Floor Planks
1436 products
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Daltile Oltre 8" x 48" Rectified Matte Porcelain Floor Plank

Daltile Oltre 12" x 48" Rectified Matte Porcelain Floor Plank

Daltile Dignitary 6" x 24" Rectified Matte Porcelain Floor Plank

Daltile Delegate 6" x 24" Rectified Matte Porcelain Floor Plank

Daltile Timber Glen Contemporary 6" x 24" Rectified Porcelain Floor Plank

Del Conca USA Woodscape 8" x 48" Glazed Porcelain Plank

Del Conca USA Woodland 8" x 48" Rectified Glazed Porcelain Plank

Del Conca USA Voyage 8" x 32" Glazed Porcelain Plank

Daltile Pines Terrace 7.25" x 48" Luxury Vinyl LVF Dry Back 8 Mil Plank

Daltile Pines Terrace 7.25" x 48" Luxury Vinyl LVF Dry Back 20 Mil Plank

Daltile Asher Bend 2mm 9" x 71" Micro-Beveled Luxury Vinyl 12 Mil Plank

Daltile Asher Bend 6.5mm 5" x 24" Micro-Beveled Luxury Vinyl 20 Mil Plank

Daltile Asher Bend 6.5mm 9" x 71" Micro-Beveled Luxury Vinyl 20 Mil Plank

Daltile Halstatt 7.25" x 48" Luxury Vinyl SPC Rigid Core 12 Mil Plank

Daltile Harper's Place 7.5" x 48.5" Luxury Vinyl 8 Mil Plank

Daltile Langton Flexible Click 7.5" x 52" Micro-Beveled Matte Luxury Vinyl Plank
Chesapeake Waycross 4.75" x RL Hand Scraped Solid Hardwood Plank

Chesapeake Stockbridge 5" x RL Wirebrushed Solid Hardwood Plank

Chesapeake Southern Charm 9.5" x RL Wirebrushed Engineered Hardwood Plank

Chesapeake Points East 7.5" x RL Wirebrushed Engineered Hardwood Plank

Chesapeake Mystic Bay 6.5" x RL Brushed Engineered Hardwood Plank

Chesapeake Liberty Plus 8" x 47.5" Embossed Waterproof Laminate Plank

Chesapeake Speakeasy 7" x 48" SPC 12mil Vinyl Plank

Chesapeake Roaring 20's 8.86" x 60" Rigid Core 20mil Vinyl PlankFloor Planks in Vinyl, Hardwood, Laminate and Porcelain
Floor planks are long, rectangular flooring pieces used to create a clean, linear floor layout. They are commonly chosen for wood-look designs, wider room flow, and practical everyday flooring. This collection includes real plank flooring such as vinyl, hardwood, engineered hardwood, and laminate, along with porcelain plank options that create a similar plank-style look with tile performance.
Floor planks work well in living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, hallways, entryways, basements, and commercial spaces. The right choice depends on how the space is used, how much moisture is present, how much traffic the floor receives, and whether the buyer wants comfort, durability, water resistance, or a natural wood feel.
Real Floor Planks vs Plank-Look Tile
Not every plank-style floor is made from the same material. Hardwood, engineered hardwood, vinyl, SPC, WPC, and laminate are real floor planks because they are manufactured as plank boards. Porcelain plank tile is different. It is tile made in a plank shape, often designed to look like wood or create a long, linear surface.
This difference matters because each material performs differently. Hardwood gives natural wood character. Vinyl planks offer waterproof and easy-care performance. Laminate planks provide a budget-friendly wood-look surface. Porcelain planks give the look of wood or stone with the durability and moisture resistance of tile.
Vinyl Floor Planks
Vinyl floor planks are popular for homes and commercial spaces because they combine durability, water resistance, and easy maintenance. Many vinyl planks are available as LVP, SPC, or WPC flooring, giving buyers options based on firmness, comfort, and daily use.
Vinyl planks are a strong choice for kitchens, basements, laundry rooms, rentals, pet-friendly homes, and busy areas where the floor needs to handle spills, cleaning, and regular foot traffic. Wood-look vinyl planks are especially common for buyers who want the warmth of wood without the same moisture concerns.
Hardwood and Engineered Hardwood Planks
Hardwood planks are real wood flooring boards that bring natural grain, warmth, and long-term character to a space. Each plank has its own wood movement, color variation, and surface detail, which gives the floor a more authentic look.
Engineered hardwood planks use a real wood top layer over a stable core, making them more flexible for certain home conditions than solid hardwood. These planks are often chosen for living rooms, bedrooms, dining rooms, and main living areas where natural wood appearance is the priority.
Hardwood planks need more care than vinyl or porcelain, but they offer a real material feel that many homeowners value.
Laminate Floor Planks
Laminate floor planks are designed to give a wood-look surface at a more accessible price point. They are made with a printed design layer, a protective wear layer, and a core structure that supports regular residential use.
Laminate planks work well in bedrooms, living rooms, hallways, and other dry areas where buyers want a clean wood-look floor without the cost of hardwood. Some modern laminate options also offer improved water resistance, but the product rating should always be checked before using it in moisture-prone spaces.
Porcelain Plank Tile
Porcelain plank tile is not a wood or vinyl plank, but it is made in a plank format. It is often used to create wood-look floors with the strength, water resistance, and easy cleaning of porcelain tile.
Porcelain planks are useful in bathrooms, kitchens, entryways, laundry rooms, patios, and commercial spaces where moisture, cleaning, and durability matter. They can give the appearance of wood while performing more like tile.
Buyers should remember that porcelain planks feel harder and cooler underfoot than vinyl, laminate, or hardwood. Installation also matters because long tile planks need proper layout, grout spacing, and surface preparation.
How to Choose the Right Floor Planks
The best floor planks depend on the room and the way the floor will be used. For wet areas, vinyl planks and porcelain plank tile are often more practical. For natural warmth and long-term character, hardwood or engineered hardwood planks are better choices. For budget-friendly wood-look flooring in dry spaces, laminate planks can work well.
Also consider plank width, color, texture, finish, and installation method. Wide planks can make a room feel more open, while narrow planks can create a more traditional look. Matte and textured surfaces are often easier to live with than very glossy finishes, especially in busy homes.
A good floor plank should not only look right on installation day. It should match the room’s traffic, cleaning needs, moisture level, comfort expectations, and long-term maintenance.
FAQs
Q) What are floor planks?
A) Floor planks are long, rectangular flooring pieces used to create a plank-style floor layout. They can be made from hardwood, engineered wood, vinyl, laminate, or tile materials.
Q) Are vinyl planks real floor planks?
A) Yes, vinyl planks are real floor planks because they are manufactured as long flooring boards. LVP, SPC, and WPC are common types of vinyl plank flooring.
Q) Is porcelain plank considered floor plank flooring?
A) Porcelain plank tile is not a traditional floor plank like hardwood, vinyl, or laminate. It is a porcelain tile made in a long rectangular shape, often with a wood-look appearance. Because of its plank shape and floor use, it is commonly called porcelain floor plank.
Q) Are floor planks good for commercial spaces?
A) Yes, some floor planks work well in commercial spaces. Vinyl planks, porcelain plank tile, and certain laminate or engineered options can handle commercial use when the product rating matches the traffic level.
Q) Which floor planks look most natural?
A) Hardwood and engineered hardwood planks offer the most natural wood character because they use real wood. Wood-look vinyl, laminate, and porcelain planks can also create realistic designs with different performance benefits.

