polished Glazed Vitrified Tile) is simply GVT that's been mechanically buffed after firing to bring up a mirror shine. Same body, same base tile, different surface treatment. That single confusion is probably responsible for more bad bathroom-floor decisions than any other myth in the tile industry.

Morbi, Gujarat, remains India's dominant GVT manufacturing cluster, and for good reason SACMI hydraulic presses, digital inkjet printing lines, and large kiln capacity all sit within a tight industrial radius, which keeps turnaround fast and pricing competitive.
But here's what most guides don't tell you: not every Morbi factory runs the same process control. Larger, established plants maintain tighter dimensional tolerance and near-total defect-free surfaces; smaller, unbranded units allow looser tolerances, which shows up later as lippage once the tile is on your floor. Exact tolerance figures vary by factory and product line always confirm current dimensional tolerance data with your specific supplier before ordering. You won't see this difference in a showroom sample. You'll see it after installation, when adjacent tile edges don't sit flush.
This is exactly why manufacturers sort finished tiles by caliber code a size-grading applied after firing, since even tiles from the same production run can shift a fraction of a millimeter as they cool. Tiles get grouped into caliber batches based on that measured size, and mixing two different caliber codes in one room is what causes uneven grout lines and lippage, even when the shade matches perfectly.
Firing is also where shade variation gets baked in literally. Kiln atmosphere, clay moisture, and firing temperature all shift slightly between production runs. Even a small change can nudge the final tone. That's why a single production batch is treated almost like a vintage in the wine world: buy across two different batches for the same room, and you risk a visible color mismatch across your floor.
Buyers rarely need all four categories explained they need to know which one their room actually requires.
| Type | Glaze/Print Layer | Best For | Avoid For |
| GVT (matte/textured) | 0.3–1mm printed glaze | Living rooms, bedrooms, wet-area floors (matte grades) | Heavy industrial traffic |
| PGVT (polished GVT) | Same glaze, mechanically buffed | Dry living areas, low-traffic luxury spaces | Wet bathroom/kitchen floors |
| Double Charge | 3–4mm powder layer, deeper design | High-footfall commercial corridors, budget-conscious buyers | Ultra-fine marble replication |
| Full-Body Vitrified | Design runs through the entire tile thickness | Heavy commercial, industrial, high-abrasion zones | Budget residential (pricier) |
The practical difference between GVT and Double Charge comes down to how deep the pattern runs. GVT's design sits in a thin surface layer; Double Charge pushes color granules deeper into the body before firing, which is why chips and scratches are far less visible on Double Charge a genuine advantage in malls, lobbies, and airports where footfall is relentless.


Surface finish decides almost everything about how a GVT tile behaves day to day grip underfoot, how visible scratches are, how easy it is to clean.
Common finishes: Matte, High Gloss/Polished, Sugar Finish, Carving, Metallic, Baby Skin (satin), Rustic, Rain-drop, Fluted.
Matte and textured finishes have been gaining ground over high-gloss in the mid-to-premium segment largely because buyers have gotten wiser about the slip-hazard trade-off that glossy floors carry. Sugar finish and carving tiles, in particular, see strong demand in both Tier 1 and Tier 2 cities right now, mostly for their tactile, stone-like feel.
Sizes worth knowing:
Large format slabs are seeing genuinely strong demand in premium residential projects right now fewer grout lines, a cleaner look. What sounds good on paper, though, comes with real installation demands we'll get to in a bit.

Most GVT product pages throw specs at you without explaining what they mean for your specific room. Here's the shortlist that actually drives a buying decision:
You don't need to memorize all of this. But when a dealer hands you a spec sheet, knowing which two or three numbers to check first saves you from an expensive surprise later.

