5 Best Non Slip Bathroom Floor Tiles for Safety

March 14, 2026
Written By Jim Carter

Jim Carter has over 12 years of experience installing wall and floor tiles in kitchens and bathrooms across the UK.

Wet bathroom floors cause thousands of household injuries in the UK every year. Choosing a tile with the correct slip-resistance rating is the single most effective way to reduce that risk. This guide covers the five best non-slip tile options, how to read safety ratings, and what to look for before you buy.

What Makes a Bathroom Tile Non-Slip?

A tile’s slip resistance comes from its surface texture, finish, and R-rating – not its appearance or material type alone.

Slip resistance is measured using the German DIN 51130 standard, which assigns tiles an R-rating from R9 to R13. The higher the number, the greater the grip underfoot. For domestic bathrooms, R10 is the accepted minimum; R11 suits wet-room and shower-floor applications.

The PTV (Pendulum Test Value) is the UK standard used in commercial settings. A PTV of 36 or above is classified as low slip risk. Many tile suppliers now display both ratings.

How to Read Slip Resistance Ratings

R-ratings and PTV scores tell you exactly how safe a tile will be in a wet bathroom environment before purchase.

  • R9 — suitable for dry domestic areas only; not recommended for bathrooms
  • R10 — the standard minimum for domestic bathroom floors; safe for most households
  • R11 — recommended for wet rooms, walk-in showers, and households with young children or elderly users
  • R12–R13 — commercial wet environments; rarely needed in domestic bathrooms
  • PTV 36+ — low slip risk under UK Health and Safety Executive guidance

Always check the tile manufacturer’s datasheet, not just the product description. Marketing terms like “anti-slip” or “grip” are not standardised.

The 5 Best Non-Slip Bathroom Floor Tiles

1. Matt Porcelain with R10 or R11 Rating

Matt porcelain is the most widely available, hardwearing, and genuinely slip-resistant tile for UK domestic bathroom floors.

The matt surface creates natural friction when wet. Porcelain’s low water absorption rate (below 0.5%) means the tile body itself resists moisture penetration, reducing surface deterioration over time.

  • R10 rated: suitable for main bathroom floors and en suites
  • R11 rated: recommended for shower trays and wet rooms
  • Sizes: 300 mm × 300 mm to 600 mm × 600 mm – smaller formats increase grout line density, adding extra grip
  • Maintenance: wipe clean; textured matt surfaces may need periodic grout sealing

Top specification tip: Look for tiles with a surface roughness (Ra) value above 6 µm. This figure appears on technical datasheets and confirms practical grip beyond the R-rating alone.

2. Textured Slate-Effect Porcelain

Slate-effect porcelain replicates the natural grip of real slate with a consistent R11 rating and far lower maintenance requirements.

Real slate is naturally slip-resistant but varies in thickness, absorbs moisture unevenly, and requires regular sealing. Porcelain versions deliver the same surface texture with none of those drawbacks.

  • Surface: calibrated split-face texture that grips wet feet reliably
  • Colour range: charcoal, graphite, mid-grey, terracotta
  • Best used in: walk-in showers, wet rooms, and accessible bathrooms
  • Grout recommendation: use an anti-fungal, flexible grout in a close colour match

The textured surface does collect soap residue more readily than a smooth tile. A weekly scrub with a stiff brush keeps the grip channels clear.

3. Small-Format Mosaic Tiles (48 mm × 48 mm or Smaller)

Mosaic tiles provide exceptional grip in shower trays and wet areas because their high grout-line density creates a naturally textured walking surface.

The grout itself acts as a friction point. A 300 mm × 300 mm sheet of 48 mm mosaics contains roughly 36 individual tiles – and 36 grout joints – per sheet. That density outperforms a single large-format tile on a wet surface.

  • Material options: porcelain, glass, or natural stone mosaics
  • Best R-rated option: unglazed porcelain mosaic at R10–R11
  • Avoid: glossy glass mosaics on floors – the reflective surface reduces wet grip
  • Ideal applications: shower trays, wet room floors, accessible bathrooms

Sizing Guide for Mosaic Tiles in Wet Areas

  • 48 mm × 48 mm — standard choice; good balance of grip and cleaning ease
  • 25 mm × 25 mm — maximum grip; more grout to maintain
  • Penny round (50 mm diameter) — popular in accessible bathrooms; R10 rated in unglazed finishes

4. Brushed or Honed Natural Stone

Honed or brushed stone tiles – particularly limestone and travertine – offer a naturally textured surface with reliable grip ratings for bathroom floors.

Polished stone is dangerous when wet; honed and brushed finishes are a different category. The mechanical surface preparation removes the mirror finish and leaves a fine, open texture that grips effectively.

  • Honed limestone: warm, pale tones; R10 in most specifications
  • Brushed travertine: rustic surface texture; R10–R11 depending on thickness
  • Tumbled slate: heavily textured; R11 across most product lines
  • Essential requirement: seal before installation and annually thereafter

Stone is porous. An unsealed stone floor in a wet bathroom becomes a slip risk as water penetrates the surface and degrades the tile body over time. Sealing is not optional.

5. Anti-Slip Vinyl-Look Porcelain (Wood or Concrete Effect)

Anti-slip porcelain tiles in wood and concrete effects combine practical R10–R11 ratings with the warm aesthetics many homeowners prefer over clinical stone finishes.

Porcelain planks and concrete-effect tiles have evolved significantly. Many now carry verified R10 ratings alongside realistic surface textures that mimic timber grain or brushed cement.

  • Plank format (150 mm × 600 mm or longer): popular in family bathrooms and en suites
  • Concrete effect (600 mm × 600 mm): minimal aesthetic with good grip on textured matt variants
  • Check: the R-rating applies to the anti-slip version – some ranges offer gloss and matt in the same style; only the matt carries the grip rating
  • Underfloor heating compatibility: most porcelain planks are fully UFH-compatible

Installation Factors That Affect Slip Resistance

Correct installation is just as important as the tile itself – poor grouting and wrong adhesive choices reduce the effectiveness of any non-slip surface.

  • Grout joint width: narrow joints (under 3 mm) reduce the friction contribution of the grout itself in textured tile layouts
  • Grout type: use a polymer-modified, anti-fungal grout in all wet areas
  • Substrate preparation: a level, fully bonded substrate prevents tile movement, which degrades surface integrity over time
  • Tile direction: in plank formats, lay tiles perpendicular to foot traffic for maximum grip contact

The five tile types that deliver genuine slip resistance in UK bathrooms are: matt porcelain (R10/R11), textured slate-effect porcelain, small-format mosaics, honed natural stone, and anti-slip wood or concrete-effect porcelain planks. In every case, verify the R-rating on the technical datasheet, use the correct grout, and seal any porous stone annually. Safety performance comes from the specification – not the marketing description.

Leave a comment