Where to Buy Bathroom Tiles in Bangkok (2026 Guide)
Tile shopping in Bangkok usually goes one of two ways. You walk into HomePro, grab something that looks fine, and hope. Or you spend a Saturday driving between showrooms on Pracha Uthit Road, see ten thousand options, and leave empty handed. There is a better path. Below is where contractors and architects actually buy.
Quality Thai brands
COTTO
Thailand's largest tile brand, owned by SCG. Multiple showrooms across Bangkok. The Ratchada branch is a good first stop. The range covers basic ceramics through respectable porcelain. Prices start around ฿200 to ฿800 per sqm. The slip-rated bathroom lines are the right pick for floors. Not glamorous, reliably good.
Dynasty Ceramic
A close second to COTTO. Strong selection of marble-look, cement-look, and wood-look tiles. Often a touch cheaper than COTTO at similar quality. Worth visiting if you want a modern look on a mid-range budget.
Bangkok Ceramic
The budget option that does not look budget. Decent variety, sensible prices, and a real showroom for in-person inspection. Useful when every baht counts.
Imported and premium brands
tile-it (tile-asia.com)
The place to go for Italian and European tiles. Showrooms in Bangkok and Phuket. Stock includes porcelain, glass mosaics, ceramic mosaics, and natural stone from brands your architect will recognize. The price step up from Thai brands is real, and so is the difference in finish.
WDC (Western Decor Corporation)
Imported porcelain with clean modern designs. A natural starting point if your reference photos lean Scandinavian or Japanese contemporary.
BRILLTILE
Handmade tiles from Lampang, more than 2,000 designs across 76 colors. The right choice if you want a bathroom that does not look like every other condo on Sukhumvit. Mid to high price range. You are paying for craft.
Kenzai
Premium imported tiles from several countries. Best suited to projects where the budget conversation is already settled.
Best shopping districts
Pracha Uthit and Suksawat Road
Bangkok's wholesale building materials strip. Stores line both sides for easy comparison. This is where contractors buy, and the prices reflect it. Not pretty, not air-conditioned, 20 to 30 percent cheaper than retail. Bring water and wear comfortable shoes.
CDC (Crystal Design Center)
The other end of the spectrum. A premium home decor hub on Ekkamai-Ramintra with imported tiles, sanitaryware, and fittings curated under one roof. Excellent for seeing high-end materials in person, less kind to your budget.
Boonthavorn
The reliable all-rounder. Multiple tile brands under one roof and staff who can actually help you decide. Mid-range pricing, good selection, no pressure to upgrade.
HomePro and Thai Watsadu
The big-box option. Wide selection, convenient parking, and you can pick up grout, adhesive, and a new shower curtain on the same trip. Not a destination for premium tiles, but perfectly fine for a standard renovation.
Four buying rules
- Order 10 to 15 percent extra. This is not optional. Cuts, breakage, and future repairs all eat into the order. Running out mid-installation means a two to three week delay, assuming the lot is still available.
- Check production lots. Tiles from different batches can show visible color differences once laid side by side. Open one box from each pallet and compare before signing.
- Test slip resistance. R10 or higher for bathroom floors. Hold a tile, wet it, run your thumb across it. If it feels like ice, keep shopping.
- Compare price per square meter, not per tile. A ฿35 tile sounds cheap until you learn it is 10x10 cm and you need 100 of them per square meter.
Not sure what to choose?
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