| Myth | Reality |
| "GVT tiles are 100% waterproof." | No ceramic or vitrified tile is absolutely zero-absorption. GVT is impervious at under 0.5% absorption practically moisture-proof, not literally zero. |
| "GVT and PGVT are different materials." | Same body. PGVT is GVT that's been mechanically polished after firing. |
| "Polished PGVT is fine for bathroom floors it has anti-skid properties." | Polished glaze surfaces are consistently the least slip-resistant option in the GVT family. Multiple industry safety codes specifically warn against polished finishes on wet floors. |
| "Cement mortar is fine for laying GVT." | Because GVT's absorption is under 0.5%, there are almost no pores for cement mortar to mechanically grip. Look for adhesive that meets IS 15477 the Indian standard for polymer-modified tile adhesives rather than generic cement-based mortar; it's required, not optional. |
Price varies by brand and location. Verify with your local tile dealer.
That said, here's the pricing context most buyers don't get told upfront:
Large-format slabs (1200×1800mm and above) typically carry a price premium over standard 600×600mm and 600×1200mm sizes partly material cost, partly the specialized handling and lower breakage tolerance during transport.
Ask any experienced tiler about GVT and you'll get the same three warnings, almost word for word.
On adhesive: Standard cement-sand mortar simply doesn't bond to GVT properly there aren't enough pores for mechanical grip. Polymer-modified adhesive (Class S1 for standard tiles, Class S2 with higher polymer content for large-format slabs) is what actually holds. Skip this, and within a year or two you'll hear that hollow, drum-like sound when you tap the floor a sign the bond has already failed underneath.
On spacers: Homeowners often push for a "joint-free" look on large slabs. Installers push back for good reason thermal expansion needs somewhere to go. Butt-jointed large slabs without spacers eventually squeeze against each other and chip at the corners. A 2–3mm spacer isn't cosmetic; it's structural. For large uninterrupted floor areas, installers should also provide movement (expansion) joints at appropriate intervals around the perimeter and across the field, to accommodate structural and thermal movement beyond what tile spacers alone can absorb.
On cutting and wastage: GVT's glaze layer is thin and can chip during cutting if the blade isn't diamond-grade and properly maintained. Diagonal layouts and intricate patterns also push wastage well past the standard 5–10% margin installers routinely bump material orders to 15–20% for pattern work to avoid running short mid-installation.

Honestly, this is the most overlooked detail in any GVT project: the subfloor matters more than the tile itself. GVT has essentially zero flex tolerance unlike wood or vinyl, it can't absorb subfloor movement. Even minor deflection under load can snap a tile or crack the grout line. A straight-edge check on the subfloor before laying isn't optional on any serious project; it's the difference between a floor that lasts decades and one that cracks within a year.
There's also a live debate worth knowing about: GVT versus natural marble for premium homes. Large-format GVT delivers convincing marble visuals at a fraction of the cost, with zero risk of acid etching from vinegar or cleaning chemicals a real weakness of natural marble. But marble purists have a fair point too: GVT's printed pattern eventually repeats across tiles, while natural stone veining is genuinely one-of-a-kind. And if a GVT tile chips, you replace the tile; if marble gets etched or scratched, it can be professionally ground and re-polished indefinitely. Neither side is wrong it depends on whether you value cost-and-durability or organic uniqueness more.
Contrarian take, and worth saying plainly: for a heavy-traffic industrial floor, standard printed GVT is often not the right choice full-body vitrified or Double Charge tiles hold up to abrasive wheel traffic and impact far better, since there's no thin surface glaze layer to wear through.
Daily cleaning is straightforward a neutral pH cleaner with a damp mop handles most residential dirt. For polished PGVT, a near-dry microfiber mop keeps streaking down.
The mistake worth avoiding: acid-based bathroom cleaners. Acid attacks the printed glaze layer over repeated use, and over a few years that translates to visible fading you can't reverse. Skip abrasive scrubbing pads too they dull the surface finish permanently.
One detail almost nobody mentions: in hard-water cities, it's not the tile that discolors it's the grout. Standard cement grout absorbs mineral deposits from hard water and turns grey or mottled within a year. Epoxy grout is completely non-porous and sidesteps this entirely. Worth the extra cost, especially in bathrooms and kitchens.
Morbi isn't just India's largest tile cluster by volume it's where design turnaround happens fastest, because digital inkjet lines let factories customize patterns without the long lead times legacy manufacturing demands elsewhere.
For dealers and distributors, ex-factory rates from Morbi typically undercut metro distributor pricing meaningfully, since you're buying closer to the source. For export buyers across UAE, Africa, and Southeast Asia, Morbi factories routinely handle container loading, batch-consistency documentation, and export packaging details that matter enormously when a shipment needs to arrive with shade continuity intact across an entire container.
For architects and builders sourcing at scale, the practical advantage is flexibility: custom sizes, finishes, and short production runs that larger international brands generally won't accommodate below a much bigger minimum order.

