About Us Contact Us Blogs Wall Tiles Floor Tiles
Nagpur city Amritsar city Barnala city Bathinda city Faridkot city Kotkapura-and-jaitu city Mandi-gobindgarh city Fatehgarh-sahib city Abohar-and-fazilka city Jalalabad city Zira-and-firozpur city Batala city Gurdaspur city Mukerian city Hoshiarpur city Jalandhar city Kapurthala city Phagwara city Ludhiana city Khanna city Malerkotla city Mansa city Moga city Pathankot city Patiala city Rupnagar-and-anandpur-sahib city Mohali city Dhuri-and-sangrur city Sunam-and-lehragaga city Nawanshahr city Sri-muktsar-sahib city Malout-and-gidderbaha city Tarn-taran-sahib city Thiruvananthapuram city Ajmer city Kekri city Beawar city Alwar city Khairthal city Banswara city Baran city Barmer city Bharatpur city Bhilwara city Shahpura city Bikaner city Bundi city Chittorgarh city Churu city Ratangarh city Dausa city Dholpur city Dungarpur-and-sagwara city Sri-ganganagar city Suratgarh city Hanumangarh city Jaisalmer city Jalore city Sanchore city Jhalawar city Jhunjhunu city Balotra city Jodhpur city Phalodi city Hindaun-karauli city Kota city Nagaur city Pali city Rajsamand city Gangapur-city city Sawai-madhopur city Neem-ka-thana city Abu-road city Tonk city Udaipur city Kotputli-and-behror city Didwana city Deeg city Salumbar city Dudu city Anupgarh city Madurai city Navsari city Vadodara city Faridabad city Gurugram city Cuttack city Bhubaneswar city Dhanbad city Ranchi city Agra city Gauriganj-amethi city Bareilly city Bulandshahr-khurja city Etawah city Fatehgarh-farrukhabad city Firozabad city Gorakhpur city Hapur city Jaunpur city Jhansi city Lucknow city Mathura city Mau-maunath-bhanjan city Meerut city Mirzapur-vindhyachal city Moradabad city Muzaffarnagar city Prayagraj-allahabad city Rampur city Saharanpur city Sambhal city Shahjahanpur city Varanasi city Hubli-dharwad city Mysore city Anakapalli city Anantapur city Madanapalle city Rayachoti city Chirala-bapatla city Chittoor city Rajahmundry city Eluru city Tenali city Guntur city Kakinada city Tuni city Amalapuram city Gudivada city Machilipatnam city Kurnool city Nandyal city Vijayawada city Narasaraopeta city Chilakaluripeta city Ongole city Nellore city Dharmavaram city Puttaparthi city Srikakulam city Parvathipuram city Tirupati city Visakhapatnam city Vizianagaram city Bhimavaram city Proddatur city Kadapa city Jorhat city Agar-malwa city Alirajpur city Anuppur city Ashoknagar city Balaghat city Sendhawa-and-barwani city Betul city Bhind city Bhopal city Burhanpur city Chhatarpur city Chhindwara city Pandhurna-and-saunsar city Datia city Dewas city Dhar city Dindori city Khandwa city Guna city Gwalior city Harda city Narmadapuram-hoshangabad city Indore city Jabalpur city Jhabua city Katni-murwara city Khargone city Mandla city Mandsaur city Gadarwara-and-narsinghpur city Neemuch city Prithvipur-and-niwari city Panna city Raisen city Biaora-rajgarh city Ratlam city Rewa city Sagar city Satna city Sehore-and-ashta city Seoni city Shahdol city Shajapur city Sheopur city Shivpuri city Sidhi city Singrauli-and-waidhan city Tikamgarh city Ujjain city Umaria city Mauganj city Maihar city
Privacy Policy
Find available design in your city
Size Area Look Category Finish Color

200x1200 Tiles: Border, Skirting and Module Matched Strip

200x1200 tiles (8x48 inch, 0.66x4 feet) measure 200mm by 1200mm, a narrow strip format that shares its 1200mm length with several larger tile sizes sold in India. This shared length is the main reason designers reach for this size, since it lines up cleanly with other tiles in the same collection.

