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Floors

Shop floor tile for kitchens, bathrooms, entryways, powder rooms, mudrooms, living spaces, and design-led commercial interiors. This collection brings together floor-friendly porcelain, marble, travertine, limestone, checkerboard tile, and select mosaics where the format and product rating support floor use.

Use the filters to narrow by material, finish, size, color, and look. For floors, always review the individual product’s recommended application, finish, slip-resistance details where available, and installation requirements before ordering full project quantities.


Popular floor applications

  • Entryways and foyers: durable tile surfaces for high-visibility transitions and first impressions
  • Kitchens and breakfast nooks: low-maintenance porcelain or natural stone for everyday use
  • Bathrooms and powder rooms: floor tile and mosaics where product ratings and installation methods allow
  • Mudrooms and laundry rooms: practical surfaces for moisture, foot traffic, and daily wear
  • Living spaces and hallways: larger formats, stone looks, and natural materials for continuous flooring
  • Commercial interiors: porcelain and select natural stone for hospitality, retail, and design-build projects

Explore floor-friendly collections


How to choose floor tile

  • For low maintenance: porcelain tile is often the most practical choice for busy kitchens, baths, mudrooms, and commercial spaces.
  • For natural character: marble, travertine, and limestone offer real stone variation, veining, movement, and texture.
  • For pattern: checkerboard tile adds structure and rhythm to foyers, kitchens, powder rooms, and mudrooms.
  • For wet areas: confirm product suitability and use appropriate installation methods; mosaics may be preferred where slope or traction matters.
  • For larger spaces: larger-format tile can reduce grout lines and create a more continuous visual field.

Material notes for floors

Porcelain tile is durable, low maintenance, and available in stone-look, plaster-look, checkerboard, and modern formats. It is often the best starting point for busy floors.

Natural stone tile brings real variation and material depth. Marble, travertine, and limestone may require sealing and pH-neutral cleaning, especially in kitchens, bathrooms, and high-use areas.

Checkerboard tile depends on color contrast, scale, layout alignment, and grout choice. Samples are recommended before selecting full project quantities.


Order samples before your project

Floor tile can look different depending on lighting, grout color, layout direction, room size, and surrounding finishes. Samples help you compare color, texture, finish, and scale before ordering full project quantities.

Visit the ArtePierre Sample Program to learn how to order samples for your project.


Trade and project support

Working on a residential, commercial, hospitality, or design-build flooring project? ArtePierre supports designers, architects, builders, contractors, and trade professionals with samples, availability checks, product guidance, and project quantities.

Visit the ArtePierre Trade Program for more information.


Helpful links

Frequently asked questions

What tile is best for floors?

Porcelain tile is often the most practical choice for busy floors because it is durable and low maintenance. Natural stone, marble, travertine, limestone, and checkerboard tile can also work beautifully when the product, finish, and installation method are suitable for the space.

Can natural stone be used on floors?

Yes. Marble, travertine, and limestone can be used on floors, but they may require sealing, pH-neutral cleaning, and additional care compared with porcelain.

Are mosaics good for bathroom floors?

Mosaics are often useful for bathroom and shower floors because smaller pieces and additional grout joints can help with slope and traction. Always confirm the specific product’s suitability.

Should I order floor tile samples first?

Yes. Samples help you review color, texture, finish, and scale in your actual lighting before ordering full project quantities.