Walk into any tile shop in Morbi and ask for "non digital tiles," and you'll usually get a slightly puzzled look before the dealer points you toward a rack of plain, solid-colour vitrified pieces sitting quietly next to the flashy wood-look and marble-look digital ranges. That reaction tells you something. Non-digital tiles aren't trendy. They're not the tiles that get photographed for Instagram reels. But ask any contractor who's laid flooring for a factory, a hospital corridor, or a five-year-old commercial kitchen, and non-digital is often the tile they'd choose without hesitation.
Non digital tiles are ceramic, porcelain, or vitrified tiles decorated using screen printing, roller (roto) printing, or solid pigment infusion not the CMYK inkjet process used for digital tiles. That difference in printing method changes the pattern range, but more importantly, it changes what's under the surface: many non-digital ranges (Double Charge, Soluble Salt, Full Body Vitrified) carry pigment 3–4mm deep into the tile body instead of a thin printed layer on top. In real-world terms, that's why a chipped non-digital tile often looks less alarming than a chipped digital one.
This guide is written for buyers who are past the "what looks nice" stage and want to know what they're actually buying dealers sourcing stock, architects specifying commercial floors, builders quoting projects, and export buyers checking whether Morbi-manufactured non-digital tiles hold up to international standards.

☑️ Best For: High-traffic commercial floors, industrial spaces, export/wholesale orders, budget-conscious plain-tone residential flooring.
☑️ Avoid If: You want a realistic wood, marble, or stone-look feature floor that's digital tile territory.
☑️ Budget: Price varies by brand and location; verify with your local Morbi dealer often competitive with or lower than comparable digital ranges.
☑️ Maintenance: Low dense vitrified body resists staining; matte finishes need less slip-caution upkeep than polished.
☑️ Durability: High PEI 4–5 available, chips far less visible than digital/GVT due to deeper pigment layer.
Here's a clean, quotable definition: non digital tiles are ceramic, porcelain, or vitrified floor and wall tiles produced through screen printing, roller printing, or pigment-infusion methods rather than digital inkjet printing, generally conforming to IS 15622:2017 and ISO 13006:2018 standards for vitrified bodies. In practice, this means simpler, more solid patterns but a surface and body that's often engineered for heavier wear than a typical digital tile.
You'll come across four names most often in the Indian market:
One thing many buyers overlook: "non-digital" doesn't mean "old technology that's being phased out." Full-body and Double Charge non-digital ranges are still specified heavily for airports, hospitals, factories, and metro-station flooring precisely because of how the pigment sits in the tile not despite it.
The process starts the same way most vitrified tiles do clay, feldspar, and silica are blended, pressed, and fired at high temperature. The difference is in how colour and pattern get onto (or into) the tile.
Screen and roller printing use physical screens or engraved rollers to transfer ink onto the tile surface before firing. It's mechanically simpler than digital inkjet, but it comes with a quirk almost nobody talks about: screens and rollers can't print all the way to the tile's edge. What most installers will tell you is that this is exactly why older screen-printed and roller-printed tiles often have a faint unprinted white border it's not a manufacturing defect, it's a physical limitation of the printing method itself.

Double Charge and Soluble Salt tiles work differently. Instead of printing a surface pattern, coloured granules or liquid pigment are pressed or infused into the tile body before firing, then the whole thing is fired in a kiln at high temperature. That's what gives Double Charge tiles their 3–4mm wear layer, verified under IS 15622 Group BIa for structural integrity.
There's a factory-economics side to this that dealers deal with but buyers rarely hear about. Before digital printing existed, factories had to hold much larger physical stock screen drums, roller sleeves, sample boards for every pattern because matching a colour on a repeat order wasn't a software adjustment, it was a 2-hour test firing in a kiln to check how the pigment behaved at temperature. That's part of why non-digital tile ranges tend to be narrower and more standardised than the constantly-refreshed digital catalogues. Fewer patterns, but each one is more thoroughly production-tested.


This is usually the actual decision buyers are trying to make, so here's the direct comparison.
| Factor | Non Digital Tiles | Digital Tiles |
| Printing method | Screen/roller printing or pigment infusion | CMYK inkjet |
| Design range | Limited solid colours, simple patterns | Extensive wood, marble, stone-look realism |
| Wear layer depth | 3–4mm (Double Charge/Full Body) | Typically under 1mm glaze |
| Chip appearance | Colour continues through thickness | Chips often reveal white base body |
| Best suited for | High-traffic commercial, industrial, plain aesthetics | Residential, design-led, feature areas |
| Batch-to-batch consistency | Generally tighter (fewer patterns to reproduce) | Can vary more across print runs |
| Indicative pricing | Often lower to comparable | Varies widely by design complexity |
That sounds good on paper for digital tiles' design range and it is a real advantage if you want a realistic wood or marble look. But surprisingly, the durability argument cuts the other way for one specific failure mode: when a glazed vitrified tile (GVT) chips in a high-traffic zone, it reveals a stark white scar from the base body underneath. A full-body non-digital tile with the same impact just shows a slightly duller patch of the same colour far less visible. If you've ever walked through an older commercial corridor and noticed random white chip marks scattered across an otherwise dark floor, that's usually GVT, not full-body.

