Bathroom tiles · Styles & colours · Dublin homes
Bathroom Tile Ideas for Irish Homes
The looks worth considering in 2026, the colours that suit each space, and where every style works best.
Where to start
Tiles set the tone of the whole room.
The most popular bathroom tiles in Irish homes right now are large-format matt porcelain in soft neutrals, marble-effect and stone-effect finishes for a calm, considered look, and warm wood-effect tiles for floors. The right choice comes down to the size of the room, whether the tile is going on the floor or the wall, and the mood you want.
There is no single right tile. A tile that looks perfect on a sample board can feel very different across a whole wall or floor, which is why format, finish and colour matter as much as the pattern itself.
This guide walks through the styles worth considering, with real ranges you can see in our Dublin showroom and order online. When you are ready, browse the full tile range and order samples to try in your own light.
- Most popular
- Large-format matt porcelain in soft neutrals
- Best for floors
- Slip-resistant porcelain and wood-effect
- Best for walls
- Marble-effect, metro and decorative
- Every tile
- Needs the right finish for where it sits
The room.
Room size drives tile scale. Large-format tiles calm a bigger bathroom and, counter-intuitively, make a small one feel larger too.
Floor or wall.
Floors need slip-resistant, hard-wearing finishes. Walls give you freedom for gloss, marble-effect and decorative tiles.
The mood.
Bright and clean, warm and natural, or bold and characterful. Colour and finish set the feeling before anything else.
The main styles
Six tile styles, and where each one works.
Most bathroom schemes are built from one or two of these styles. Pick the look you want, then tap through to browse the ranges you can buy.
Large-format porcelain
The calm, modern default. Fewer grout lines, hard-wearing, ideal on floors and walls.
Marble-effect
The drama of marble without the sealing and upkeep. A luxury look made practical.
Stone & concrete-effect
Quietly contemporary. Natural texture or soft matt concrete for a minimal finish.
Wood-effect
Warmth underfoot that looks like timber but behaves like porcelain in a wet space.
Metro & ceramic
The classic wall finish. Brick bond, vertical stack or herringbone, in gloss or matt.
Decorative & terrazzo
Character for a feature wall, niche or WC, where you can afford to be bolder.
Choosing a colour
Colour sets the mood before anything else.
Here is how the most popular bathroom tile colours tend to behave in Irish homes, so you can match the shade to the room and the light it gets.
- White keeps a bathroom bright, timeless and easy to accessorise. The safest choice for small or north-facing rooms.
- Grey is the modern neutral. Warm greys feel calm, cooler greys feel crisp, and both pair with almost any brassware.
- Beige and cream are back in favour, softening a room and working beautifully with wood-effect floors.
- Green is the standout accent of the moment, from sage to deeper forest tones, best used on a single feature wall.
- Black adds contrast and depth. On a floor or one wall, with white around it, it looks sharp rather than heavy.
Floor or wall
Not every tile suits every surface.
Floor tiles
- Choose a suitable slip rating, especially in a shower or wet area
- Porcelain is the safer bet for durability underfoot
- Wood-effect brings warmth without real timber in a wet space
- Larger formats reduce grout lines and feel calmer
- Textured finishes add grip where it matters
Wall tiles
- More freedom: gloss, marble-effect and decorative all shine here
- Marble-effect makes a striking feature behind a vanity
- Metro tiles suit a classic or contemporary layout
- Decorative and terrazzo work best in a contained feature zone
- No slip performance needed, so finish is free to lead
Small bathroom ideas
Make a small bathroom feel larger.
Small bathrooms and ensuites are common in Irish homes, and the right tiles do a lot of the work. A few choices make the biggest difference to how open a tight space feels.
Seeing these against each other in our Dublin showroom makes the choice far easier, so you can compare scale, finish and colour before ordering.
Three ideas that work
- Format
- Large-format tiles, not small, for fewer grout lines.
- Colour
- White, cream or pale grey to bounce light around.
- Continuity
- Run one tile floor to wall to remove visual breaks.
- Finish
- A little gloss or satin lifts a windowless ensuite.
- Feature
- One bold wall, kept contained, adds character.
- Floor
- Slip-resistant porcelain for a safe, easy-clean base.
See it before you buy
A sample in your own light beats any screen.
Tile colour shifts with the light in your room, so what looks warm in a showroom can read cooler at home. Ordering samples, or seeing the full slab in person, is the most reliable way to choose with confidence.
Our showroom at Roselawn Shopping Centre, Dublin 15 has the ranges in this guide on display, and our team can advise on what suits floors, walls and wet areas.
FAQs
Bathroom tile questions Irish homeowners ask.
What are the most popular bathroom tiles in 2026?
Large-format matt porcelain in soft neutrals is the most popular choice, alongside marble-effect and stone-effect finishes for a calm, considered look and wood-effect tiles for floors. Green is the standout accent colour of the moment.
Are porcelain or ceramic tiles better for a bathroom?
Both work well. Porcelain is harder and more water-resistant, which makes it the better choice for bathroom floors and wet areas. Ceramic is a versatile and cost-effective option for walls and feature zones.
What tiles make a small bathroom look bigger?
Large-format tiles in light colours make a small bathroom feel larger, because fewer grout lines and a brighter surface make the room read as more open. Running the same tile across floor and walls removes visual breaks.
Can you use wood-effect tiles in a bathroom?
Yes. Wood-effect porcelain is designed for wet spaces. It gives the warm look of timber but is waterproof, durable and easy to clean, which makes it ideal for bathroom and wet-room floors.
Which tiles are best for a shower wall?
Porcelain and glazed ceramic are the most common choices for shower walls because they resist water and are easy to clean. Marble-effect porcelain is popular for a premium look, while metro tiles suit a classic finish.
Ready to choose?
Browse the ranges, order samples, or plan it with our team.
Explore the full tile collection online, or visit Newlook Tiles & Bathrooms at Roselawn Shopping Centre, Dublin 15 to see porcelain, ceramic, marble, stone, wood-effect and decorative ranges in person.