Teal Tiles & Stones

- Teal tiles and stones bring a clean blue-green finish to bathrooms, kitchens, pools, entryways and outdoor areas. Explore teal floor tiles, wall tiles, stone slabs and paving options from trusted Australian suppliers, with choices for residential builds, commercial interiors and architectural projects. Use this page to compare materials, finishes, formats and applications before shortlisting products that suit your design brief, budget and installation needs. From subtle muted teal to deeper ocean tones, the right surface can add colour without overpowering the space.

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Teal sits between blue and green, so it can read as calm, coastal, modern or bold depending on the material and finish. In finishes, it is often used as an accent rather than across every surface. That said, teal tiles and stones can also work across larger areas when the tone is soft, the grout is considered and nearby materials are restrained.

How to choose teal tiles and stones

Start with the application. A teal splashback has different demands from teal pool tiles, outdoor paving or a stone vanity top. Wet areas need surfaces that handle moisture and cleaning. Floors need the right slip resistance and edge detail. Benchtops and slabs need attention to sealing, staining and daily wear.

Popular teal tile and stone options

ArchiPro brings together products across natural stone, porcelain, concrete and ceramic ranges. The best choice depends on how the surface will be used, how much maintenance you want and the visual result you are trying to achieve.

  • Teal wall tiles: A practical way to bring colour into bathrooms, laundries, powder rooms and kitchens. Gloss finishes reflect light, while matt finishes feel softer and more architectural.
  • Teal floor tiles: Suitable for bathrooms, entries and commercial spaces when specified with the correct slip rating, thickness and wear rating.
  • Teal stone: Natural stone may include veining, mineral movement or variation across slabs. View samples where possible, as colour can shift between batches.
  • Teal mosaics: Useful for curves, pool surrounds, niches and small feature zones. More grout lines can improve grip but also require more cleaning.

Match the material to the space

For large format surfaces, explore stone slabs for vanities, splashbacks, fireplace surrounds and statement walls. Slabs can reduce grout lines and give a more continuous look, though they need professional handling and careful planning around joins.

For patios, paths, pool zones and courtyards, compare outdoor tiles and paving. Outdoor products should be selected for slip resistance, UV exposure, drainage, frost exposure where relevant and compatibility with the substrate. Teal is often used around pools and entertaining areas because it works well with water, greenery, pale render and natural timber.

If you want a softer handmade feel or a more industrial look, concrete tiles can be a strong option. They may need sealing and more care than porcelain, but they have a depth of colour that suits feature floors and wall panels.

For the widest choice of formats, finishes and price points, browse tiles. Porcelain and ceramic tiles are common for bathrooms and kitchens because they are generally easy to clean and available in many sizes, from small kit-kat tiles to large floor formats.

Colour, grout and finish details

Teal can change dramatically under different lighting. A tile that appears green in a showroom may look bluer under cool LED lighting or next to white stone. Order samples where possible and test them against cabinetry, tapware, paint and flooring before committing.

  • Light teal: Works well in compact bathrooms and coastal interiors where brightness matters.
  • Deep teal: Creates a stronger feature wall or powder room effect, especially with brushed brass, black or aged bronze fittings.
  • Greyed teal: A quieter option for projects that need colour without a high-contrast result.
  • Grout colour: Matching grout softens the pattern. Contrast grout highlights tile shape and may make small-format tiles feel busier.

What to check before you buy

Ask suppliers for technical information, not just colour samples. For floors and wet areas, check slip rating, water absorption, cleaning guidance, edge finish and recommended grout. For natural stone, ask whether sealing is required, how often it should be maintained and which cleaners should be avoided.

Also confirm lead times, batch availability and minimum order quantities. Teal products can be more design-specific than neutral tiles, so ordering extra for cuts, breakage and future repairs is sensible. For most projects, allow a waste factor and speak with your installer before placing the final order.

Use ArchiPro to compare teal tiles and stones from Australian suppliers, review product details and connect with specialists who understand specification, installation and finish compatibility.