Tiles are one of the most visible and most permanent elements of a home. The wrong tile choice — too slippery, too small for the scale of the room, wrong shade for the light — is with you for the next twenty years. In Nepal, a market flooded with Indian and Chinese tiles at every price point, knowing how to choose takes some navigation. This guide is based on what we actually specify across 200+ projects.
01TILE TYPES AND WHERE TO USE THEM
- Vitrified tiles (double-charged or nano): The best all-around floor tile for living rooms, bedrooms, and hallways. Very hard, very low maintenance, available up to 1200x1200mm. The most popular tile in Kathmandu homes in 2026 — for good reason.
- Ceramic tiles: Lower cost, suitable for bathroom walls and light-traffic areas. Not recommended for main floor areas — surface wears and becomes porous over time.
- Porcelain tiles: High-density, low-absorption. The standard for bathrooms, kitchen floors, and outdoor/terrace areas. Also the best choice for areas that get wet.
- Natural stone tiles (marble, granite, limestone): Beautiful and durable when properly sealed and maintained. Marble requires periodic resealing in Nepal’s climate; unsealed marble in a kitchen or bathroom will stain within months.
- Anti-skid / rustic tiles: Essential for outdoor terraces, stairs, bathroom floors, and any wet area. A polished floor tile on a staircase is a safety hazard.
- Wood-look porcelain (wood planks): Increasingly popular for bedrooms — gives the warmth of wood with the practicality of tile. Works very well in Kathmandu’s dusty climate where real wood flooring needs more maintenance.
02TILE BRANDS AVAILABLE IN KATHMANDU
The tile market in Nepal is primarily supplied by Indian manufacturers, with some local and some Chinese product. Our experience by tier:
- Premium tier (consistent quality, full range): Kajaria, Somany, Asian Granito. Available at major tile showrooms in Kalimati, Maitighar, Sanepa. These brands have reliable colour consistency across batches — critical when tiling a large area.
- Mid-tier (good quality, value): Orient Bell, Nitco. Good surface quality, reasonable range. Spot-check for colour lot consistency before ordering a full room.
- Economy tier: Multiple Chinese brands available. Quality varies significantly by lot. Not recommended for main living areas where consistency and longevity matter.
- Local Nepali production: Limited to basic ceramic tiles. Some are quite good for bathroom walls; not suitable for main floor areas.
03SIZE GUIDE: GETTING TILE SIZE RIGHT FOR EACH ROOM
- Small bathrooms (under 6 sq m): 300x300 or 400x400mm for floors; 300x600mm for walls. Larger tiles in small spaces create awkward cuts and make the room feel smaller.
- Standard bathrooms: 600x600mm floors; 300x600 or 600x1200mm walls.
- Living rooms and open-plan areas: 800x800 minimum; 1000x1000 or 600x1200mm for a spacious contemporary look. Large-format tiles have fewer grout lines — cleaner, easier to clean.
- Kitchens: 600x600 or 600x1200mm for floors; 300x600 or 300x900mm for walls. A kitchen backsplash is a place to introduce a different colour or texture — keep the floor more neutral.
- Outdoor terraces: Anti-skid porcelain, 600x600 minimum. Avoid large-format tiles outdoors — thermal movement can crack them on Kathmandu’s extreme temperature days.
04GROUTING AND LAYING: WHERE MOST MISTAKES HAPPEN
A good tile laid badly looks bad. The most common installation errors in Nepal:
- Insufficient bed mortar thickness — tiles crack under point loads when the mortar bed is too thin or has voids. Specify minimum 25mm cement-sand bed for floor tiles.
- Wrong grout colour — unsanded grout in joints wider than 3mm will crack. Use epoxy grout for bathrooms and kitchens; it is stain-proof and long-lasting.
- No expansion joints — large tiled areas without expansion joints will crack as the structure moves. Specify joints every 4–5 metres in large rooms.
- Tiles not soaked before laying — unsoaked ceramic tiles absorb water from the mortar too fast, weakening the bond. Standard practice is to wet tiles before laying, though vitrified tiles are dense enough to skip this.
All NextGen Interiors projects include full material specification and site supervision — we do not leave tile selection and laying to guesswork. If you want a professional eye on your material choices before you purchase, talk to us.