Get answers to common questions about hallway tiles
Light colours in the cream, white, and soft grey range reflect more ambient light and make a narrow corridor appear wider and more open. Pairing a light mid-tone tile with a closely matched grout colour rather than a contrasting grout reduces visual segmentation and helps the passage read as one connected surface.
For mid-range vitrified tiles suitable for corridors, expect ₹80–₹120 per sq.ft at retail. Buying at Morbi ex-factory dealer rate brings this to ₹25–35 per sq.ft for the same quality tier, before freight and GST. Premium large-format porcelain runs ₹200–₹350 retail and ₹50–80 ex-Morbi.
Matte or satin finish is the better choice for hallways. Matte tiles hide dirt between cleaning cycles, show fewer scratches from daily footwear, and provide better grip when the floor is wet. Glossy tiles have a place in dim interior corridors where light reflection is a priority, but they require more frequent cleaning and carry a higher slip risk at entry points.
600×600 mm or 600×1200 mm tiles are proportionally suited to most Indian residential corridor widths. For a wood-look approach, 200×1200 mm plank tiles in an offset or herringbone pattern work particularly well. Very large format tiles create disproportionate cuts in narrow passages and are better suited to wider entry halls.
A T-bar metal trim at the transition joint is the clean, practical method. Where both spaces use similar tile heights and tones, running the same tile continuously through both areas without a visible joint creates a more open and connected feel. Avoid sharp colour or finish contrasts in smaller homes, they divide the visual floor plane and make each space feel smaller.
In apartment corridors where bags and footwear scrape the walls constantly, [dado tiles] are worth every rupee. Installing protective wall tiles on the lower section of corridor walls, typically up to 900 mm from the floor, prevents scuff marks from footwear, bags, and daily movement.
They don't need to match exactly, but maintaining visual continuity is helpful. Using the same colour family or complementary neutral tones allows the spaces to connect rather than compete. What matters more is that the hallway tile has the correct technical rating for traffic levels.