Non-digital doesn't mean flat or boring the finish options are broader than most buyers expect.
Here's the thing about the glossy-vs-slippery assumption: it's not automatically true. Polished Double Charge tiles can indeed drop below a 0.4 wet coefficient of friction, which is genuinely slippery. But unglazed, matte full-body non-digital tiles can achieve strong slip resistance even in wet zones the finish matters more than the "digital or non-digital" label ever will.
Non-digital tiles are manufactured across the same size range as most vitrified stock in India:
Thickness typically runs 8mm to 9mm for standard 600×600mm and 800×800mm floor formats, with heavier commercial/institutional specifications going up to 10–12mm. Double Charge tiles carry their 3–4mm pigment layer within this overall thickness it's not an additional dimension, it's built into the standard tile depth.
Where non-digital tiles genuinely shine:
Non-digital tiles are a poor fit for feature walls, statement flooring, or any space where you specifically want a realistic wood, marble, or stone visual. That's digital tile territory. Don't fight the medium if the room's design hinges on a striking visual pattern, non-digital's limited design range will leave you compromising on the one thing you actually wanted.
Indian climate matters here too. In humid coastal cities, matte and textured non-digital finishes handle moisture-prone bathroom and balcony floors well without the slip risk of high-gloss digital tiles. In North India's colder pockets, the denser vitrified body of full-body non-digital tiles resists the freeze-thaw stress that porous ceramic can suffer.

Honestly, this is the most overlooked detail in any non-digital tile decision: you're trading design flexibility for surface durability. If your project genuinely needs a wide range of finishes wood planks in one zone, marble-look in another non-digital's narrower catalogue will frustrate you. It's also worth knowing that glossy non-digital finishes carry the same wet-slip risk as glossy digital ones; "non-digital" is not a slip-resistance guarantee on its own.
Specification ranges below reflect typical Group BIa vitrified benchmarks always request manufacturer-specific test certificates to confirm exact values for your selected batch.
| Parameter | Typical Value | Standard Reference |
| Water absorption | ≤0.5% (vitrified); <0.1% (full-body/porcelain) | ISO 10545-3 |
| Breaking strength | ≥1300 N | IS 15622:2017 |
| PEI rating | 4–5 (Double Charge/Full Body); 1–2 (plain ceramic) | - |
| Thickness | 8–9mm (standard); 10–12mm (heavy commercial) | - |
| Slip resistance | R9 (indoor dry) to R11 (wet/outdoor commercial) | DIN 51130 |
| Wet DCOF | ≥0.42 recommended for wet commercial zones | ANSI A137.1 |
| Group classification | BIa | ISO 13006:2018 |
Architects and contractors: PEI rating measures surface abrasion resistance, not structural strength. That's a common mix-up. If you need to know how much load a floor tile can take, you're looking at breaking strength (N), not PEI. The two numbers answer completely different questions.

| Myth | Reality |
| "Non-digital tiles are outdated ceramic tiles." | Double Charge and Full Body Vitrified non-digital ranges are premium, engineered products used in heavy commercial traffic not a legacy category. |
| "All glossy tiles are slippery when wet." | Polished Double Charge can drop below 0.4 wet COF, but unglazed full-body non-digital tiles can achieve strong wet slip resistance. |
| "PEI rating tells you how strong the tile is." | PEI measures surface wear resistance only; breaking strength (N) measures structural load capacity. |
Price varies by brand and location. Verify with your local tile dealer.
A few things to factor in regardless of the exact rate you're quoted:

Large-format non-digital tiles (600×1200mm and above) are not forgiving of a lazy subfloor. Installers consistently flag two things: first, cutting these tiles wastes more material than smaller formats, so budget for the higher wastage percentage upfront, not as a surprise mid-project. Second, continuous runs need expansion joints every 3–4 metres skip this, and thermal expansion can eventually cause tiles to tent or pop up, particularly in spaces with large glass exposure or direct sun. Large-format non-digital tiles are typically rectified for tighter joints, and installers commonly use tile spacers with a levelling system to prevent lippage.

