20 Art Deco Bathroom Floor Tile Ideas You Need to Try


So, you’re redoing your bathroom floor and you’re tired of looking at the same boring white subway tiles everyone’s bathroom has. Honestly, same. I went through this exact spiral last year โ€” standing in a tile showroom, completely overwhelmed, until I stumbled onto Art Deco designs and thought, “Why didn’t I find this sooner?” If you want a bathroom that actually has a personality, Art Deco floor tiles are where it’s at. Let’s get into it.

What Even Is Art Deco? (Quick Refresher)

Before we jump into the ideas, let me give you a super quick rundown. Art Deco is a design movement from the 1920sโ€“30s that’s all about bold geometry, symmetry, rich contrasting colors, and that unmistakable sense of glamour. Think Great Gatsby, old Hollywood, and luxury hotels that somehow still look cooler than anything built in the last decade. Yeah, it aged that well.

In bathrooms specifically, Art Deco tiles show up as geometric patterns, sunburst shapes, chevrons, fan motifs, and striking black-and-white combos. The goal is sophistication with a little drama โ€” and honestly? Your bathroom deserves that energy.

20 Art Deco Bathroom Floor Tile Ideas

1. Classic Black and White Geometric Pattern

This is the OG of Art Deco tile looks. You can’t go wrong with a bold black-and-white geometric floor โ€” hexagons, diamonds, or stepped patterns all work beautifully here. I installed a similar look in my own guest bathroom and every single visitor comments on it. It’s timeless, high-contrast, and works with literally any wall color.

2. Fan or Shell-Shaped Tiles (Scallop Style)

Fan tiles โ€” also called scallop or clamshell tiles โ€” are having a massive moment right now, and honestly they deserve it. They create this beautiful layered texture on the floor without being chaotic. Stack them in ivory and taupe for a soft Art Deco vibe, or go bold with navy and gold. I tried the ivory version in a small bathroom and it made the space look twice as expensive. No joke.


3. Sunburst Medallion Floor Tile

Want a real showstopper? A sunburst medallion tile laid in the center of your bathroom floor is pure Art Deco royalty. These tiles radiate outward from a central point, creating an almost hypnotic pattern. Pair it with plain surrounding tiles so the medallion stays the star. This one’s definitely a statement โ€” but that’s kind of the whole point, right?


4. Chevron Pattern in Marble Look

Chevron is bold, dynamic, and gives your floor serious energy. When you do it in marble-look porcelain tiles โ€” whether in classic Calacatta white or grey veined stone โ€” you get something that feels very 1920s luxury apartment. FYI, porcelain marble-look tiles are way more practical than real marble for bathroom floors. They’re durable, easier to clean, and they don’t stain when you inevitably knock over a shampoo bottle.


5. Hexagon Mosaic in Black, White, and Gold

Three colors. One killer floor. Black hexagons, white hexagons, and the occasional gold accent tile laid in a geometric mosaic pattern is chef’s kiss for Art Deco bathrooms. The gold pieces don’t need to dominate โ€” even 10โ€“15% gold tiles scattered through the pattern adds that luxe feel. I honestly think this is one of the most underrated tile combos out there.


6. Navy Blue and White Diamond Tiles

Navy and white is a combo that never, ever gets old. Diamond-shaped tiles in these two colors laid in an alternating pattern feel distinctly Art Deco โ€” nautical, crisp, elegant. If your bathroom has gold fixtures (lucky you), this pairing is insanely good. It’s one of those combos where the whole room suddenly looks intentional and designed rather than just “tiles on a floor.”


7. Stepped or Staircase Pattern

This one’s a little less common, which is exactly why I love it. Stepped patterns โ€” sometimes called “staircase” or “key” patterns โ€” use rectangular tiles arranged to create a visual stepped effect across the floor. It’s geometric, it’s bold, and it screams Art Deco without being over the top. In my experience, these look best in two-tone palettes: black and cream, or grey and white.


8. Penny Round Tiles in Art Deco Colors

Penny tiles (those tiny round mosaics) have been around forever, but when you pick them in Art Deco-appropriate colors โ€” think deep emerald, rich burgundy, or classic black โ€” they take on a whole different character. They’re also great for smaller bathrooms because the small scale of the tile doesn’t overwhelm the space. Honestly, I wasn’t a huge fan of penny tiles before I saw them in a dark forest green. Changed my mind completely.


9. Encaustic Cement Tiles With Bold Geometric Motifs

Encaustic cement tiles are the real deal for Art Deco fans. These are handmade, patterned tiles with geometric or floral motifs baked right into the surface โ€” not just printed on top. They’re thicker, more tactile, and genuinely beautiful. Yes, they’re pricier and need sealing, but the result is a floor that looks like it belongs in a 1930s Parisian hotel. Worth every penny IMO.

