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Apartment Flooring
Durable & Stylish Flooring for Apartments
Our flooring solutions for apartments are designed to combine style, durability, and easy maintenance. Whether you're renovating or building new apartments, our flooring options provide comfort, longevity, and an aesthetic appeal that enhances any living space.
Why Choose Our Apartment Flooring?
- Durability: Built to withstand daily wear and tear, our flooring is ideal for high-traffic areas such as living rooms, hallways, and kitchens.
- Easy Maintenance: Low-maintenance surfaces ensure easy cleaning and upkeep, perfect for busy apartment living.
- Noise Reduction: Designed to minimize noise, making it a great choice for multi-unit buildings and shared living spaces.
- Comfort: Our flooring options provide a comfortable surface for residents, ideal for both barefoot walking and furniture placement.
- Stylish Options: Available in a variety of finishes and colors, our flooring complements any apartment decor, from modern to traditional.
Perfect for Every Room
From kitchens to bedrooms, our apartment flooring offers the perfect balance of style and functionality. Choose a durable, low-maintenance option that enhances the comfort and appeal of any apartment space.
Rely-On Olefin MattingStarting at $25.00
Rely-On Olefin Matting Rely-On Olefin Matting offers a practical and economical solution for floor protection in light-traffic areas. Made from durable olefin carpet fibers, this matting is designed to capture dirt and moisture, helping to maintain a clean and safe environment. Its low-profile design allows for easy placement in entryways,...
Rely-On Olefin Matting Rely-On Olefin Matting offers a practical and economical solution for floor protection in light-traffic areas. Made from...
Rely-On Olefin Matting
Rely-On Olefin Matting offers a practical and economical solution for floor protection in light-traffic areas. Made from durable olefin carpet fibers, this matting is designed to capture dirt and moisture, helping to maintain a clean and safe environment. Its low-profile design allows for easy placement in entryways, lobbies, and other indoor spaces.
Key Features of Rely-On Olefin Matting
- Durable Olefin Fibers: Made from tough olefin fibers, this matting is built to handle light foot traffic while effectively trapping dirt and moisture.
- Moisture Absorption: The olefin carpet fiber quickly absorb moisture, keeping floors dry and reducing the risk of slips and falls.
- Low-Profile Design: The slim design ensures easy placement in doorways and prevents tripping hazards, making it ideal for entryways and lobbies.
- Easy to Clean: Designed for minimal maintenance, this matting can be vacuumed or shaken out to remove debris, ensuring it remains functional and attractive.
- Cost-Effective Solution: A budget-friendly choice for maintaining cleanliness in indoor spaces without compromising on quality or performance.
- Versatile Applications: Perfect for use in offices, commercial buildings, or residential settings where light traffic is expected.
Perfect for Light-Traffic Areas
Rely-On Olefin Matting is the ideal choice for keeping light-traffic areas clean, dry, and safe. Its durable construction and moisture-absorbing capabilities make it a reliable and cost-effective option for maintaining floor cleanliness in various indoor environments.
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Rely-On Olefin Matting
Rely-On Olefin Matting offers a practical and economical solution for floor protection in light-traffic areas. Made from durable olefin carpet fibers, this matting is designed to capture dirt and moisture, helping to maintain a clean and safe environment. Its low-profile design allows for easy placement in entryways, lobbies, and other indoor spaces.
Key Features of Rely-On Olefin Matting
- Durable Olefin Fibers: Made from tough olefin fibers, this matting is built to handle light foot traffic while effectively trapping dirt and moisture.
- Moisture Absorption: The olefin carpet fiber quickly absorb moisture, keeping floors dry and reducing the risk of slips and falls.
- Low-Profile Design: The slim design ensures easy placement in doorways and prevents tripping hazards, making it ideal for entryways and lobbies.
- Easy to Clean: Designed for minimal maintenance, this matting can be vacuumed or shaken out to remove debris, ensuring it remains functional and attractive.
- Cost-Effective Solution: A budget-friendly choice for maintaining cleanliness in indoor spaces without compromising on quality or performance.
- Versatile Applications: Perfect for use in offices, commercial buildings, or residential settings where light traffic is expected.
Perfect for Light-Traffic Areas
Rely-On Olefin Matting is the ideal choice for keeping light-traffic areas clean, dry, and safe. Its durable construction and moisture-absorbing capabilities make it a reliable and cost-effective option for maintaining floor cleanliness in various indoor environments.
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Wonder-Pro Olefin MattingStarting at $55.00
Wonder Pro Matting is a plush, cut-pile olefin entrance mat made to soak up water and fine dust at the door, in a deep range of colors. Where some entrance mats scrape coarse grit, this one is built to wipe shoes clean and hold moisture and fine dirt — pulling...
