Luxury Vinyl Tile
64 products
Showing 1 - 24 of 64 products


Kahrs Click 5 mm Wood 6.75" x 47.75" Luxury Vinyl Tile 12mil

Karndean Korlok Select Rigid Core 18" x 24" Luxury Vinyl Tile 20mil

Forbo MCT 13.11" x 13.11" Smooth Luxury Vinyl Tile

Tarkett ID Latitude Abstract 18" x 18" 20mil Luxury Vinyl Tile

Crossville Access Point LVT 18" x 18" Medium Gloss Luxury Vinyl Tile 12 mil

Karndean LooseLay 19.7" x 24" Luxury Vinyl Tile 20mil

Karndean Opus Gluedown 6" x 36" Luxury Vinyl Tile 20mil

Karndean Opus Gluedown 18" x 24" Luxury Vinyl Tile 20mil

Forbo Allura Flex 1.0 - 7.9" x 47.2" Embossed Luxury Vinyl Tile

Forbo Allura Flex 1.0 - 39.4" x 39.4" Embossed Luxury Vinyl Tile

Kahrs Click 5mm Stone 11.75" x 23.5" Luxury Vinyl Tile 12mil

MS International Glenridge 12" x 24" Low Gloss Luxury Vinyl Tile

Shaw Pathways 7" x 48" Square LVT Luxury Vinyl Tile 6 mil

Shaw Pathways 7" x 48" Square LVT Luxury Vinyl Tile 12 mil

Shaw Briard 9" x 60" Micro Bevel SPC Luxury Vinyl Tile 20 mil

Crossville Access Point LVT 18" x 18" Medium Gloss Luxury Vinyl Tile 20 mil

Karndean Art Select Rigid Core 18" x 36" Luxury Vinyl Tile 30mil

Karndean Art Select Rigid Core 18" x 18" Luxury Vinyl Tile 30mil

Karndean Art Select Rigid Core 18" x 24" Luxury Vinyl Tile 30mil

Karndean Korlok Select Rigid Core 6" x 24" Luxury Vinyl Tile 20mil

Karndean knight Rigid Core 12" x 18" Luxury Vinyl Tile 12mil

Karndean Art Select Gluedown 18" x 36" Beveled Luxury Vinyl Tile 30mil

Karndean Art Select Gluedown 18" x 24" Beveled Luxury Vinyl Tile 30milLuxury vinyl tile (LVT) became popular because it solves several everyday flooring problems at once. It gives homeowners the appearance of wood, stone, or concrete surfaces while remaining easier to maintain, more moisture-resistant, and softer underfoot than many traditional hard-surface floors.
Unlike older sheet vinyl, modern LVT is available in tile and plank formats with more realistic textures, lower-gloss finishes, and stronger wear protection designed for active residential use.
Why LVT Replaced Many Traditional Basement Floors
Basements were once heavily dependent on carpet, laminate, or basic sheet vinyl, but moisture exposure often created long-term problems. Luxury vinyl tile became a more practical alternative because it handles humidity and everyday moisture without the same expansion concerns associated with hardwood or some laminate flooring systems.
That flexibility made LVT especially common in:
- basements
- laundry rooms
- bathrooms
- kitchens
- lower-level living spaces
Many homeowners also prefer LVT in homes with pets or children because the surface is generally easier to clean and less sensitive to everyday spills.
Tile-Look Surfaces Without Traditional Tile Maintenance
One reason homeowners choose luxury vinyl tile over porcelain or stone is the difference in daily maintenance and underfoot feel.
Traditional tile floors are harder, colder, and more dependent on grout maintenance over time. LVT offers a similar visual direction while feeling quieter and slightly softer underfoot in residential environments.
Stone-look and concrete-look luxury vinyl tile are especially popular in:
- kitchens
- entryways
- open-plan interiors
-
modern residential spaces
where homeowners want a cleaner architectural look without the harder surface feel of traditional tile installations.
Wood-Look, Stone-Look, and Concrete-Look LVT
Modern LVT collections are designed to imitate a wide range of natural and architectural materials.
Wood-look LVT is commonly used for connected living spaces where homeowners want a continuous floor appearance with easier maintenance than traditional hardwood.
Stone-look and terrazzo-look LVT are often selected for bathrooms, laundry rooms, and modern interiors where surface texture and visual movement matter more than natural material variation.
Many newer collections also use embossed textures and matte finishes to reduce the artificial shine often associated with older vinyl flooring.
What Changes LVT Quality Long-Term
Not all luxury vinyl tile performs the same over time. Wear layer thickness, surface texture, installation system, and core construction all affect how the floor handles residential traffic and long-term use.
Some LVT collections are designed primarily for light residential spaces, while others are built for heavier traffic environments and repeated daily use.
Glue-down luxury vinyl tile is commonly used in commercial and multi-family settings because it provides stronger stability across large continuous spaces. Floating click-lock LVT is more common in residential projects where faster installation and easier replacement matter more.
The overall performance of luxury vinyl tile depends heavily on choosing the right construction type for the environment rather than simply choosing a surface style alone.



