The Tile Shop is a dedicated tile retailer serving Oklahoma City homeowners and contractors with a showroom inventory spanning ceramic, porcelain, natural stone, and specialty finishes for kitchens, bathrooms, and feature walls.
A full-line tile distributor with both retail and contractor-facing operations, The Tile Shop stocks products from budget-friendly ceramic options to high-end Italian porcelain and slate. The showroom displays tiles in context—backsplash sections, full wall installations, and floor layouts—allowing customers to see how patterns and grout lines affect a room's proportions before ordering. The business serves both DIY renovators and licensed contractors, with pricing and minimum-order policies that reflect this dual clientele.
Ceramic tile starts around $1.50 to $3.50 per square foot for solid-color, 12x12 formats common in bathrooms and utility areas. Porcelain, which resists moisture and staining better than ceramic, runs $3 to $8 per square foot for standard sizes; specialty finishes like matte, textured, or large-format (24x24 inches and larger) tiles push toward $10 to $15 per square foot. Natural stone such as marble, granite, and travertine ranges $5 to $25 per square foot depending on origin and finish. Hand-painted and imported tiles, often seen in Southwestern or Mediterranean designs, cost $8 to $20 per square foot.
Installation materials (thinset, grout, sealers) are available on-site, reducing a second trip to a big-box retailer. Grout color selection significantly affects visual impact; The Tile Shop stocks at least 15 standard colors plus custom-match options. Labor for installation is not offered in-house, but staff can recommend licensed installers familiar with the specific tile properties (for instance, natural stone requires sealing before grout application in many cases).
Pricing is subject to material cost fluctuations, especially for imported tiles; confirm current pricing before finalizing a budget.
Home Depot and Lowe's carry tile selections limited to mainstream sizes and colors, typically ceramic and basic porcelain; prices are competitive on commodity products but the range stops short of specialty or large-format options. Tile liquidation outlets around Oklahoma City occasionally offer closeout stock at steep discounts, but selection is inconsistent and return policies are tighter. Floor & Decor, if operating in the metro area, emphasizes price leadership on volume and carries some large-format options but fewer natural stone varieties and less on-site design guidance.
The Tile Shop's advantage is depth in natural stone, imported tiles, and custom-cut pieces, plus staff who understand substrate preparation, waterproofing, and tile-specific issues (thermal expansion with large-format porcelain, for example). It suits renovators choosing a distinctive tile or those whose subfloor or wall condition requires specialized materials. Home centers suit budget-conscious DIYers doing straightforward tile work in dry areas.
Ideal customers are homeowners planning a bathroom or kitchen renovation with a defined style (Spanish Colonial, contemporary minimalist, transitional), contractors stocking for multiple jobs, or anyone replacing tile in a high-moisture area where durability matters. The showroom layout and sample program work well for people who can spend 30 to 60 minutes browsing and comparing.
It is not ideal for impulse purchases or emergencies (a single cracked tile needed for repair); inventory is deep on new product but not restocked daily for obsolete patterns. Renters or those with very tight budgets should price big-box stores first.
Bring photos or actual samples of adjoining surfaces (countertop, paint color, cabinet finish) to see how tiles harmonize. Staff will show swatches in natural light and under the showroom's overhead lighting, which reveals differences in gloss and tone invisible in artificial light alone. Request sample pieces to take home; most retailers provide 2 to 4 tiles at no charge. Discuss grout color, edge profiles (bullnose, trim, or finished edges), and special cuts needed. For new construction or significant layouts, take a photo of the space's dimensions and orientation to assess layout options.
Confirm current hours before visiting, as retail hours are subject to seasonal adjustment and staffing. On-site parking is typically available; if purchasing full pallets for contractor work, curbside loading is often arranged by appointment. Delivery within Oklahoma City is available for orders above a minimum threshold, typically $500 to $1,000 depending on tile weight and distance.
The Tile Shop anchors a practical step in renovation planning where selection matters more than speed, offering the depth and guidance that broad-based retailers do not.
