Marine Flooring Guide

IMO Certified Vinyl & Marine LVT

Marine LVT and marine vinyl look like any commercial floor — and carry one thing a commercial floor does not: IMO/MED fire certification for life at sea. This guide explains what makes a vinyl floor ship-ready, how marine vinyl and marine LVT differ, and where each belongs on board.

Written for shipyards, naval architects, interior outfitters and superyacht teams. Trivaro supplies IMO/MED certified marine vinyl and LVT across Europe with full classification documentation as standard.

IMO/MED
Fire-certified vinyl
Wheelmark
EU conformity
Zone-by-zone
Vinyl & LVT map
IMO Certified Vinyl
IMO FTP CodeMED WheelmarkR9–R10
Vinyl certified for life at sea.
Cabins·Corridors·Superyachts

What Makes Vinyl 'Marine'

A commercial LVT and a marine LVT can share the same décor and the same wear layer. What separates them is maritime fire compliance — and the documentation that proves it.

  • IMO FTP Code fire testing

    Tested to the IMO 2010 FTP Code — Part 2 surface flammability and, as a primary deck covering, Part 5. The maritime equivalent of a land building’s reaction-to-fire class.

  • MED wheelmark conformity

    For EU-flagged vessels, MED Module B+D conformity carries the wheelmark — proven by a Type Examination Certificate number, not just the logo.

  • Low smoke & toxicity

    Marine certification verifies low smoke density and toxic-gas emission in a fire — critical in the confined spaces of a vessel under SOLAS.

  • Commercial performance on top

    Marine vinyl and LVT still carry the wear, slip and acoustic performance of a commercial floor — the maritime certification is added, not traded.

Marine Vinyl vs Marine LVT

Both are IMO/MED certified vinyl floor coverings. The choice is format and zone — a jointless welded sheet for wet and hygienic areas, or a tile/plank décor for cabins and public spaces.

Marine Vinyl (sheet)

  • What: homogeneous or heterogeneous sheet vinyl with welded seams.
  • Best for: galleys, bathroom corridors, wet zones, high-traffic circulation.
  • Why: a hygienic, jointless, slip-rated surface that is easy to clean.
  • Slip: safety grades with higher DS/R-ratings for wet areas.

Marine LVT (tile/plank)

  • What: luxury vinyl tile or plank with wood or stone décor.
  • Best for: passenger cabins, suites, owner/VIP areas, public lounges, feature corridors.
  • Why: premium appearance with maritime fire compliance built in.
  • Slip: R9–R10 for dry zones; pair with safety vinyl in wet areas.
Zone Map

Where Marine Vinyl & LVT Go On Board

Maritime flooring is specified zone by zone. Here is where certified vinyl and marine LVT typically land across a passenger vessel.

Cabins & suites

Marine LVT wood/stone décors for comfortable, low-maintenance interiors with acoustic underlay between decks.

Corridors & circulation

High-traffic heterogeneous vinyl and marine LVT with slip ratings for main routes and stairwells.

Galleys & wet zones

Welded marine safety vinyl with anti-slip DS rating — hygienic and jointless under IMO FTP Code.

Lounges & dining

Marine LVT feature floors where a wood or stone look leads, with full IMO/MED certification.

Owner & VIP areas

Premium marine LVT and bespoke custom wood for superyacht and cruise feature spaces.

Crew & service

Practical certified vinyl for crew accommodation and service zones — durable and easy to maintain.

How to Specify Marine Vinyl & LVT

From vessel brief to documentation package — four steps that keep a marine vinyl specification on the right side of classification review.

01

Map the zones

Split the vessel into zones — cabins, corridors, galleys, wet areas, public spaces — and decide where a welded marine vinyl is needed and where marine LVT leads on appearance.

02

Set fire & slip per zone

Confirm the IMO FTP Code parts that apply, and the slip rating each zone needs — R9–R10 for dry circulation, higher DS/R-grades for galleys and wet areas.

