Color
Product Type
Brand
Materials
Features
Design / Pattern
- Sort by Featured
- Sort by Best Selling
- Sort by Alphabetically, A-Z
- Sort by Alphabetically, Z-A
- Sort by Price, low to high
- Sort by Price, high to low
- Sort by Date, new to old
- Sort by Date, old to new
Color
Product Type
Brand
Materials
Features
Design / Pattern
Porcelain Tiles
Porcelain mosaic tiles and porcelain field tiles share the same parent material (high-fired porcelain) but differ in scale and pattern density. Mosaic-format porcelain delivers small-format pattern weight; large-format porcelain delivers continuous stone visuals across the floor without grout-line interruption. Buyers searching for porcelain mosaic tiles often arrive looking for the stone aesthetic itself, and Surface Art's marble-, travertine-, slate-, and sandstone-look porcelain field tiles cover that aesthetic ground in formats that handle high-traffic kitchens, bathrooms, and entryways without the sealing or maintenance natural stone demands.
We carry the Surface Art range because it offers genuine craftsmanship from European and US factories (Italy, Spain, Turkey, USA) at prices that undercut comparable natural stone significantly. Floor Warehouse curates across the line so you can compare honed marble-look against polished marble, travertine-look against rustic, and white absolute slate against polychrome variants in one place. We're an online-only retailer, which means we work harder on samples, the room visualizer, and the flooring calculator so you can spec the project confidently before committing.
Why Choose Porcelain Tiles from Floor Warehouse?
-
19 Surface Art porcelain tiles in marble, travertine, slate, sandstone, and rustic visuals.
-
Imported from Italy, Spain, Turkey, and the USA, with rectified edges for precise installation.
-
Matte porcelain tiles in 16 of 19 colorways, suiting modern interiors that favor low-sheen finishes.
-
Freeze-resistant and stain-resistant construction, suitable for indoor and select outdoor applications.
You Might Also Like
-
Marble Mosaic: For genuine marble mosaic in honed Carrara, including basketweave, hexagon, penny field, and Greek key patterns from Heritage Tile.
-
Tile Flooring: The full tile range we stock, useful for comparing porcelain against ceramic, stone, and luxury vinyl tile alternatives.
-
Surface Art: The complete Surface Art collection, including additional porcelain ranges, accent options, and trim pieces for matched installations.
-
Travertine Collection: For travertine specifically in a softer, vinyl format if porcelain feels too dense or cold underfoot.
Best Porcelain Tiles for...
Modern Matte Aesthetic
For modern interiors that favor low-sheen finishes, the best matte porcelain tiles are the Antique Onyx Travertine and Adobe Rustic Natural lines from Surface Art. Both deliver matte travertine and earth-tone visuals that suit warm-neutral palettes without the reflective shine of polished alternatives.
Marble Look Without the Maintenance
For buyers who want marble's visual luxury without sealing, the best porcelain mosaic tiles alternative is large-format marble-look porcelain. The Carrara Elite Artistic Marble in Natural and the Jasper Marble Blanc deliver high-fidelity Carrara visuals in a porcelain format that resists staining, etching, and water absorption.
Slate and Stone Visuals
For mountain-modern, lodge, or transitional interiors, the best stone-look porcelain tiles are the Structured Rocks Slate and Yellowstone Slate ranges. The Colorado, Montana, Alberta, Polychrome, and Light Green colorways cover the warm-to-cool spectrum slate enthusiasts typically choose between.
Outdoor and Wet-Floor Applications
For patios, pool surrounds, and bathroom floors, the best porcelain floor tile is freeze-resistant and stain-resistant by construction. The Absolute Slate White and Black colorways carry the strongest slip-resistance specifications in the collection, suiting both indoor wet floors and select exterior applications.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are matte porcelain tiles better than polished for floors?
What's the difference between porcelain and ceramic tile?
How do you install porcelain mosaic tiles and porcelain field tiles?
Are Surface Art porcelain tiles suitable for outdoor use?