Surplus Tiles & Flooring

End-of-line, surplus and reclaimed tiles and flooring from across the UK. Ceramic, porcelain, LVT, engineered wood and reclaimed quarry tiles — by the box or by the pallet.

Tile and flooring surplus flows through the UK in vast volume: manufacturers ship in dye-batches, distributors accept a 10–15% over-order on new lines, and retailers clear last-season stock every quarter. What gets called 'end-of-line' is almost always first-quality tile — the pattern is simply no longer in the catalogue. Prices routinely land 40–70% below current retail.

For utility rooms, garages, rental refurbs, or any large single-batch installation, surplus is unbeatable. The one caveat: because you can't re-order, buy 10–15% overage in a single go. Reclaimed Victorian encaustic tiles, quarry tiles and terrazzo pieces trade in smaller quantities and command a premium for heritage repairs where a specific pattern is required.

Every listing below shows the batch/dye-lot number where available, tile format, PEI wear rating for floor tiles, and coverage in m² so you can size your order accurately.

  • leftover ceramic tiles job lot
  • cheap porcelain tiles end of line
  • surplus LVT flooring
  • reclaimed quarry tiles
  • discounted bathroom tiles
  • surplus engineered wood flooring
  • end of line porcelain 600x600
  • reclaimed Victorian encaustic tiles

Common tiles & flooring sub-types

Porcelain tiles
Kitchens, bathrooms, floors — 600×600 the default.
Ceramic wall tiles
Splashbacks, bathrooms — softer and lighter.
LVT & vinyl click
Karndean, Amtico, Quick-Step surplus.
Engineered wood
Oak, walnut and ash boards — pre-finished.
Reclaimed quarry & Victorian
Encaustic patterns, Minton, Craven Dunnill.
Natural stone
Travertine, limestone, slate — surplus and reclaimed.

2026 UK price bands

Live SurplusBuilder listings sampled Q1 2026. Regional variation ±10–20%.

ProductTypical surplus £/m²Merchant new
Porcelain 600×600 (end-of-line)£14–£22£40–£60
Ceramic wall tile£8–£14£20–£35
Designer/Italian porcelain£20–£35£80–£140
LVT (surplus click)£10–£18£28–£45
Engineered oak flooring£22–£38£55–£90
Reclaimed quarry tiles£28–£55n/a (heritage)

Buyer's checklist

  • Always confirm the batch number is consistent across the lot — mixed batches show as visible colour bands.
  • Order 10% extra for a straight lay, 15% for diagonal, and 20% for large-format herringbone.
  • PEI 4+ for hallways and kitchens; PEI 3 is fine for bathrooms and utility rooms.
  • Rectified tiles need 2–3mm grout joints; non-rectified need 3–5mm to hide edge variation.
  • LVT and engineered wood must acclimatise 48 hours on-site before laying — factor into your programme.
  • Reclaimed Victorian encaustics are a matching game — take a photo of an original tile to the seller before buying.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I match tile batches?+

Always buy at least 10% extra to cover cuts, breakages and future patch repairs. Reclaimed and end-of-line tiles cannot be re-ordered, so order generously — running short mid-job forces a second-batch mismatch or a full re-lay.

Are end-of-line tiles seconds?+

No. End-of-line means the retailer or distributor is clearing stock because the pattern is no longer in the catalogue — they are first-quality tiles at clearance prices. Seconds (visible flaws) are usually listed explicitly as B-grade at a further 20–40% discount.

Can I mix batches on a large floor?+

Only if you deliberately want the variation. On a plain-colour porcelain, batch mixing shows as visible banding under artificial light. On patterned or rustic tiles the variation reads as intended character. Ask the seller for batch numbers on every pallet.

How long does LVT need to acclimatise?+

48 hours in the room it will be laid, flat and out of the packaging, at 18–22°C. Skip this step and click-lock joints will open in the first few weeks.

Are surplus tiles CE-marked?+

Yes — surplus stock is factory-fresh with the same CE/UKCA marks as new merchant supply. Reclaimed tiles are older than the CE-marking regime and don't carry it; specify accordingly for public and commercial projects.

What's the difference between PEI 3, 4 and 5?+

PEI rates a tile's resistance to abrasion. PEI 3: light residential (bathrooms, bedrooms). PEI 4: medium-heavy residential and light commercial (kitchens, hallways). PEI 5: heavy commercial (retail, airports).