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[Spain] These Are the Latest Flooring Trends Dominating in 2026

These Are the Latest Flooring Trends Dominating in 2026
Este espacio nos muestra algunas de las tendencias en 2026

Editor's Note

This editor’s note highlights the key facts and market implications behind “These Are the Latest Flooring Trends Dominating “, with emphasis on sourcing, product fit, fabrication, logistics, or buyer impact.

Undoubtedly, flooring has the ability to transform the personality of a home. Many turn to wood floors and laminates for the warmth they provide. However, there are also many other variants. This year, it seems we are seeking even more naturalness and sustainability in home coverings, prioritizing real materials like terrazzo, wood, terracotta, or stone. Want to know more? Join us in this article where we tell you about the flooring trends that are still popular from 2025, what is already obsolete, and the newest trends of this 2026.

We Prefer Dark Wood to Light Wood

Light wood floors have been predominant in recent years, as they go with everything and help rooms look brighter and more spacious. However, tastes seem to be changing. Brands in the sector, such as the British company Abingdon Flooring, comment that in 2026 we will leave behind those light and grayish tones to bet on darker, warmer woods with more character.

Large-Format Porcelain

Porcelain pavements continue to maintain their prominence despite the years. The reason? They are highly resistant to impacts and scratches, easy to clean and maintain, function as a good insulator against sudden temperature changes, and, given their low porosity (they hardly absorb water), they are a great ally for bathrooms and kitchens. In addition to being available in large formats that minimize the number of joints, they have the ability to reproduce wood, stone, or marble, like this example.

This year, we will also see it especially in terracotta and ochre tones, due to the current reclamation of the essential.

Terrazzo Effect

Terrazzo is coming back strong, but without a retro feel. This year it modernizes with neutral tones, large inlays, and more sober designs. Ideal for homes with a modern Mediterranean or warm industrial style. It is used in both porcelain stoneware tiles and vinyl.

Herringbone Floors

Wood parquet installed in herringbone or chevron patterns remains one of the most chosen, in its most classic and natural versions, as it adds personality and dynamism to spaces, especially in living rooms and hallways.

Microcement for Character

Microcement is already one of the most used materials in interior design projects and not just for bathrooms. Its smooth, light, and continuous finish transmits warmth and allows spaces to gain much more personality through furniture. It works well in both minimalist interiors and modern homes.

Hydraulic Floors with Geometric Patterns

Hexagons, herringbones, checkers, diamonds… Floors become canvases with geometric mosaics. They are used mainly in delimited areas (kitchens, entrances, bathrooms) to create decorative contrasts, dynamism, and originality.

Vintage Hydraulic Floors

We have been seeing vintage tiles from the seventies this past year, and in 2026 they do not disappear completely. Given their geometric designs, this type of hydraulic floor adds a plus of sophistication and personality, but they are reserved for certain rooms or corners, for example in hallways, bathrooms, or kitchens to add color.

Rustic Floors

Rustic floors gain importance in homes more connected with nature and the outdoors and in that search for the vintage. Natural stones with an aged finish, handmade terracottas, irregular woods, and traditionally inspired ceramics are in style. Medium or uneven formats, with visible joints, earthy tones, and imperfect surfaces that reinforce authenticity predominate.

Porcelain Stoneware with Marble Effect

Inspired by Carrara, Calacatta, or Onyx marbles, this stoneware combines visual luxury with zero maintenance. Ideal for those seeking sophistication without giving up resistance. In 2026, it is trending in white, black, or even intense green colors.

Cork Floors

Cork is having a sweet moment as an alternative to laminate floors. This is easy to understand because it is a sustainable, warm, and very pleasant material to walk on, in addition to being a great insulator against noise and cold. It also surprises with how well it withstands daily wear, so it works just as well in kitchens and bathrooms as in a study or work area. A practical and, moreover, very comfortable option.

Minimalist, relaxed, and natural spaces were the protagonists in 2025 and we are still seeing them. In this line, we continue to see natural wood floors, in matte tones and with a rustic touch, and microcement in pure colors and without stridency, but there are some more trends we have inherited from 2025.

XXL Formats

XXL formats also continue to work, as they achieve almost joint-free surfaces. This helps to gain a certain feeling of spaciousness and uniformity. They work well in modern and sophisticated homes with very clean finishes.

Fashion is cyclical, and in the world of flooring, too. What was once a trend today may seem impersonal or poorly adapted to current spaces, which are more organic and natural and look to the past. These are two types of floors that are no longer popular in 2025:

Laminate Floors

Laminate floors that imitated wood had their moment of glory for their practicality, but they are losing strength against real wood or more honest alternatives in their materiality, such as cork. Architect Abel Pérez summarizes it this way in a recent interview:

“Imitations have peaked. Now we are looking for materials with soul. Wood is used for real, or something else is chosen, but not a substitute.”

Vinyl Floors Lose Strength

Vinyl floors had their boom thanks to their quick installation, affordable prices…

Source: Read the original article | Published: December 08, 2025

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