Wet Room Floor Options: Resin, Mosaic and Small-Format Porcelain — Slip Resistance (PTV >36), Falls and Linear Drain Position

Quick Answer: Wet room floors must achieve a minimum Pendulum Test Value (PTV) of 36 or above when wet to comply with BS 8300:2018 and the Equality Act 2010 access requirements. Falls must drain to the waste at a minimum gradient of 1:80 (1.25%) and typically 1:60 (1.67%) for practical drainage. Linear drains can be positioned along any wall or in the centre of the fall; the entire floor must fall toward the drain without ponding. Resin floors, small-format porcelain (<10×10 cm), and glass mosaic all offer suitable slip-resistant options.

Summary

A wet room is not just a bathroom without a shower tray. It is a fully waterproofed space where the entire floor drains to a point or linear waste, and where every surface must be slip-resistant in wet conditions. The floor specification is more demanding than a standard bathroom because water will cover the entire floor surface, not just the immediate shower area.

The most common reason wet room floors fail inspection or cause accidents is inadequate slip resistance. A large-format polished porcelain tile that achieves an excellent R10 dry rating may fall below PTV 36 when wet, making it non-compliant for domestic and commercial wet rooms alike. Slip resistance is a property of the wet tile surface, not just the material type — the same tile in a polished finish and a natural/textured finish can have dramatically different wet-surface PTV values.

Falls are the second most common failure. The floor must slope continuously to the drain at sufficient gradient to carry water away without ponding. Inadequate falls mean puddles sit on the floor long after use — creating both a slip hazard and a breeding ground for mould in the grout joints. Installing a wet room on an existing suspended timber floor, or in an upstairs location, requires careful structural assessment and additional waterproofing measures beyond a standard wet room system.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Floor Material Typical PTV (Wet) Format Options Maintenance Cost Range (Supply)
Resin (polyurethane/epoxy) 55–70+ (textured) Seamless Annual clean, 5–10yr recoat £30–£80/m²
Glass mosaic 40–55 20×20 mm, 25×25 mm Grout cleaning £35–£80/m²
Porcelain mosaic 40–60 50×50 mm, 48×48 mm Low £15–£50/m²
Small-format porcelain (<10×10) 38–55 75×75 mm, 100×100 mm Low £20–£60/m²
Mid-format textured porcelain 36–50 100×200 mm, 200×200 mm Low £20–£60/m²
Large-format polished porcelain 15–30 (wet) 600×600 mm+ Low £20–£80/m²
Natural slate 40–60 Various Sealing required £25–£70/m²
Natural limestone 25–45 Various Regular sealing £30–£100/m²
Resin-bonded aggregate 55–80 Seamless Annual maintenance £40–£100/m²

Detailed Guidance

Slip Resistance — Selecting the Right Surface

The Pendulum Test Value (PTV) is the definitive measurement for slip resistance on pedestrian surfaces in the UK. BS 7976-2:2002 defines the test method and BS 8300:2018 defines the minimum PTV of 36 for wet surfaces in accessible spaces. While BS 8300 applies specifically to buildings accessible to disabled people (i.e., subject to the Equality Act), the 36 PTV threshold is now accepted as best practice for all domestic wet rooms.

How to verify PTV:

Effect of tile format on slip resistance: Small-format tiles achieve higher effective slip resistance primarily because of the proportion of grout joints. A 50×50 mm mosaic tile has significantly more grout joint area per m² than a 600×600 mm large-format tile. Grout joints (when properly profiled and slightly recessed) create micro-edges that provide grip underfoot. This is why mosaics are the default specification for pool surrounds, shower trays, and commercial wet areas.

Falls — Designing the Drainage System

The fall gradient determines how quickly water drains from the floor surface. Insufficient fall allows water to pond; excessive fall is uncomfortable underfoot and can be problematic for wheelchair users.