Wonder Pro Matting is a plush, cut-pile olefin entrance mat made to soak up water and fine dust at the...
Wonder Pro Matting is a plush, cut-pile olefin entrance mat made to soak up water and fine dust at the door, in a deep range of colors. Where some entrance mats scrape coarse grit, this one is built to wipe shoes clean and hold moisture and fine dirt — pulling it off the sole and keeping it on the mat, so a medium-traffic interior stays cleaner and drier past the threshold.
What Wonder Pro Matting Does Before Water and Dust Reach Your Floor
Most of what dirties an interior floor comes in on shoes — not just mud, but fine dust and moisture you don't always see. ISSA field data shows a building takes on up to 12 times more dirt during wet weather, and it takes six to eight steps to walk a sole dry. A mat at the door is where that gets caught before it spreads onto the floor.
Wonder Pro is built for the fine stuff. The plush cut-pile olefin face holds water and fine dirt rather than letting it pass through — it retains about 60% more liquid and fine dust than a standard mat — and a vinyl backing acts as a moisture barrier, keeping what the mat collects off the floor underneath instead of soaking through to it.
Why a Plush Olefin Surface, and Why This One
The face is cut-pile olefin — a dense, soft polypropylene pile that behaves like carpet and holds moisture deep in the fibers. That plush surface is what lets it pull moisture from shoes: a sole sinks slightly into the pile and leaves water and fine dust behind. The olefin resists fading, staining, mold, and mildew, so it keeps its look and doesn't turn musty as it works.
Underneath is a DINP-free PVC vinyl backing that doubles as a moisture barrier — it grips the floor and stops the water the mat holds from reaching the surface below. This mat holds moisture and fine dust rather than scraping coarse grit: it's rated for medium interior traffic and tuned for the fine stuff, not for knocking heavy mud off boots.
It also comes in a deep set of colors — Black, Castellan Red, Charcoal, Marlin Blue, Pebble Brown, and Walnut — so the mat can match a lobby or reception scheme rather than just sit there in standard gray. The colors are part of the point: this is the entrance mat for spots where the floor is on show.
Where It Belongs (and Where It Doesn't)
This is an interior, medium-traffic mat for spaces where appearance and a clean, dry floor both matter — office building lobbies, small retail floors, banks, churches, motels, and reception areas. It shines a few steps inside the door, finishing the job of drying shoes and catching the fine dust a coarse mat misses.
Where it's the wrong call is outdoors or against heavy mud and grit. As a plush mat it isn't built to scrape coarse debris or take the weather, and a flood of mud would clog the pile. The right setup is a scraper outside or at the first door, with Wonder Pro inside to finish the job — and to look good doing it.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
Three things decide whether Wonder Pro fits your entrance.
First, where it sits. Wonder Pro is a moisture-and-dust mat for the interior, after coarse debris is mostly off. If it's the only mat facing a muddy or gritty entrance, it'll load up faster than it can handle; paired with a scraper ahead of it, it does its job for years.
Second, the size. It comes in standard sizes from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', plus rolls and custom sizes up to 11'9" wide — useful for a wide lobby run or an odd opening. Size it to cover the steps it takes to dry a sole, not just the doorway.
Third, the color and the look. With six colors to choose from, pick a tone that fits the space and hides traffic — darker shades like Charcoal and Walnut stay looking clean longer between cleanings, while a color like Marlin Blue or Castellan Red can pick up a brand or interior accent.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has specified commercial matting since 1964, so when the floor at your entrance is on display, we help you choose a mat that protects it and looks right doing it — matching the surface, size, and color to the space and the traffic. We'll also tell you when a spot needs a coarse scraper ahead of a plush mat like this rather than the plush mat alone. For the rest of the indoor range, see our all indoor entrance mats.
Specifications Type Indoor entrance mat, medium traffic (moisture & fine dust) Surface Plush cut-pile olefin (polypropylene) Pile weight 18 oz/yd² Thickness 7/16" Backing DINP-free PVC vinyl moisture barrier (3 lb vinyl strength, ASTM D624 die-T) Flammability Passes DOC-FF-1-70 Moisture retention Holds ~60% more liquid and fine dirt than a standard mat Resistance Resists fading, staining, mold, and mildew Colors Black, Castellan Red, Charcoal, Marlin Blue, Pebble Brown, Walnut Standard sizes 2'×3', 3'×4', 3'×5', 3'×6', 3'×8', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×8', 4'×10', 6'×10' Roll / custom sizes 3'×60', 4'×60', 6'×60'; custom up to 11'9" × 60' Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How does a plush mat hold dirt and water?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's the opposite approach to a hard scraper. The face is a dense cut-pile olefin — a soft, carpet-like pile — and when a shoe presses into it, water and fine dust transfer off the sole and settle down between the fibers, where they stay instead of being tracked on. The pile holds about 60% more liquid and fine dirt than a standard mat. Underneath, a vinyl backing works as a moisture barrier, so the water the mat collects stays in the pile and off the floor below.