This size is used mainly as a border strip, skirting piece, stair nosing or mixed-width plank accent, rather than as the sole tile covering an entire floor. Prices range from Rs. 50 to Rs. 120 per sq.ft from Morbi and Gujarat manufacturers depending on body and finish.

 

Same Tile, Three Different Names

200mm converts to approximately 0.66 feet or 7.87 inches, commonly rounded to 8 inches. 1200mm converts to approximately 3.94 feet or 47.24 inches, commonly rounded to 4 feet or 48 inches.

This gives the 8x48 tiles and 0.66x4 tiles names seen in search results, both describing the same 200mm by 1200mm product. One tile covers approximately 2.58 square feet, so a 100 square foot area needs roughly 39 tiles before wastage.

Buyers see three different naming conventions for the same product mainly because tile search behaviour in India mixes metric, the industry standard, with inch and foot-based habits carried over from older construction practices and international design references. Confirming the metric size in millimetres remains the most reliable way to avoid ordering the wrong product, regardless of which naming convention a listing or search result uses.

 

Why 1200mm, Specifically

The defining feature of this size is its 1200mm length, which matches the length of 600x1200mm tiles, 1200x1800mm and 1200x2400mm tiles sold under the same collection names. A designer can pair a 200x1200 border strip against any of these larger tiles, and the grout lines will align across the full length of the join.

This module matching is the main reason 200x1200 exists as a distinct size from narrower or shorter strip tiles. A skirting piece, a stair riser trim, or a border running along the edge of a 600x1200mm floor all rely on this shared 1200mm length to avoid an awkward, uneven joint line.

Buyers planning a mixed-width plank floor, where two or three different tile widths are laid side by side to imitate randomised real wood planking, also rely on this shared length so every strip in the pattern lines up at the same point along the room.

A common real-world example is a bedroom floor laid in 600x1200mm tiles, with a 200x1200 strip in a contrasting or matching tone used as the skirting around the room's perimeter. Because both pieces share the same 1200mm length, the skirting joints land at exactly the same points as the floor tile joints along each wall, giving a coordinated, deliberate look rather than a mismatched one.

 

GVT or Full Body Vitrified: Which to Pick at This Length

200x1200 tiles are available in GVT tiles and full body vitrified construction. Full body vitrified is the more common recommendation at this length, since the longer strip is more prone to flexing during handling than the shorter 200x1000mm size, and a consistent body colour hides any minor chip better along a longer visible edge.

GVT versions remain available at a lower price point for buyers prioritising budget over long-term chip resistance, particularly for border or skirting use where the strip sees less direct foot traffic than a full floor tile would. Both types carry water absorption below 0.5 percent under IS 15622:2006 standards for vitrified tiles.

Thickness also plays a role in choosing between the two bodies at this length. A thinner GVT strip, typically 8mm, is easier to cut precisely for corner mitres on skirting, while a full body vitrified strip at 9mm to 10mm holds up better if used as an actual floor tile in a mixed-width layout that sees regular foot traffic.

 

Finishes That Work Well as a Border

For coordinating tones, wood-look tiles remain a popular finish at this size, particularly for buyers building a mixed-width plank floor using this strip alongside a wider plank tile in the same wood tone. Stone and concrete-look strips are also common, mainly for border or skirting applications rather than a full wood plank floor.

A matte or lightly textured finish suits floor and skirting use, while a glossy finish is sometimes chosen for a decorative border strip on a wall rather than a floor, where slip resistance is not a concern. Buyers combining this strip with a larger format tile should always request samples of both together, since colour and tone can shift slightly between different production runs even within the same collection.