GVT tiles are a genuinely solid choice for most Indian homes and commercial spaces durable, design-flexible, and priced competitively when sourced right. The buyers who end up unhappy almost always made one of two mistakes: picked the wrong finish for a wet area, or skipped batch verification and ended up with a mismatched floor. Neither mistake is hard to avoid once you know what to check.
If you're not sure which option suits your space, share your layout with a tile consultant before confirming your order.
A quick call to a Morbi tile specialist can save you a costly mismatch. 📞 Talk to Morbi Tile Experts Call +91 75677 75672
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.
GVT (Glazed Vitrified Tiles) are vitrified ceramic tiles with a water absorption rate below 0.5%, finished with a digitally printed glaze layer that replicates marble, stone, wood, or concrete. They combine a dense, durable tile body with attractive surface designs, making them suitable for residential and commercial floors and walls.
GVT tiles are manufactured by pressing refined clay, silica, and feldspar under high pressure before firing them at temperatures above 1200°C to create a dense vitrified body. A digitally printed glaze is then fused onto the surface during firing, producing realistic designs with long-lasting durability.
Glazed GVT tiles include matte, textured, carving, sugar, and glossy finishes, while polished GVT (PGVT) tiles are mechanically polished after firing to create a mirror-like surface. Matte GVT offers better slip resistance, whereas polished GVT is best suited for dry indoor spaces where a luxurious appearance is the priority.
It depends on the finish. Matte, textured, and carving-finish GVT tiles generally provide better grip and are suitable for bathrooms and kitchens. Polished GVT (PGVT) has a smoother, shinier surface and can become slippery when wet, making it better suited for dry indoor areas.
GVT tiles are not completely waterproof, but they are highly moisture-resistant due to their vitrified body with less than 0.5% water absorption. This makes them an excellent choice for bathrooms, kitchens, and other areas exposed to moisture when installed and grouted correctly.
A quality GVT tile can last 50 years or more with proper installation and maintenance. In normal residential use, the vitrified body remains highly durable, while the glazed surface retains its appearance for many years under everyday foot traffic.
Yes. GVT tiles offer excellent scratch resistance for normal residential and commercial use. However, dragging heavy metal furniture or exposing the surface to abrasive industrial traffic can eventually damage the glaze, so protective pads and proper maintenance are recommended.
Some GVT tiles are suitable for outdoor applications, but only if they are specifically designed for exterior use. For outdoor areas exposed to rain or freezing conditions, choose matte or textured frost-resistant tiles with the appropriate slip resistance and confirm the manufacturer's specifications before installation.
GVT tiles are available in a wide range of sizes, including 600×600mm (2×2 ft), 600×1200mm (2×4 ft), 800×1600mm, 1200×1800mm, and 1200×2400mm slabs. The right size depends on the room dimensions, design preference, and installation requirements.
GVT tiles are available in marble-look, stone-look, wood-look, concrete-look, terrazzo, geometric, abstract, and contemporary designer patterns. Modern digital printing technology allows them to closely replicate the appearance of natural materials while offering the durability of vitrified tiles.
Clean GVT tiles regularly with a soft mop and a neutral-pH cleaner. Avoid acid-based cleaners, harsh chemicals, and abrasive scrub pads that can dull the glazed surface over time. Wipe spills promptly and use epoxy grout in moisture-prone areas for easier long-term maintenance.
Morbi Tile Hub offers a wide selection of GVT tiles, including matte, polished (PGVT), carving, sugar, and stone-look collections in multiple sizes, colours, and finishes. Options are available for residential, commercial, retail, hospitality, and export projects, with factory-direct sourcing from Morbi.
Morbi Tile Hub provides factory-direct GVT tiles from Morbi with competitive pricing, consistent batch quality, multiple finishes and sizes, expert product guidance, and reliable dispatch across India and international export markets. Buyers also benefit from customized solutions, dependable supply, and professional support throughout the sourcing process.
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