03

Verify the certification

Check the MED Module B Type Examination Certificate number in the Notified Body register — the wheelmark logo is the claim, the certificate is the proof. See the wheelmark verification guide.

04

Assemble the documentation

Require IMO/MED certificates, test reports and the DoP for every line, prepared for Lloyd’s Register, DNV or Bureau Veritas review. Trivaro supplies this as standard.

Marine & LVT Clusters

Related Reading

Continue with the marine segment, the certification guides and the commercial LVT range.

Marine flooring

Marine Flooring Solutions — the full IMO/MED certified range, vessel zone map and classification documentation.

IMO/MED certification

IMO/MED Certification guide — FTP Code Part 2 & 5, the wheelmark and Module B+D in plain English.

Commercial LVT

Commercial LVT Flooring — the land-side LVT range, wear class, fire and slip specification.

Marine LVT & IMO Certified Vinyl — FAQ

The questions shipyards, outfitters and naval architects ask about certified marine vinyl and LVT. See also the marine flooring segment and the IMO/MED certification guide.

01

What is marine LVT and how does it differ from commercial LVT?

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Marine LVT is luxury vinyl tile certified for use at sea — it carries IMO FTP Code fire testing and, for EU-flagged vessels, MED Module B+D certification with the wheelmark, on top of the wear, slip and acoustic performance of commercial LVT. A commercial LVT can look identical but without IMO/MED certification it cannot be specified on a passenger vessel. The difference is the maritime fire and smoke documentation, not the décor. See the commercial LVT range.

02

What is the difference between marine vinyl and marine LVT?

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Both are IMO/MED certified vinyl floor coverings. Marine vinyl usually means homogeneous or heterogeneous sheet vinyl with welded seams — the standard for galleys, wet zones and high-traffic corridors where a hygienic, jointless surface matters. Marine LVT is a tile or plank with a wood or stone décor, used in cabins, suites and public lounges where appearance leads. Many vessels use both, zone by zone.

03

What certification does vinyl flooring need to be used on a ship?

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On a passenger vessel, vinyl must meet the IMO FTP Code 2010 — Part 2 (surface flammability) and, as a primary deck covering, Part 5. EU-flagged vessels additionally require MED (2014/90/EU) Module B+D conformity, identified by the wheelmark. The proof is the Module B Type Examination Certificate number, verifiable in the Notified Body register — see the wheelmark verification guide.

04

Where is marine LVT used on board a vessel?

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Marine LVT is specified for passenger cabins and suites, owner and VIP areas, public lounges, dining rooms and feature corridors — anywhere a wood or stone look is wanted with maritime fire compliance. For galleys, bathrooms and wet zones, a welded marine safety vinyl is usually specified instead for its jointless, slip-rated surface.

05

Is marine LVT slip resistant enough for wet areas?

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Standard marine LVT carries an R9–R10 slip rating, suitable for dry cabins and circulation. For galleys, bathroom corridors and wet zones, specify a dedicated marine safety vinyl with a higher DS/R-rating and a defined pendulum value. Set the slip class per zone and prove it with test data — the same discipline as a commercial spec, with the added maritime fire documentation.

06

Can you supply marine LVT for superyachts and refits?

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Yes. Trivaro supplies IMO/MED certified marine LVT and marine vinyl for newbuild outfitting and refit programmes on cruise ships, passenger ferries, RoPax vessels and superyachts. Stock ranges allow fast delivery for dry-dock schedules, and every order includes the IMO/MED certificates, test reports and DoP prepared for classification society review.

Specifying Marine Vinyl or LVT for a Vessel?

Trivaro is a B2B supplier of IMO/MED certified marine vinyl and marine LVT across Europe — for shipyards, outfitters, naval architects and superyacht teams. Full classification documentation included as standard.

Send us your vessel type, the zone breakdown and area estimates. We will respond with certified product recommendations, samples and a B2B quotation.

Specifying Marine Vinyl or LVT for a Vessel?