Orange Floor Tiles

Filter and sort 3 products

Style / Effect
Colour
Product Type
Product Category
Finish
Price
£
£
Suitability
Nominal Size
Shape
Sort by

Orange Floor Tiles

Orange floor tiles bring instant warmth and personality underfoot, from soft terracotta and peachy tones through to richer burnt orange shades. They’re a strong choice when you want a space to feel more inviting and lived-in, without relying on busy patterns or bold wall colours. Browse this collection to compare tones, finishes and formats, then order a sample to see how the orange reads in your home’s lighting before you choose.

Why choose orange floor tiles?

Warmth that changes the feel of a room

Orange is naturally warming. Terracotta and burnt orange tones can make kitchens, hallways and bathrooms feel more welcoming, especially in homes that lean neutral elsewhere.

A colour that can look modern or rustic

Orange floors can feel earthy and traditional in matt or stone-effect finishes, or more contemporary when you choose cleaner formats and a controlled grout colour. The overall style comes from finish and layout, not just the colour itself.

A great base for natural materials and contrast

Orange works beautifully with warm whites, timber, stone-look surfaces and brass. For a sharper look, it also pairs well with black accents and darker tones—especially when orange is kept to the floor and the rest of the scheme stays restrained.

Where can orange floor tiles be used?

Always check each product page for floor suitability, slip rating (where relevant), and any installation notes.

Orange bathroom floor tiles

Orange bathroom floor tiles can create a warm, boutique feel—especially in terracotta or burnt orange tones. Because bathrooms are wet areas, it’s worth checking slip resistance and choosing a finish designed for bathroom floors. Many retailers use “R” slip ratings (typically R9–R13) to indicate slip resistance, which helps you choose a tile suited to the space.

Kitchens and kitchen-diners

Orange floor tiles can add warmth to modern kitchens and balance cooler worktops or painted units. Mid-tone oranges and lightly varied faces are often easier to live with day-to-day than very flat, very bright finishes.

Hallways, porches and utility rooms

These are perfect spaces for orange floors because they instantly make the home feel warmer. Practical finishes (matt, lightly textured, stone-effect) also suit higher foot traffic.

Open-plan spaces

Orange flooring can define a zone (for example, kitchen/diner) without switching materials. If you want the look to stay calm, larger formats and tonal grout help the floor read as one cohesive surface.

Popular styles and variations in orange floor tiles

Terracotta and earthy orange tones

Terracotta-style orange tiles deliver classic warmth and suit natural textures, warm whites and timber. They’re an easy route to a timeless, grounded look.

Burnt orange floor tiles

Burnt orange feels richer and more design-led—great for feature floors in bathrooms, cloakrooms and kitchens. Paired with warm metal finishes and good lighting, it can look especially premium.

Orange and multitone natural looks

If you want something forgiving and characterful, look for tiles with tonal variation. They add depth and can disguise minor day-to-day marks better than a perfectly flat colour.

Orange patterned floors vs plain colour

Plain orange floors feel bolder and more modern when the layout is simple and grout is controlled. Patterned options can soften the impact and make orange feel more “blended” into the design.

Grout, trims and practical buying guidance

What grout colour works best with orange floor tiles?

Grout choice decides whether orange looks seamless or more structured.

A soft, blended look: choose a grout close to the tile tone (warm beige/tan/terracotta) so the floor reads calm and continuous.
A clean, modern look: choose a warm grey grout for subtle definition that stays practical.
A more defined look: use deeper grey grout to outline the layout more strongly, but treat it as a deliberate design feature.

Order a sample and compare grout shades beside it in your room’s lighting—orange can shift warmer or cooler depending on daylight and bulb warmth.

Slip resistance for bathrooms and entrances

If the floor will get wet, use slip guidance as part of the decision. R ratings are a common way to indicate slip resistance, and many domestic tiles fall in the R9–R11 range depending on the intended use.

Finish matters more than you think

Glossy surfaces can reflect more light, but can feel less practical underfoot in wet areas. Matt and lightly textured finishes often suit bathrooms, hallways and utility spaces better.

Sample first to confirm tone and intensity

Orange can read peachy, terracotta, rust, or burnt depending on the tile and the room. Order a sample and view it morning and evening, then hold it against your wall colour, cabinetry and any nearby flooring transitions before committing.

Style inspiration: how to use orange floor tiles

Create a warm, modern neutral scheme

Let the orange floor bring warmth, then keep walls in warm white or soft greige. Add timber and brushed metals for a calm, cohesive finish.

Go bold with contrast

Pair burnt orange floors with black accents, charcoal paint, or deep green cabinetry. Keep the rest of the palette tight so the colour feels intentional rather than busy.

Keep the floor as the feature

If the floor is orange, simplify everything else: plain walls, minimal patterns, and one metal finish. This is the easiest way to make orange feel premium rather than overpowering.

Add texture instead of extra colour

If you want a more design-led result, choose an orange tile with subtle surface variation or texture, then light it well. Texture adds depth without needing pattern.

FAQs about orange floor tiles

What colours go with orange floor tiles?

Warm white, cream, beige and greige are the easiest pairings and keep the scheme calm. Timber and stone-look surfaces sit naturally with orange tones. For contrast, black accents and deep greens can look striking—especially with burnt orange shades.

Are orange floor tiles suitable for bathrooms?

Yes, as long as the tile is rated for floor use and suited to wet areas. Check slip guidance (often shown as an R rating) and choose a finish that feels confident underfoot.

Will orange floor tiles make a room feel smaller?

Not necessarily. Lighter terracotta and softer orange tones can warm and brighten a space. In smaller rooms, orange often works best when walls and large surfaces stay simple and light.

What grout colour should I use?

For most homes, a warm tonal grout (beige/tan) keeps the look seamless and lived-in. Warm grey grout gives a more modern edge. Order a sample and test grout shades in your lighting before you decide.

What’s the best way to choose the right orange?

Order a sample and check it in the room at different times of day. Orange tones can shift significantly under warm bulbs versus daylight, so seeing it in place is the most reliable way to choose confidently.