On real projects, the batch mismatch issue causes more post-installation regret than almost anything else on this list and it's entirely avoidable with basic diligence at order time. Transport breakage of 3–5% is also standard industry reality, not a defect; factor it into your order quantity rather than treating every broken piece on arrival as a quality failure.
There's a genuine area of professional disagreement worth flagging: some architects push hard for full-body vitrified tiles everywhere, arguing the chip-resistance is worth the design trade-off in any commercial space. Others argue that in low-traffic commercial zones a boutique reception area, say a well-specified GVT with a protective coating delivers 90% of the visual benefit at a lower cost, and the chip-risk argument is overstated for spaces that see light foot traffic. Both positions have merit; the right call depends on how much wheeled or heavy traffic the specific zone will actually see.
Still unsure about your tile specifications? Our team can review your requirements before you buy.
Quick Recommendation: Choose Full Body Vitrified for heavy commercial traffic, Double Charge for value-driven durability, and Digital Tiles if design realism matters more than chip-resistance.
Non-digital tiles aren't the flashy choice, and they were never meant to be. What most installers will tell you privately is that they still recommend them for the projects where showroom looks matter less than five-year performance commercial corridors, industrial floors, export orders, budget residential flooring that still needs to hold up. If your priority is a striking visual statement, go digital. If your priority is a floor that ages quietly without embarrassing chip marks, non-digital, particularly full-body or Double Charge vitrified material, remains one of the more sensible calls in Indian tile buying verify the batch codes, confirm the grade, and you'll rarely regret it.
Morbitaa Buildmart LLP works directly with Morbi, Gujarat's vitrified and ceramic tile manufacturers, supplying non-digital and full-body vitrified tile ranges to dealers, builders, and export buyers across India, UAE, Africa, and Southeast Asia. This guide draws on real sourcing and factory-floor experience from Morbi's manufacturing cluster.
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Get answers to common questions about non digital tiles
No. Industry participants estimate that non-digital tiles continue to account for a significant share of India's annual tile volume. Builders, contractors, and institutional buyers continue to specify them because of durability, batch consistency, and cost-effectiveness that digital tiles do not always match.
Full-body non-digital vitrified tiles with PEI 4–5 rating are well-suited for heavy foot traffic [As per standard vitrified tile classification]. Their colour and material composition extend through the entire tile body, so surface wear does not reveal a different coloured layer beneath.
Water absorption depends on the tile type. Full-body vitrified non-digital tiles: typically below 0.1%. Standard vitrified: below 0.5%. Glazed ceramic variants: 6–10% [As per ISO 10545-3]. Always request a factory test certificate before confirming your order.
Double-charge vitrified tiles are the correct choice for kitchen floors due to their high wear resistance, low water absorption, and PEI 4 rating [As per standard vitrified tile classification]. For kitchen walls, plain glazed ceramic in matte finish is practical and easy to maintain.
Yes. Structured and textured non-digital variants with R11 and R12 slip resistance ratings are available and widely used in hospitals, parking areas, balconies, and outdoor flooring.
Non-digital full-body tiles are more durable in hard-use conditions because chips and scratches do not expose a different coloured layer [Based on Morbi dispatch patterns, 2024–2026]. Digital tiles may have higher visual appeal but their print layer has finite wear tolerance.
Non-digital tiles are ceramic or vitrified tiles manufactured without digital inkjet printing. Their appearance is created using traditional technologies such as Double Charge, Full Body, or Soluble Salt. They are widely used in commercial, industrial, and residential spaces where durability, consistent appearance, and cost-effective performance are more important than decorative printed designs.
Non-digital tiles are suitable for homes, offices, retail stores, schools, hospitals, factories, warehouses, shopping malls, parking areas, and other high-traffic commercial spaces. The ideal application depends on the tile type, finish, and slip-resistance requirements.
Non-digital tiles offer high strength, excellent wear resistance, low water absorption, consistent colour throughout production batches, easy maintenance, long service life, and cost-effective performance. Many variants are also suitable for heavy foot traffic and industrial environments.
Non-digital tiles are manufactured using refined clay, feldspar, quartz, silica, and other natural minerals. These raw materials are pressed under high pressure and fired at high temperatures to produce dense, durable ceramic or vitrified tiles.
Morbi Tile Hub supplies a wide range of non-digital tiles, including Double Charge Vitrified Tiles, Full Body Vitrified Tiles, Soluble Salt Vitrified Tiles, and other commercial-grade vitrified flooring solutions in multiple sizes, colours, and finishes for domestic and export markets.
Most vitrified non-digital tiles have very low water absorption, typically below 0.5%, making them highly resistant to moisture. While the tiles themselves are highly water-resistant, proper installation and grouting are essential to prevent water seepage through joints.
With proper installation and regular maintenance, high-quality non-digital vitrified tiles can last 20–30 years or even longer. Their lifespan depends on traffic levels, installation quality and routine care.
Yes. Non-digital tiles require minimal maintenance. Regular sweeping and mopping with a mild pH-neutral cleaner are usually sufficient to keep them clean. Their dense surface resists stains, dust, and everyday wear.
Yes, selected non-digital tiles can be used outdoors, especially matte or anti-skid vitrified tiles designed for exterior applications. The appropriate tile should be chosen based on slip resistance, climate conditions, and expected foot traffic.
Non-digital tiles are commonly available in sizes such as 300×300 mm, 400×400 mm, 600×600 mm, and 800×800 mm, depending on the product category. Popular finishes include matte, polished, lappato, rustic, and anti-skid surfaces.
Morbi Tile Hub sources directly from leading Morbi manufacturers, offering factory pricing, consistent quality, multiple product options, export-ready packaging, and reliable dispatch across India and international markets. Buyers also benefit from expert guidance and flexible bulk supply solutions.
The best supplier depends on your project requirements, quality standards, and delivery expectations. If you are looking for factory-direct sourcing, a wide product range, competitive pricing, and dependable nationwide or export supply, Morbi Tile Hub is a trusted choice for non-digital vitrified tiles from Morbi, India's leading ceramic manufacturing hub.
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