
Matte porcelain · large format
Concrete look tiles.
The honest material palette — raw, pared back, and completely at home in contemporary interiors. Matte porcelain with the texture of brushed cement. Zero maintenance.
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Filter all 117 concrete-look tiles
Showing 24 of 117
Cemento Corte
2800 × 1200mm · matte
Cemento Castello
1200 × 600mm · matte
Cemento Sovrano
1200 × 1200mm · matte
Beton Naturale
1200 × 600mm · matte

Beton Meridiano
1200 × 600mm · matte

Calacatta Villa
1200 × 600mm · matte
Beton Provence
1200 × 600mm · matte

Cemento Quintessenza
1200 × 600mm · matte
Beton Meridiana
1200 × 600 · matte

Cemento Nobile
1200 × 600mm · matte

Cemento Organza
1200 × 600mm · matte

Beton Classico
1200 × 600mm · matte
Cemento Eterno
1200 × 600 · matte

Beton Damasco
1200 × 600 · matte
Beton Capri
1200 × 600 · matte
Cemento Modena
3200 × 1600mm · matte

Beton Marmo
600 × 150mm · matte
Beton Veneto
3200 × 1600mm · matte

Cemento Ponente
300 × 300 × 9mm · matte
Cemento Nuvola
300 × 300 × 9mm · matte

Beton Perla
300 × 300 × 9mm · matte

Cemento Levante
300 × 300 × 9mm · matte

Cemento Como
300 × 300 × 9mm · matte

Beton Ravenna
306 × 306 · matte
About concrete-look
Porcelain vs real concrete. Real poured concrete is porous, prone to cracking, and requires sealing and maintenance. Concrete-look porcelain is non-porous, completely inert, and will look the same in 30 years.
Where does it work best? Kitchen floors, bathroom floors, open-plan living areas, laundry floors. The matte finish handles foot traffic and wet areas without showing marks.
Grout colour. Use matching grey grout for a seamless effect — the grout joint should disappear into the tile. A slightly lighter tone than the tile also works well.
Ordering guide
Always order a sample. Matte concrete-look tiles vary significantly in tone and texture between batches and brands. $15 flat for up to 5 samples, credited back.
Order 10% more than measured area. Standard wastage for square lay. 15% for diagonal layouts.
Large format installation. 600×1200mm tiles require a flat, level substrate — any deflection will show. Use flexible adhesive rated for large format.
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Concrete-look questions
What's the difference between concrete-look porcelain and real concrete?
Real poured concrete is porous, prone to cracking, and needs sealing. Concrete-look porcelain is non-porous, completely inert, never seals or stains, and looks the same in 30 years. The texture and tonal variation are inkjet-printed and very convincing in modern Italian and Spanish ranges.
Where does concrete-look porcelain work best?
Kitchens, bathrooms, open-plan living, laundries, alfresco. The matte finish handles foot traffic without showing marks. Industrial-style fitouts and Scandi-modern interiors are the natural design contexts. Pair with warm timber and matte black hardware to soften the palette.
Will concrete-look tiles look dated?
Cool grey concrete-look from the 2010s now reads as 'that decade'. Modern warm-grey, taupe and rust-tinted concrete looks are more durable visually — they share a palette with travertine and limestone, which have aged well across centuries.
What grout colour should I use with concrete-look tiles?
Match the grout to the dominant tile tone for a seamless 'continuous surface' effect. A slightly lighter or darker grout (one shade off) also works and emphasises the format. Avoid white grout with grey concrete-look — it reads jarring and emphasises the tile boundaries.
Prefer a warmer natural tone?
Travertine-look porcelain →