How much traffic can it handle, and what wears it out?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's rated for medium interior traffic — office lobbies, retail floors, reception areas, and similar spaces. In those spots it holds up for years, and the olefin resists fading, staining, mold, and mildew, so it keeps its look and doesn't turn musty as it absorbs moisture.
What wears it out early is the wrong job. A plush pile clogs and mats down if it's left to face heavy mud and grit alone, or placed where far more traffic crosses it than it's rated for. Keep it to medium interior traffic, with coarse debris handled ahead of it, and it lasts.
Can I use it outdoors, and how do I clean it?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Keep it indoors. Wonder Pro is built for interior medium traffic — it isn't made for weather or for scraping heavy outdoor grit, so an exposed exterior door will wear it down fast. Inside, it's the mat that finishes drying shoes a few steps in. To clean it, vacuum regularly and extract or hose it off when it's heavily soiled, then let it dry fully before it goes back down — the olefin resists mold and mildew, but any mat works best dry.
What sizes can I get, and can it be made to fit?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', and it also comes in 60-foot rolls. If you need a custom size, it can be made up to 11'9" wide and 60 feet long — wide enough for a full lobby run or an unusual opening.
Size it to the traffic path, not just the door, so it covers the steps it takes to dry a sole. And if the mat will sit out in the open rather than wall-to-wall, ask for edged ends — standard rolls ship without edging unless you specify it.
What does it look like, and what colors are there?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
It has a plush, carpet-like surface that looks more finished and softer underfoot than a hard ribbed or rubber mat — a good fit for a lobby, bank, church, or reception area where the entrance is on display. There are six colors: Black, Castellan Red, Charcoal, Marlin Blue, Pebble Brown, and Walnut. The colors resist fading and staining, and darker tones like Charcoal and Walnut keep looking clean longer between cleanings, while Castellan Red or Marlin Blue can pick up a brand or interior accent.
Can I match it to our space or get a custom size?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
On size, yes — custom dimensions up to 11'9" by 60 feet mean you can fit a wide entry or a specific footprint rather than settling for the nearest stock size. On color, the six-color range lets you tie the mat to an interior scheme or a brand palette.
If you want an actual printed logo at the door, that's a different construction — a logo mat — and we can point you to one. Wonder Pro itself is about a clean, colored, plush surface that protects the floor and looks the part, rather than carrying artwork.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
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Wonder Pro Matting is a plush, cut-pile olefin entrance mat made to soak up water and fine dust at the door, in a deep range of colors. Where some entrance mats scrape coarse grit, this one is built to wipe shoes clean and hold moisture and fine dirt — pulling it off the sole and keeping it on the mat, so a medium-traffic interior stays cleaner and drier past the threshold.
What Wonder Pro Matting Does Before Water and Dust Reach Your Floor
Most of what dirties an interior floor comes in on shoes — not just mud, but fine dust and moisture you don't always see. ISSA field data shows a building takes on up to 12 times more dirt during wet weather, and it takes six to eight steps to walk a sole dry. A mat at the door is where that gets caught before it spreads onto the floor.
Wonder Pro is built for the fine stuff. The plush cut-pile olefin face holds water and fine dirt rather than letting it pass through — it retains about 60% more liquid and fine dust than a standard mat — and a vinyl backing acts as a moisture barrier, keeping what the mat collects off the floor underneath instead of soaking through to it.
Why a Plush Olefin Surface, and Why This One
The face is cut-pile olefin — a dense, soft polypropylene pile that behaves like carpet and holds moisture deep in the fibers. That plush surface is what lets it pull moisture from shoes: a sole sinks slightly into the pile and leaves water and fine dust behind. The olefin resists fading, staining, mold, and mildew, so it keeps its look and doesn't turn musty as it works.
Underneath is a DINP-free PVC vinyl backing that doubles as a moisture barrier — it grips the floor and stops the water the mat holds from reaching the surface below. This mat holds moisture and fine dust rather than scraping coarse grit: it's rated for medium interior traffic and tuned for the fine stuff, not for knocking heavy mud off boots.
It also comes in a deep set of colors — Black, Castellan Red, Charcoal, Marlin Blue, Pebble Brown, and Walnut — so the mat can match a lobby or reception scheme rather than just sit there in standard gray. The colors are part of the point: this is the entrance mat for spots where the floor is on show.
Where It Belongs (and Where It Doesn't)
This is an interior, medium-traffic mat for spaces where appearance and a clean, dry floor both matter — office building lobbies, small retail floors, banks, churches, motels, and reception areas. It shines a few steps inside the door, finishing the job of drying shoes and catching the fine dust a coarse mat misses.