FeatureEncaustic Cement TilesStandard Porcelain Tiles
Pattern durabilityBuilt into materialSurface printed
MaintenanceRequires sealingLow maintenance
CostHigherBudget-friendly
Aesthetic feelHandmade, artisanClean, modern

10. Terrazzo With Geometric Border

Terrazzo is technically a surface, not a specific tile pattern, but hear me out. Art Deco-era architects loved terrazzo floors because of how they could embed geometric shapes and colored marble chips into a seamless surface. Today you can get terrazzo-look tiles that mimic this, and pairing them with a strong geometric border tile around the perimeter of the room is pure Art Deco magic.


11. Elongated Hexagon (Arabesque) in Black and Gold

Elongated hexagons โ€” sometimes called arabesques or lantern tiles โ€” hit differently when done in black with gold grout. The elongated shape adds movement to the floor while keeping the geometric structure that’s so central to Art Deco design. This look tends to work really well in narrow bathrooms because the elongated shape draws the eye and makes the space feel longer.


12. Monochrome Greek Key Border

The Greek key (or meander) border is one of the most iconic Art Deco decorative elements โ€” that continuous, interlocking right-angled pattern that runs around the edge of a space. Using it as a border tile around a simpler floor tile in the center is a smart move. It adds complexity and craftsmanship without making the whole floor feel busy. It’s that subtle flex that tile people notice immediately.



13. White Zellige Tiles With Geometric Grout Lines

Zellige tiles are traditionally Moroccan, but their handmade, slightly irregular surface pairs beautifully with Art Deco geometry. Use them in a diamond or herringbone layout with dark grey or charcoal grout, and the irregularity of the tile surface actually adds depth and character. Honestly, this trend feels a little fresher than some of the more rigid Art Deco patterns right now โ€” and I’m here for it.


14. Parquet-Style Wood-Effect Tiles in Geometric Layout

Wait โ€” wood tiles? In a bathroom? Trust me. Large-format wood-effect porcelain tiles arranged in a parquet (herringbone or chevron) pattern give you that Art Deco warmth and organic luxury feel without the water damage drama of actual wood floors. The geometric arrangement is key here โ€” regular wood plank tiles won’t cut it. You need the pattern to do the heavy lifting.


15. Black Octagon With White Dot Insets

This is one of the most classic Art Deco tile combinations ever invented and it still works perfectly. Large black octagons with small white square dots at the intersections โ€” it’s a pattern that’s been on bathroom floors since the 1920s and it refuses to go out of style. Simple, striking, and endlessly elegant. If you’re not sure where to start with Art Deco tiles, honestly, start here.


16. Faded Pastel Geometric Tiles (Dusty Rose & Sage)

Not everyone wants the high-contrast black-and-white Art Deco look โ€” and that’s totally valid! Softer, faded pastel versions of geometric Art Deco tiles (think dusty rose, sage green, or muted mustard) give you the same structured geometry but with a gentler, more feminine energy. I’ve seen this in a powder room done in dusty pink hexagons with cream grout and it was genuinely dreamy. ๐Ÿ™‚


17. Bold Diagonal Stripe Pattern

Diagonal stripe tiles are underrated. Running bold diagonal stripes โ€” alternating dark and light โ€” across a bathroom floor creates incredible visual movement. It makes the space feel dynamic rather than static. This works especially well in longer, narrower bathrooms where a standard grid layout would just emphasize how tight the space is. Go diagonal, bro. It works.


18. Art Deco Sunflower or Petal Motif Tile

Floral motifs in Art Deco design aren’t soft and romantic โ€” they’re geometric, stylized, and bold. Think sunflower or lotus petal patterns rendered in strong geometric shapes rather than realistic curves. In floor tile form, these can be absolutely stunning, especially in a cream and terracotta or black and gold palette. This is one of those choices that makes your bathroom feel like a destination rather than just a room.


19. High-Gloss Charcoal and Silver Geometric Tile

For a more contemporary take on Art Deco, high-gloss charcoal tiles with silver or platinum geometric accents are incredibly sleek. This is the kind of floor that makes your bathroom feel like a luxury hotel spa โ€” dark, moody, reflective, and undeniably cool. Pair it with polished chrome fixtures and white walls for maximum impact. Wow! This combo genuinely stops people in their tracks.


