ONLY IF... the floor surface is well-prepared (1/2" cement board minimum), the tiles have a thick enough body (some wall tiles have a very thin body, and are unsuitable for floor tiles because they're so fragile), and are made up of a material (my favorite is red clay) suitable for compressive loading (your heeled shoes, or high heels), your mortaring work is IMPECCABLE, and your tile-laying technique is excellent.
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ONLY IF... the floor surface is well-prepared (1/2" cement board minimum), the tiles have a thick enough body (some wall tiles have a very thin body, and are unsuitable for floor tiles because they're so fragile), and are made up of a material (my favorite is red clay) suitable for compressive loading (your heeled shoes, or high heels), your mortaring work is IMPECCABLE, and your tile-laying technique is excellent.
Maybe not, but not for the reason you think! Wall tiles on the floor would certainly be considered an alternative material. In some jurisdictions it is illegal to install building materials for other than their intended purpose without approval.
"The provisions of this code are not intended to prevent the
installation of any material or to prohibit any design or method
of construction not specifically prescribed by this code, provided
that any such alternative has been approved. An alternative material,
design or method of construction shall be approved where the building
official finds that the proposed design is satisfactory and complies
with the intent of the provisions of this code, and that the
material, method or work offered is, for the purpose intended, at
least the equivalent of that prescribed in this code. Compliance with
the specific performance-based provisions of the International Codes
in lieu of specific requirements of this code shall also be permitted
as an alternate."
I once asked for approval and they wanted result from a testing lab showing equivalency.
Please don't shoot the messenger! I think you know who to shoot.
I just purchased 600+ sqft of wood look tile (6"x24") to install in the living room and family room. Got them delivered only to see the words "ceramic" on the boxes. I somehow assumed they were porcelain. So I go to the website listed on the box, found my tiles and saw that they were categorized as "ceramic wall tiles", no other information is offered, and I don't know the grade of the tile. Now I'm panicking because there is a no refund policy.
Can I use these "ceramic wall tiles" on my floors? Would it be a waste of time and money to install them? My biggest concern is installing them (myself) and the floors cracking a few years later.
thank you in advance!
Edit w/ update/question: Thank you again to everyone who replied. I ended up calling the tile store, who then called the manufacture and they reassured me that the tiles are suitable for flooring, and made of porcelain (even though the box has "CERAMIC" printed on it).
This weekend I took them out of the box and started laying them out. I quickly noticed some were chipped at the edges. They could have already chipped upon arrival, or I was not careful enough and had chipped them as I laid them out. Either way I feel like these tiles are very prone to chipping and I can't help but think they are ceramic tiles.
My question to everyone is: are tiles that fragile and is chipping normal during the install process? or have I been duped?
I've included some pictures for a visual.
Thank you!