Where it's the wrong call is outdoors or against heavy mud and grit. As a plush mat it isn't built to scrape coarse debris or take the weather, and a flood of mud would clog the pile. The right setup is a scraper outside or at the first door, with Wonder Pro inside to finish the job — and to look good doing it.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
Three things decide whether Wonder Pro fits your entrance.
First, where it sits. Wonder Pro is a moisture-and-dust mat for the interior, after coarse debris is mostly off. If it's the only mat facing a muddy or gritty entrance, it'll load up faster than it can handle; paired with a scraper ahead of it, it does its job for years.
Second, the size. It comes in standard sizes from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', plus rolls and custom sizes up to 11'9" wide — useful for a wide lobby run or an odd opening. Size it to cover the steps it takes to dry a sole, not just the doorway.
Third, the color and the look. With six colors to choose from, pick a tone that fits the space and hides traffic — darker shades like Charcoal and Walnut stay looking clean longer between cleanings, while a color like Marlin Blue or Castellan Red can pick up a brand or interior accent.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has specified commercial matting since 1964, so when the floor at your entrance is on display, we help you choose a mat that protects it and looks right doing it — matching the surface, size, and color to the space and the traffic. We'll also tell you when a spot needs a coarse scraper ahead of a plush mat like this rather than the plush mat alone. For the rest of the indoor range, see our all indoor entrance mats.
Specifications Type Indoor entrance mat, medium traffic (moisture & fine dust) Surface Plush cut-pile olefin (polypropylene) Pile weight 18 oz/yd² Thickness 7/16" Backing DINP-free PVC vinyl moisture barrier (3 lb vinyl strength, ASTM D624 die-T) Flammability Passes DOC-FF-1-70 Moisture retention Holds ~60% more liquid and fine dirt than a standard mat Resistance Resists fading, staining, mold, and mildew Colors Black, Castellan Red, Charcoal, Marlin Blue, Pebble Brown, Walnut Standard sizes 2'×3', 3'×4', 3'×5', 3'×6', 3'×8', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×8', 4'×10', 6'×10' Roll / custom sizes 3'×60', 4'×60', 6'×60'; custom up to 11'9" × 60' Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How does a plush mat hold dirt and water?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's the opposite approach to a hard scraper. The face is a dense cut-pile olefin — a soft, carpet-like pile — and when a shoe presses into it, water and fine dust transfer off the sole and settle down between the fibers, where they stay instead of being tracked on. The pile holds about 60% more liquid and fine dirt than a standard mat. Underneath, a vinyl backing works as a moisture barrier, so the water the mat collects stays in the pile and off the floor below.
How much traffic can it handle, and what wears it out?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's rated for medium interior traffic — office lobbies, retail floors, reception areas, and similar spaces. In those spots it holds up for years, and the olefin resists fading, staining, mold, and mildew, so it keeps its look and doesn't turn musty as it absorbs moisture.
What wears it out early is the wrong job. A plush pile clogs and mats down if it's left to face heavy mud and grit alone, or placed where far more traffic crosses it than it's rated for. Keep it to medium interior traffic, with coarse debris handled ahead of it, and it lasts.
Can I use it outdoors, and how do I clean it?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Keep it indoors. Wonder Pro is built for interior medium traffic — it isn't made for weather or for scraping heavy outdoor grit, so an exposed exterior door will wear it down fast. Inside, it's the mat that finishes drying shoes a few steps in. To clean it, vacuum regularly and extract or hose it off when it's heavily soiled, then let it dry fully before it goes back down — the olefin resists mold and mildew, but any mat works best dry.
What sizes can I get, and can it be made to fit?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', and it also comes in 60-foot rolls. If you need a custom size, it can be made up to 11'9" wide and 60 feet long — wide enough for a full lobby run or an unusual opening.
Size it to the traffic path, not just the door, so it covers the steps it takes to dry a sole. And if the mat will sit out in the open rather than wall-to-wall, ask for edged ends — standard rolls ship without edging unless you specify it.
What does it look like, and what colors are there?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
It has a plush, carpet-like surface that looks more finished and softer underfoot than a hard ribbed or rubber mat — a good fit for a lobby, bank, church, or reception area where the entrance is on display. There are six colors: Black, Castellan Red, Charcoal, Marlin Blue, Pebble Brown, and Walnut. The colors resist fading and staining, and darker tones like Charcoal and Walnut keep looking clean longer between cleanings, while Castellan Red or Marlin Blue can pick up a brand or interior accent.
Can I match it to our space or get a custom size?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
On size, yes — custom dimensions up to 11'9" by 60 feet mean you can fit a wide entry or a specific footprint rather than settling for the nearest stock size. On color, the six-color range lets you tie the mat to an interior scheme or a brand palette.