Colour coordination strategy generally falls into two approaches at this size. A matching strip in the same tone as the main floor tile creates a seamless, unified look, while a contrasting strip in a darker or lighter shade creates a deliberate framing effect that draws attention to the room's proportions. Neither approach is more correct than the other, and the choice usually comes down to whether the room is meant to feel larger and more continuous or more defined and structured.

 

Skirting, Stair Nosing and Other Everyday Uses

Skirting and border strips are the single most common use for this size, running along the base of a wall or the edge of a room in a colour or tone that complements the main floor tile. Stair nosing and riser trim are another frequent application, since the 1200mm length matches a typical stair width without needing a joint across most residential staircases.

Mixed width plank flooring, where this size is combined with a wider plank tile such as 200x1000mm tiles or a squarer format in a randomised layout, is a growing design trend for bedrooms and living rooms wanting a less uniform, more natural wood floor appearance. Feature wall borders, framing a mirror, television unit or headboard, are a common decorative use on walls rather than floors.

Kitchen counter backsplash edging and bathroom half wall cap trim are two further applications for this size, using the strip as a finishing edge rather than a full surface covering. A dado line, a decorative horizontal band run partway up a wall, is another common use, particularly in hallways and stairwells where a full height feature wall would be too visually heavy.

Note: 200x1200 tiles are rarely used to cover an entire floor on their own, since a room laid entirely in a single narrow strip repeats the same joint pattern too frequently to look natural. Pairing it with a wider tile or using it as a border generally gives a better result.

 

Getting the Joint Line to Match

Installing 200x1200 tiles as a border or skirting piece requires careful planning of the starting point, since any misalignment compounds visibly along a run this long. Installers typically dry lay the full border along the room before applying adhesive, to confirm the joint pattern lines up with the main floor tile as intended.

When paired with a larger format tile of the same 1200mm length, grout joints should be planned to align directly across the seam between the two sizes, since an offset joint at this length draws the eye more than it would with a shorter strip. A single 200x1200 tile weighs approximately 5.5 kilograms, light enough for one installer to handle without lifting equipment.

Corner returns on a skirting run need a mitred cut where two strips meet at an internal or external corner, rather than a simple butt joint, for a finished look comparable to timber skirting board. Installers unfamiliar with mitring tile at this length should practice on an offcut before cutting the first visible corner piece, since a mismatched mitre angle is difficult to disguise once installed.

Epoxy grout is recommended at the joints for any border or skirting application exposed to regular cleaning or moisture, such as kitchen tiles or bathroom edge, since it resists staining better than standard cement grout over repeated mopping.

 

Budgeting for a Border or Skirting Run

GVT versions of this size are priced from Rs. 50 to Rs. 80 per sq.ft from Morbi and Gujarat manufacturers, the more affordable option for border and skirting applications. Full body vitrified versions cost more, from Rs. 80 to Rs. 120 per sq.ft, recommended for floor use or any application with regular foot traffic.

Since this size is usually bought in smaller quantities than a full floor tile, per piece or per running metre pricing is sometimes offered alongside the standard per square foot rate, particularly for skirting and border orders. Buyers should confirm which pricing method a dealer is quoting before comparing costs across suppliers.

Order quantities for a skirting or border run are typically calculated in running metres rather than square feet, based on the room's perimeter rather than its floor area. A dealer quoting a small border order may apply a minimum order value or a slightly higher per-piece rate than a bulk floor tile order, since cutting and packing a small quantity of a specialised strip size carries a similar handling cost to a much larger order.

GST, freight from Gujarat, and matching trim pieces such as external corner mitres for skirting should be budgeted separately from the base tile price. Buyers combining this size with a larger format tile should also confirm both are ordered from a matching production batch to avoid a visible shade difference along the join.

 

Where It's Made and What Backs the Price

Genuine 200x1200 vitrified tiles carry water absorption below 0.5 percent, compliant with IS 15622:2006 standards for vitrified tiles, keeping the strip stable through India's monsoon humidity without warping along its length. Most 200x1200 tiles sold in India are manufactured in Morbi, Gujarat, and packed in narrow cartons suited to the strip's elongated shape.