20. Mixed Material Mosaic: Stone, Glass, and Metal Accents

The most ambitious idea on this list โ€” and possibly the most rewarding. A custom mosaic floor that mixes natural stone, glass tiles, and small metal (brass or copper) accents in a structured Art Deco geometric layout is next-level. It’s not cheap, and it’s not a weekend DIY project (fair warning), but the result is genuinely one-of-a-kind. If you’re going all-in on your bathroom remodel, this is the version that makes people gasp when they walk in


Tips for Pulling Off Art Deco Tiles Without Going Overboard

Keep the Rest of the Room Simple

Art Deco floors are statement pieces. If your floor is doing all this geometric, high-contrast work โ€” let it. Keep your walls simple (white, cream, or a single deep color), keep fixtures minimal, and resist the urge to add more pattern elsewhere. The floor is the lead singer. Everything else is backup.

Grout Color Matters More Than You Think

Grout is not an afterthought with Art Deco tiles. Dark grout on a dark tile pattern loses the definition of the design. White grout on a black-and-white tile pops the pattern beautifully. Gold-tinted grout on a black hexagon floor? Honestly insane in the best way. Choose intentionally.

Consider Tile Scale Relative to Room Size

Small bathroom = smaller tiles or mosaic patterns. Large bathroom = go bigger and bolder. Art Deco patterns can get overwhelming fast in tight spaces, so scale your tile choice to your floor area. A massive medallion tile in a tiny powder room can actually work โ€” but only if it’s centered and the room layout allows it.


Quick Art Deco Tile Style Guide

StyleBest ColorsBest Room SizeDifficulty
Black & White GeometricBlack, WhiteAnyEasy
Fan/Scallop TilesIvory, Navy, SageSmallโ€“MediumEasy
Sunburst MedallionGold, Cream, BlackMediumโ€“LargeMedium
Encaustic CementMulti-color, TerracottaAnyHard

Where to Shop for Art Deco Floor Tiles

Beyond Amazon (where the Editor’s Picks above are great starting points), here are a few trusted sources worth exploring:

  • Ann Sacks (annsacks.com) โ€” High-end, authentic encaustic and decorative tiles
  • Tile Bar (tilebar.com) โ€” Wide range of affordable Art Deco-style options
  • Fireclay Tile (fireclaytile.com) โ€” Sustainable, handmade geometric tiles

These retailers consistently get strong reviews from designers and renovation enthusiasts for quality and range. Definitely worth browsing before you commit.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Are Art Deco floor tiles hard to clean? Not really! Most modern Art Deco-style tiles are porcelain or ceramic, which are super easy to wipe down. Encaustic cement tiles need sealing and a bit more care, but nothing unmanageable.

Q: Can I use Art Deco floor tiles in a small bathroom? Absolutely. Just scale down the tile size to match the space, and consider mosaic or penny-style options. A small bathroom with a bold Art Deco floor can actually feel larger and more interesting than one with plain tiles.

Q: What grout color works best with Art Deco tiles? It depends on the tile, but as a rule โ€” contrast is your friend. White grout with dark tiles, dark grout with light tiles. For gold-toned Art Deco designs, a warm grey or tan grout tends to complement nicely.

Q: Are peel-and-stick Art Deco tiles worth buying? For renters or anyone who wants to test a look before committing, yes! The Amazon peel-and-stick options I mentioned (Art3d and Tic Tac Tiles) are genuinely decent quality for a temporary or budget solution.

Q: How much does it cost to tile a bathroom floor with Art Deco tiles? This varies wildly. Basic porcelain Art Deco tiles can run $3โ€“$8 per square foot. Encaustic cement or custom mosaic tiles can hit $20โ€“$50+ per square foot. Factor in installation costs too, which typically add $5โ€“$15 per square foot depending on complexity.


Final Thoughts

Art Deco bathroom floor tiles are one of those design choices where you put them in and suddenly your whole bathroom looks intentional, curated, and genuinely beautiful โ€” instead of just a room with a toilet. I’ve never met a person who regretted going Art Deco with their floor. Seriously, not one.

Whether you start small with some peel-and-stick options (grab the Art3d Mosaic Sticker Tiles or the Tic Tac Tiles Art Deco Pattern on Amazon to test the look), or you go full send with custom encaustic cement tiles and gold grout โ€” there’s an Art Deco tile idea on this list that’s right for your space and your budget.

So โ€” which of these 20 ideas are you actually going to try? Drop your thoughts in the comments, or tag me if you do the renovation. I genuinely want to see how it turns out! ๐Ÿ™Œ

The team behind Urban Nook Creations is passionate about home dรฉcor and interior styling. We share curated ideas and creative inspiration to help you design a space you truly love.

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