If you want an actual printed logo at the door, that's a different construction — a logo mat — and we can point you to one. Wonder Pro itself is about a clean, colored, plush surface that protects the floor and looks the part, rather than carrying artwork.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
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Vinyl Loop Mats$128.00Vinyl Loop Mat The Vinyl Loop Mat is a highly durable mat designed for outdoor and indoor use. Its unique vinyl loop construction effectively traps dirt and moisture while providing a slip-resistant surface that keeps your space clean and safe. Perfect for high-traffic areas, this mat is built to withstand...
Vinyl Loop Mat The Vinyl Loop Mat is a highly durable mat designed for outdoor and indoor use. Its unique...
Vinyl Loop Mat
The Vinyl Loop Mat is a highly durable mat designed for outdoor and indoor use. Its unique vinyl loop construction effectively traps dirt and moisture while providing a slip-resistant surface that keeps your space clean and safe. Perfect for high-traffic areas, this mat is built to withstand the elements and heavy foot traffic.
Key Features of the Vinyl Loop Mat
- Durable Vinyl Loop Design: The vinyl loop structure traps dirt, moisture, and debris, ensuring that it stays off your floors while maintaining its appearance.
- Slip-Resistant Surface: The mat’s slip-resistant backing provides a secure grip, preventing movement and reducing the risk of accidents.
- Easy to Clean: This spaghetti mat is easy to maintain—just shake, vacuum, or hose it down to remove dirt and debris, keeping it looking fresh with minimal effort.
- Weather Resistant: Built for outdoor use, the Vinyl Loop Mat is resistant to weather conditions, ensuring long-lasting durability in both indoor and outdoor environments.
- Versatile Application: Ideal for entryways, pool areas, and other high-traffic locations, this mat enhances safety and cleanliness in a variety of spaces.
Ideal for High-Traffic Areas
The Vinyl Loop Mat is the perfect choice for businesses and homes looking for a reliable mat that can handle heavy traffic while keeping dirt and moisture under control. Its easy maintenance and weather-resistant design make it a versatile and practical solution for any high-traffic area.
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Vinyl Loop Mat
The Vinyl Loop Mat is a highly durable mat designed for outdoor and indoor use. Its unique vinyl loop construction effectively traps dirt and moisture while providing a slip-resistant surface that keeps your space clean and safe. Perfect for high-traffic areas, this mat is built to withstand the elements and heavy foot traffic.
Key Features of the Vinyl Loop Mat
- Durable Vinyl Loop Design: The vinyl loop structure traps dirt, moisture, and debris, ensuring that it stays off your floors while maintaining its appearance.
- Slip-Resistant Surface: The mat’s slip-resistant backing provides a secure grip, preventing movement and reducing the risk of accidents.
- Easy to Clean: This spaghetti mat is easy to maintain—just shake, vacuum, or hose it down to remove dirt and debris, keeping it looking fresh with minimal effort.
- Weather Resistant: Built for outdoor use, the Vinyl Loop Mat is resistant to weather conditions, ensuring long-lasting durability in both indoor and outdoor environments.
- Versatile Application: Ideal for entryways, pool areas, and other high-traffic locations, this mat enhances safety and cleanliness in a variety of spaces.
Ideal for High-Traffic Areas
The Vinyl Loop Mat is the perfect choice for businesses and homes looking for a reliable mat that can handle heavy traffic while keeping dirt and moisture under control. Its easy maintenance and weather-resistant design make it a versatile and practical solution for any high-traffic area.
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Fore-Runner MatStarting at $47.00
Fore-Runner Mat The Fore-Runner Mat is a durable and highly effective entrance mat designed to trap dirt, moisture, and debris, keeping your indoor spaces clean and safe. Made from high-performance materials, this mat is perfect for high-traffic entryways in commercial buildings, offices, and retail environments. Its sleek, low-profile design ensures...
Fore-Runner Mat The Fore-Runner Mat is a durable and highly effective entrance mat designed to trap dirt, moisture, and debris,...
Fore-Runner Mat
The Fore-Runner Mat is a durable and highly effective entrance mat designed to trap dirt, moisture, and debris, keeping your indoor spaces clean and safe. Made from high-performance materials, this mat is perfect for high-traffic entryways in commercial buildings, offices, and retail environments. Its sleek, low-profile design ensures easy placement while offering long-lasting protection for your floors.
Key Features of the Fore-Runner Mat
- Effective Dirt and Moisture Trapping: The Fore-Runner Mat is designed to capture dirt, moisture, and debris, preventing them from entering your building and reducing cleaning costs.
- Durable Construction: Made from heavy-duty materials, this mat is built to withstand constant foot traffic and maintain its performance over time.