Fall calculation:

Room Width Fall at 1:80 Fall at 1:60
1 m 12.5 mm 16.7 mm
1.5 m 18.75 mm 25 mm
2 m 25 mm 33.3 mm
2.5 m 31.25 mm 41.7 mm
3 m 37.5 mm 50 mm

Falls must be created in the substrate before tanking and tiling — not compensated for by varying the tile adhesive bed thickness. In new construction, falls can be formed in the screed layer. In retrofit, sloping formers (proprietary wet room formers in polystyrene or cement fibre) provide the correct gradient within a thin-bed system.

Point drains vs linear drains:

Linear Drain — Specification and Position

Linear drains (channel drains) are increasingly the preferred specification for wet rooms because they allow a single consistent slope across the floor — simpler to form, simpler to tile (no complex mitred fall cuts), and more accessible for users with mobility limitations.

Position guidelines:

Integration with tiled floor: Linear channel grates can be tiled or supplied in stainless steel finish. Tiled grates create a seamless look but require:

Resin Floors — When to Specify

Polyurethane and epoxy resin floors are seamless, highly waterproof, and can achieve very high PTV values through aggregate-seeded or textured finishes. They are increasingly specified in residential wet rooms as well as commercial spa and healthcare environments.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Two-part epoxy vs polyurethane:

Tanking — The Foundation of a Wet Room

No floor or wall finish is the waterproofing — the tanking membrane beneath it is. In a correctly constructed wet room, the tiling and resin coat are cosmetic finishes over a fully waterproof substrate.

Standard tanking system (tanked tile backer approach):

  1. Cement tile backer board (e.g., Aquapanel, Hardiebacker, Wedi) fixed to studs or joists
  2. Waterproof tanking membrane (liquid-applied or sheet) applied to all joints, corners, and penetrations
  3. Fabric tape embedded in wet tanking at all corner joints and around pipe penetrations
  4. Second coat of tanking membrane to full wall and floor coverage to minimum 1.8 m height on shower walls
  5. Allow tanking to cure as per manufacturer instructions before tiling
  6. Apply tile adhesive (C2 S1 minimum) and tile

Common tanking failures:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use large-format tiles in a wet room?

Large-format tiles (>60×60 cm) can be used in wet rooms if they achieve minimum PTV 36 when wet. Polished large-format porcelain typically achieves PTV 15–25 when wet — clearly unsuitable. Textured large-format tiles in a "bush hammered" or "anti-slip" finish can achieve PTV 36–45 wet. Always obtain the manufacturer's wet PTV data before specifying. Where there is doubt, test a sample with a wet cloth — if it feels slippery, it is.

What is the minimum fall for a wet room floor?

The absolute minimum is 1:80 (12.5 mm per metre of fall). In practice, most installers work to 1:60 (16.7 mm/m) to ensure reliable drainage. Falls less than 1:80 are a known cause of puddling, slow drainage, and mould growth in grout joints. The fall must be formed in the substrate — not compensated for by adhesive bed thickness variations.

Can I install a wet room on a first-floor suspended timber floor?

Yes, but with significant additional precautions. The floor structure must be assessed for deflection — BS 5385 requires deflection not to exceed L/360 of the span. Most standard joist and floorboard floors require reinforcement (additional joists, reduced centres, or an additional layer of 18 mm WBP plywood) to achieve the required stiffness. A highly flexible tanking and adhesive system (C2 S2) is mandatory. A leak detection mat or moisture alarm is recommended between the substrate and tanking to detect failures before they cause structural damage below.

How do I stop grout going black in a wet room?

Grout discolouration in wet rooms is caused by mould growth, not dirt. Prevention: specify an epoxy grout (RG class per BS EN 13888) or a polymer-modified CG2W grout — both have significantly better resistance to mould. Ensure adequate ventilation (minimum 15 l/s extract for wet rooms under Building Regulations Part F). Advise the client to leave the wet room door open after use and to squeegee the floor.

Is a wet room suitable for users with limited mobility?

Yes — a level-access (zero-threshold) wet room with a wide linear drain and appropriate grab rails is often the best accessible shower option. For wheelchair users: minimum 1500×1500 mm turning space; a fold-down shower seat on the opposite wall to the shower head; slip-resistant tiles minimum PTV 40 wet; falls no steeper than 1:40 in the sitting/transfer area.

Regulations & Standards