Comparison Guide

LVT vs SPC Flooring

LVT and SPC look almost identical — same printed décor, same wear layer. The difference is the core, and that one difference decides which one belongs in each zone of your project.

This guide compares flexible-core LVT and rigid-core SPC the way a specifier actually decides: by traffic, temperature, subfloor condition and installation speed. Written for contractors, developers and architects choosing a commercial vinyl tile.

Flexible
LVT core
Rigid
SPC core
By zone
How to choose
LVT vs SPC
Flexible coreRigid coreCommercial
Same look, different core.
Stability·Traffic·Subfloor

The Core Difference, in One Minute

Strip away the marketing and there is exactly one structural difference between LVT and SPC — and everything else follows from it.

  • LVT = flexible PVC core

    A flexible vinyl core, available as glue-down (dryback) or click. The full bond of glue-down makes it the strongest choice for heavy rolling loads and large bonded areas.

  • SPC = rigid mineral core

    A rigid stone plastic composite core, almost always click. The rigidity gives excellent dimensional stability and tolerance of minor subfloor imperfections.

  • Same surface, same décor

    Both share a printed décor film and a clear PUR-protected wear layer — so the look and the wear class can be matched across both.

  • The choice is about conditions

    Not “which is better” but which fits this zone: traffic, temperature swing, subfloor and how fast it must turn around.

LVT vs SPC — Side by Side

The same criteria a specifier weighs when choosing between flexible-core LVT and rigid-core SPC for a commercial zone. Read it by zone condition, not by an overall winner.

Criterion

LVT (Glue/Click)

SPC (Rigid Core)

When to Specify Each

The decision is rarely all-or-nothing. Many commercial projects use glue-down LVT through the main floor and SPC in the high-temperature-swing zones.

Specify glue-down LVT when…

  • The area carries heavy traffic and rolling loads — castor chairs, trolleys, beds.
  • You want the strongest bond and stability across a large open floor.
  • The subfloor is flat and properly prepared, or can be.
  • You need a proven acoustic build with a bonded underlay.

Specify SPC when…

  • The zone sees large temperature swings — near shopfronts, conservatories, big glazing.
  • The subfloor is imperfect and a forgiving rigid board helps.
  • The programme needs a fast floating click install in an occupied space.
  • You want a waterproof rigid core in kitchens and busy corridors.

How to Decide, Zone by Zone

A simple decision path that lands the right product in each space — and avoids the classic mistake of specifying one floor type for an entire building.

01

Map the traffic and rolling loads

Where there are continuous rolling point loads — trolley routes, castor-chair zones — lean glue-down LVT. The full bond resists point loads better than a floating floor.

02

Check temperature and glazing

In zones with strong solar gain or near large windows, the rigid SPC core resists the gapping and peaking that can affect a flexible floating click LVT.

03

Assess the subfloor

A flat, dry, prepared subfloor suits glue-down LVT. Where minor imperfections remain and full prep is not viable, SPC’s rigid core is more forgiving.

04

Match programme and acoustics

For fast turnarounds in occupied spaces, click (LVT or SPC) wins. For both, set the impact-sound (dB) target and choose the underlay or integrated backing that meets it.

LVT Flooring Cluster

Related Reading

Once you have chosen the core, specify the rest — use class, fire, slip and documentation.

LVT range

Commercial LVT Flooring — luxury vinyl tiles for offices, retail, healthcare and hospitality across Europe.

LVT specification guide

Specifying Commercial LVT — use class, fire (Bfl-s1), slip, adhesives and documentation.

Vinyl range

Vinyl Flooring — the full vinyl range: LVT, SPC, heterogeneous, homogeneous and safety floors.

LVT vs SPC — FAQ

The questions we hear most often when contractors and specifiers choose between flexible-core LVT and rigid-core SPC. See also Specifying Commercial LVT.

01

What is the difference between LVT and SPC flooring?

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Both are vinyl tiles with a printed décor film and a clear wear layer; the difference is the core. LVT has a flexible PVC core (glue-down or click). SPC has a rigid mineral-filled core (almost always click). The rigid core makes SPC more dimensionally stable under temperature swings and forgiving over minor subfloor imperfections; the flexible core makes glue-down LVT stronger for heavy rolling loads and large bonded areas.

02

Is SPC better than LVT for commercial use?

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Neither is universally better. Glue-down LVT is the default for high-traffic areas and rolling loads. SPC is the better choice where there are large temperature swings (shopfronts, big glazing), an imperfect subfloor, or a need for fast click installation in an occupied space. Specify by the conditions of each zone, not by a blanket preference.

03

Which is more dimensionally stable, LVT or SPC?

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SPC is more dimensionally stable — its rigid mineral core moves far less with temperature, so it performs well in sunlit areas and near large windows. Glue-down LVT is also very stable because it is fully bonded; the instability risk is mainly with flexible floating click LVT in high-temperature-swing areas — exactly where SPC is specified instead.

04

Is SPC warmer and quieter than LVT?

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Flexible LVT tends to feel slightly warmer and softer than a bare rigid SPC board, but both are usually specified with an underlay or integrated backing that levels this out. Acoustic (dB) performance depends mainly on the underlay or integrated pad, not the core — set the dB target and choose the build that meets it.

05

Can SPC be used with underfloor heating?

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Both LVT and SPC work over underfloor heating within the manufacturer’s surface-temperature limit (commonly ~27–28°C). SPC’s rigid core handles the heating cycle with very little movement, which is one reason it is often specified over UFH. Always follow the datasheet for the temperature limit, commissioning and any underlay restrictions.

06

Should I choose LVT or SPC for a retail fit-out?

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For most retail floors glue-down LVT is specified for the heavy traffic and strong bond. SPC is a strong alternative near shopfronts and large glazing where solar gain causes temperature swings, or where a fast click install fits a tight programme. Many projects use both — glue-down LVT through the main floor, SPC in the high-glazing zones.

Choosing Between LVT and SPC for a Project?

Trivaro is a B2B supplier of commercial LVT and SPC across Europe — for distributors, contractors, developers and architects. We help you specify the right core for each zone, with full documentation included as standard.

Send us your project type, the zones and conditions (traffic, glazing, subfloor) and an area estimate. We will respond with product recommendations, samples and a B2B quotation.

Choosing Between LVT and SPC for a Project?