- Slip-Resistant Backing: The mat features a slip-resistant backing that keeps it securely in place, reducing the risk of slips and falls.
- Low-Profile Design: The sleek, low-profile design allows for easy placement in doorways and entryways without obstructing foot traffic or creating tripping hazards.
- Easy to Maintain: The Fore-Runner Mat is easy to clean, requiring only a quick vacuum or shake to remove trapped dirt and debris.
- Versatile Applications: Ideal for commercial buildings, retail stores, and office entryways, ensuring a clean and professional appearance for any space.
Perfect for High-Traffic Entryways
The Fore-Runner Mat is the perfect choice for maintaining cleanliness and safety in high-traffic areas. With its effective dirt-trapping capabilities and durable construction, this mat ensures long-lasting protection for your floors while keeping your space looking professional and clean.
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Fore-Runner Mat
The Fore-Runner Mat is a durable and highly effective entrance mat designed to trap dirt, moisture, and debris, keeping your indoor spaces clean and safe. Made from high-performance materials, this mat is perfect for high-traffic entryways in commercial buildings, offices, and retail environments. Its sleek, low-profile design ensures easy placement while offering long-lasting protection for your floors.
Key Features of the Fore-Runner Mat
- Effective Dirt and Moisture Trapping: The Fore-Runner Mat is designed to capture dirt, moisture, and debris, preventing them from entering your building and reducing cleaning costs.
- Durable Construction: Made from heavy-duty materials, this mat is built to withstand constant foot traffic and maintain its performance over time.
- Slip-Resistant Backing: The mat features a slip-resistant backing that keeps it securely in place, reducing the risk of slips and falls.
- Low-Profile Design: The sleek, low-profile design allows for easy placement in doorways and entryways without obstructing foot traffic or creating tripping hazards.
- Easy to Maintain: The Fore-Runner Mat is easy to clean, requiring only a quick vacuum or shake to remove trapped dirt and debris.
- Versatile Applications: Ideal for commercial buildings, retail stores, and office entryways, ensuring a clean and professional appearance for any space.
Perfect for High-Traffic Entryways
The Fore-Runner Mat is the perfect choice for maintaining cleanliness and safety in high-traffic areas. With its effective dirt-trapping capabilities and durable construction, this mat ensures long-lasting protection for your floors while keeping your space looking professional and clean.
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Berber Logo MatsStarting at $194.00
Berber Logo Mats put your logo at the door on a looped berber surface — a tight, low-profile weave with a subtle hobnail texture that reads as upscale rather than promotional. The logo is digitally printed in high definition, so the artwork stays crisp, and the same tight weave that...
Berber Logo Mats put your logo at the door on a looped berber surface — a tight, low-profile weave with...
Berber Logo Mats put your logo at the door on a looped berber surface — a tight, low-profile weave with a subtle hobnail texture that reads as upscale rather than promotional. The logo is digitally printed in high definition, so the artwork stays crisp, and the same tight weave that holds the print also scrapes dirt and moisture off shoes before either reaches your floor.
What a Berber Logo Mat Does Before Your Brand Looks Tired at the Door
A logo mat is doing two jobs from the moment someone walks up: it shows your brand and it protects the floor. ISSA field data shows a building takes on up to 12 times more dirt during wet weather, and it takes six to eight steps to walk a sole dry. A mat that catches that grit keeps your entrance clean — and keeps the logo from sitting in a smear of tracked-in dirt.
The looped berber weave is tight enough to scrape and hold dirt and moisture, so the floor past the mat stays cleaner and the logo stays legible instead of muddy. That matters because a worn or grimy logo mat does the opposite of its job — it makes the brand look neglected at the exact spot where a visitor forms a first impression.
Why Berber Loop, and Why This One
The surface is needle-punched PET fiber, about 44 ounces per square yard, made with at least 80% recycled content reclaimed from plastic bottles. The loop-pile berber has a smooth, even face, which is what lets the logo print crisply — the artwork is built up in layers of color and matched to a standard palette of 56 colors, so edges and lettering stay sharp.
Berber's tight weave is the durable part. It stands up to heavy foot traffic without the surface breaking down, and the hobnail texture gives it an upscale look that plain printed mats miss. The fiber is naturally stain- and fade-resistant, so the logo holds its color through regular cleaning rather than washing out after a season.
Underneath is an SBR rubber backing that contains 20% recycled tire content and keeps the mat in place to cut slipping. You can spec a universal cleated backing for carpet or a smooth backing for hard floors, and the whole mat sits low — easy to clean by vacuuming or hosing off, and low enough not to catch a door swing.
Where It Belongs (and Where It Doesn't)
This is a branding mat for indoor and covered-outdoor entries — lobbies, front desks, storefronts, building entrances, and anywhere you want a company logo greeting people as they arrive. As premium carpet logo mats go, the berber loop is on the upscale end, and it works equally well as commercial rugs with logo inside reception areas and retail floors.
