Modern Tiles
Modern tiles feature clean lines, simple forms, and refined finishes. Ideal for sleek interiors that prioritize function, balance, and contemporary design.
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Your Guide to Modern Tiles
Modern tiles have clean lines, simple formats, and finishes without heavy ornamentation. The palette stays neutral: stone looks, concrete looks, and warm wood looks in matte or satin finishes. There are no busy patterns, no high-contrast grout lines, and no decorative borders. That simplicity is what makes the style work across a wide range of homes.
Contemporary tiles and modern tiles cover similar ground, but modern design stays closer to proven materials and neutral colorways. Contemporary interiors sometimes take bigger swings with color or pattern. Where minimalist tiles reduce a room to almost nothing, modern tile allows for more material variation: a honed marble look, a concrete finish with subtle texture, a warm wood-look plank, as long as the palette stays restrained. Browse contemporary tiles if you want to see where the two styles overlap.
Modern Floor and Wall Tile
Floor Tile
The workhorse of a modern floor is a large-format porcelain tile in a stone, concrete, or wood look with a matte or satin finish. Formats of 24x24, 24x48, or 32x32 dominate because fewer grout lines mean a cleaner surface across the room. These tiles require rectified edges, meaning precision-cut to exact dimensions, so joints can stay as narrow as 1/16 to 1/8 of an inch. A matte finish handles foot traffic well and meets PEI 3 or 4 for residential use without showing scuffs or water marks. The floor tiles collection covers the full range of formats and finishes suited to this style.
Wall Tile
On walls, modern design gives you two strong directions. The first is a large-format slab that continues the same material from the floor up the wall, reducing transitions and visual noise. The second is an elongated subway format, typically 4x12 or 4x16, laid in a stacked vertical pattern with a matching or near-matching grout. Large-format tiles in 24x48 are increasingly the choice for feature walls in bathrooms and showers because they eliminate almost all grout lines. The wall tiles collection includes stone-look, concrete-look, and marble-look options across both formats.
Modern Tile by Room
Bathroom
For a modern bathroom, the most effective approach is to run the same large-format tile on both the floor and the walls. Using one material on both surfaces removes the visual seam between them and makes the room feel larger. A matte warm-gray or off-white porcelain on the floor with the same tile in a polished finish on the walls keeps the palette tight while adding a surface contrast that reads as intentional.
Kitchen
For a modern kitchen backsplash, a stacked vertical subway tile in white or warm gray with matching grout makes the backsplash look like a continuous surface rather than individual tiles. Behind the range, a single large-format slab in a stone or concrete look eliminates grout joints entirely in the most-used cooking zone and turns a functional surface into a focal point.
Shower
For a modern shower, use the same rectified porcelain on all four walls and carry it to the floor in a smaller mosaic format for slip resistance without switching materials. A 1/16-inch joint throughout and a near-matching grout gives the entire enclosure a spa-like continuity. Skip accent borders and decorative inserts. The restraint is the design.
How to Choose Modern Tile
Match your grout to your tile. Contrasting grout draws attention to every joint and makes individual tiles visible. If you want a floor or wall to look like one continuous surface, which is the core goal of modern design, choose a grout within two shades of the tile body color.
Matte on floors, satin or polished on feature walls. Matte finishes are easier to maintain underfoot and show less grime between cleanings. Polished and satin finishes on vertical surfaces catch light without the slip risk and add visual depth to a material-driven, low-pattern palette.
Scale your format to your room. A 24x48 tile in a small bathroom can overwhelm the space and create awkward cuts at every wall. For rooms under 80 square feet, a 12x24 or 18x18 installs more cleanly and still looks contemporary.
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Frequently Asked Questions
While the terms are often used interchangeably, modern and contemporary tile design have distinct characteristics. Modern design refers to a specific aesthetic movement rooted in the early to mid-twentieth century, emphasizing function over ornament, bold geometric forms, honest use of materials, and a philosophy that form should follow function. Contemporary design, by contrast, refers simply to what is current and therefore shifts with the times. Modern tiles tend to feature stronger geometric statements, high-contrast color blocking, and references to mid-century and Bauhaus design principles. If you are drawn to design that feels both timeless and purposeful, our modern tile collection is well worth exploring.
Modern tile design traditionally favors a disciplined color palette. Black and white is the most enduring pairing in the modern aesthetic, delivering high contrast and graphic clarity that reads as bold without being fussy. Warm neutrals such as concrete gray, warm white, and natural taupe bring a softer version of modernism that is highly livable. For those who want more character, deep forest greens, slate blues, and terracotta have become popular modern accent choices that ground a space with color while maintaining compositional restraint. Tile Mart offers modern tiles across all of these palettes, and our sample program allows you to test combinations directly in your space before committing.
Many modern tiles are well-suited to outdoor use, particularly those made from porcelain, which is among the most weather-resistant tile materials available. Porcelain modern tiles with a low water absorption rate handle freeze-thaw cycles effectively and resist fading in direct sunlight, making them suitable for patios, pool surrounds, and covered outdoor entertaining areas. The clean, geometric aesthetic of modern tile translates especially well to outdoor spaces where architectural lines are already prominent. It is important to select tiles with an appropriate slip-resistance rating for outdoor floors, particularly in areas that get wet regularly. Our product listings include slip-resistance information, and our team is happy to help you identify the right modern tile for your specific outdoor application.

