Price for this size spans Rs. 50 to Rs. 120 per sq.ft, with GVT versions at the lower end and full body vitrified toward the upper end. Buyers outside Gujarat should confirm freight costs separately, and always request a sample of both this strip and any larger tile it will be paired with before finalising an order, particularly given how monsoon transit conditions can affect delivery timelines.

 

Planning Your Border or Skirting Run

Choosing 200x1200 tiles usually comes down to a specific border, skirting or mixed width plank plan rather than a decision about covering an entire room. Confirming the shared length with any larger format tile in the same project, along with body type and finish, helps the final installation line up cleanly.

A well-planned border or skirting run in this size adds a finished, tailored look to a room at a fraction of the material cost of tiling an entire floor in a premium finish. TilesFinders lists 200x1200 tiles from Morbi and Gujarat manufacturers alongside module-matched larger sizes from the same collections.

You May Also Explore These Trending Tile Designs

FAQs

200x1200 tiles measure approximately 7.87 inches by 47.24 inches, commonly rounded to 8x48 tiles in search terms. The exact manufactured size stays fixed at 200mm by 1200mm across brands. Always confirm the metric size before ordering.

0.66x4 tiles refers to the same 200x1200mm product, described using the rounded foot conversion. 200mm converts to roughly 0.66 feet and 1200mm converts to roughly 3.94 feet, rounded to 4 feet. All descriptions refer to one identical tile size.

200x1200 shares its 1200mm length with 600x1200mm, 1200x1800mm and 1200x2400mm tiles, all sold under the same collection names by most manufacturers. This lets a border, skirting or accent strip in this size align cleanly with a larger floor tile from the same range. It is the main reason this specific length exists as a standard size.

One 200x1200 tile weighs approximately 5.5 kilograms, light enough for a single installer to handle without lifting equipment. This is slightly heavier than the shorter 200x1000mm size due to the extra length. Both remain far lighter than any large format panel size.

200x1200 tiles can cover a full floor, but a room laid entirely in this narrow strip often looks repetitive from the recurring joint pattern. Pairing this size with a wider plank tile in a mixed width layout, or using it as a border, generally gives a more natural result.

Yes, this size is available in both GVT and full body vitrified construction. Full body vitrified is generally recommended at this length, since the longer strip is more prone to flexing during handling. Both carry water absorption below 0.5 percent under IS 15622:2006 standards.

200x1200 tiles typically cost between Rs. 50 and Rs. 120 per sq.ft in India. GVT versions sit at the lower end, suited to border and skirting use. Full body vitrified versions cost more and suit floor applications with regular foot traffic.

Yes, 200x1200 tiles are commonly used for stair nosing and riser trim, since the 1200mm length matches a typical stair width without a joint. Confirm the specific nosing profile needed with the manufacturer before ordering. A textured or anti-skid finish is recommended for stair applications.

Epoxy grout is recommended for the joint between a 200x1200 border strip and a larger format tile, particularly in wet or frequently cleaned areas. Epoxy resists staining better than standard cement grout over repeated mopping. Grout colour should be matched across both tiles for a seamless look.

Yes, ordering both the 200x1200 strip and any larger paired tile from the same production batch is strongly recommended. Shade and tone can vary slightly between different manufacturing runs, even within the same collection name. A visible shade difference along the join is one of the most common complaints with mixed size installations.

Corners on a skirting run in this size are typically finished with a mitred cut, where two strips meet at a 45 degree angle. This gives a clean, continuous look comparable to timber skirting board. Confirm whether the installer or manufacturer provides pre-mitred corner pieces before the job starts.

200x1200 tiles are commonly quoted both ways, since skirting orders are usually measured in running metres while floor orders are measured in square feet. Confirm which unit a dealer is quoting before comparing prices between suppliers. Small border orders may also carry a minimum order value.