What it is not is a full-sun outdoor mat. The print fades in direct sunlight, so it belongs under a canopy, an overhang, a vestibule, or indoors — not exposed on an open sidewalk. It's also a branding mat that catches dirt and moisture, not an aggressive scraper for mud and gravel; keep the heaviest debris to a coarse outdoor mat and let the berber handle the finish and the logo.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
Three things decide whether a berber logo mat is the right call.
First, the light. The print fades in direct sun, so this mat is for covered or indoor spots only. If your entrance faces open sky for hours a day, a different construction will hold its color better — be honest about the exposure before you commit the logo to it.
Second, the artwork. Logos print best with text at least 1.5 inches tall and lines no thinner than a quarter inch, and very fine detail or pale backgrounds don't translate well — light colors also show dirt faster. Simple, bold artwork in darker or neutral tones reads cleanly and stays looking sharp.
Third, the floor and the size. Choose a cleated backing for carpet or a smooth one for hard floors, and size the mat to the traffic, not just the doorway — aim to cover the six-to-eight steps it takes to dry a sole. Standard sizes run up to 6'×12', with custom lengths to 20 feet.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has specified commercial matting since 1964, so when you're putting your brand on the floor, you're working with people who know which logo construction survives your specific entrance — and which will fade or flatten in it. We help you set up the artwork inside the print limits, pick the backing for your floor, and size the run so the mat protects as well as it presents. For the rest of the range, start with our commercial entrance mats.
Specifications Type Custom logo entrance mat — indoor / covered outdoor Surface Needle-punched PET, loop-pile berber with hobnail texture Weight 44 oz/yd² Recycled content At least 80% recycled PET face; SBR rubber backing with 20% recycled tire content Logo HD digital print, color matched to a 56-color standard palette Backing SBR rubber — smooth or universal cleated Colors 56 standard Use Indoor and covered outdoor; not for direct sunlight (print fades) Print limits Minimum text 1.5"; minimum line thickness 1/4" Sizes Standard 2'×3' to 6'×12'; custom widths in lengths up to 20' Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How is the logo actually printed, and will it stay sharp?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
The logo is built up in layers of color on the smooth berber surface and matched to a standard palette of 56 colors. That layering is what gives the high-definition look — crisp edges and clean lettering — as long as the artwork respects the print limits: text at least 1.5 inches tall, lines no thinner than a quarter inch, and no fine tints or transparencies. Bold, simple artwork holds up best. The fiber is naturally stain- and fade-resistant, so the print stays sharp through regular cleaning rather than washing out.
How well does it hold up to heavy traffic?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
The tight berber weave is the durable part — it's built to take heavy foot traffic without the surface breaking down, and the hobnail loop holds its texture rather than crushing flat the way a softer pile would. A mat that mats down stops scraping and starts looking worn, so that crush resistance is what keeps both the logo and the floor protection working.
The one thing that shortens its life is sunlight: the print fades in direct sun, so a covered or indoor spot is essential. Used under cover and cleaned regularly — vacuumed, or hosed off and hung to dry — it holds its look for years.
Can I put it outside?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Only under cover. Berber logo mats are made for indoor and covered-outdoor entries — under a canopy, in a vestibule, or inside a lobby. They're not built for full sun, because the print fades when it's exposed directly, and they're branding mats rather than coarse scrapers for mud and gravel. The best setup outdoors is a rugged scraper mat first to take the heavy debris, with the berber logo mat just inside or under the overhang where it stays clean, dry, and out of direct light.
What sizes can I get?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×12', and custom lengths are available in standard widths up to 20 feet — useful for a wide storefront entry or a long lobby walkway.
Size it to the traffic, not just the door opening. Aim to cover the six-to-eight steps it takes to dry a sole, so the mat protects the floor and shows the logo at full size rather than getting walked past in a stride or two.
What does it look like, and what colors are there?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
It has an upscale, low-profile look — the looped berber weave with a subtle hobnail texture reads as refined rather than promotional, which suits a polished lobby or reception area. There are 56 standard colors to build the logo and background from, so you can match a brand palette closely. One tip: skip very light background colors, since pale tones show tracked-in dirt faster — darker or neutral backgrounds keep the mat looking clean longer between cleanings.
Can it match our exact brand colors, and what artwork works best?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Colors are matched to a standard 56-color palette rather than exact PMS values, so it's a close brand match within that range rather than a precise ink match — worth knowing if your brand standard is strict. For artwork, bold logos and clear lettering reproduce beautifully; very fine detail, thin lines, gradients, and transparencies don't translate well to the woven surface. Send us your logo and we'll tell you straight whether it'll read well at mat scale or needs a small adjustment first.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
↑
Berber Logo Mats put your logo at the door on a looped berber surface — a tight, low-profile weave with a subtle hobnail texture that reads as upscale rather than promotional. The logo is digitally printed in high definition, so the artwork stays crisp, and the same tight weave that holds the print also scrapes dirt and moisture off shoes before either reaches your floor.
What a Berber Logo Mat Does Before Your Brand Looks Tired at the Door
A logo mat is doing two jobs from the moment someone walks up: it shows your brand and it protects the floor. ISSA field data shows a building takes on up to 12 times more dirt during wet weather, and it takes six to eight steps to walk a sole dry. A mat that catches that grit keeps your entrance clean — and keeps the logo from sitting in a smear of tracked-in dirt.
The looped berber weave is tight enough to scrape and hold dirt and moisture, so the floor past the mat stays cleaner and the logo stays legible instead of muddy. That matters because a worn or grimy logo mat does the opposite of its job — it makes the brand look neglected at the exact spot where a visitor forms a first impression.
Why Berber Loop, and Why This One
The surface is needle-punched PET fiber, about 44 ounces per square yard, made with at least 80% recycled content reclaimed from plastic bottles. The loop-pile berber has a smooth, even face, which is what lets the logo print crisply — the artwork is built up in layers of color and matched to a standard palette of 56 colors, so edges and lettering stay sharp.
Berber's tight weave is the durable part. It stands up to heavy foot traffic without the surface breaking down, and the hobnail texture gives it an upscale look that plain printed mats miss. The fiber is naturally stain- and fade-resistant, so the logo holds its color through regular cleaning rather than washing out after a season.
Underneath is an SBR rubber backing that contains 20% recycled tire content and keeps the mat in place to cut slipping. You can spec a universal cleated backing for carpet or a smooth backing for hard floors, and the whole mat sits low — easy to clean by vacuuming or hosing off, and low enough not to catch a door swing.
Where It Belongs (and Where It Doesn't)
This is a branding mat for indoor and covered-outdoor entries — lobbies, front desks, storefronts, building entrances, and anywhere you want a company logo greeting people as they arrive. As premium carpet logo mats go, the berber loop is on the upscale end, and it works equally well as commercial rugs with logo inside reception areas and retail floors.
What it is not is a full-sun outdoor mat. The print fades in direct sunlight, so it belongs under a canopy, an overhang, a vestibule, or indoors — not exposed on an open sidewalk. It's also a branding mat that catches dirt and moisture, not an aggressive scraper for mud and gravel; keep the heaviest debris to a coarse outdoor mat and let the berber handle the finish and the logo.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
Three things decide whether a berber logo mat is the right call.
First, the light. The print fades in direct sun, so this mat is for covered or indoor spots only. If your entrance faces open sky for hours a day, a different construction will hold its color better — be honest about the exposure before you commit the logo to it.
Second, the artwork. Logos print best with text at least 1.5 inches tall and lines no thinner than a quarter inch, and very fine detail or pale backgrounds don't translate well — light colors also show dirt faster. Simple, bold artwork in darker or neutral tones reads cleanly and stays looking sharp.
Third, the floor and the size. Choose a cleated backing for carpet or a smooth one for hard floors, and size the mat to the traffic, not just the doorway — aim to cover the six-to-eight steps it takes to dry a sole. Standard sizes run up to 6'×12', with custom lengths to 20 feet.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has specified commercial matting since 1964, so when you're putting your brand on the floor, you're working with people who know which logo construction survives your specific entrance — and which will fade or flatten in it. We help you set up the artwork inside the print limits, pick the backing for your floor, and size the run so the mat protects as well as it presents. For the rest of the range, start with our commercial entrance mats.
Specifications Type Custom logo entrance mat — indoor / covered outdoor Surface Needle-punched PET, loop-pile berber with hobnail texture Weight 44 oz/yd² Recycled content At least 80% recycled PET face; SBR rubber backing with 20% recycled tire content Logo HD digital print, color matched to a 56-color standard palette Backing SBR rubber — smooth or universal cleated Colors 56 standard Use Indoor and covered outdoor; not for direct sunlight (print fades) Print limits Minimum text 1.5"; minimum line thickness 1/4" Sizes Standard 2'×3' to 6'×12'; custom widths in lengths up to 20' Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How is the logo actually printed, and will it stay sharp?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
The logo is built up in layers of color on the smooth berber surface and matched to a standard palette of 56 colors. That layering is what gives the high-definition look — crisp edges and clean lettering — as long as the artwork respects the print limits: text at least 1.5 inches tall, lines no thinner than a quarter inch, and no fine tints or transparencies. Bold, simple artwork holds up best. The fiber is naturally stain- and fade-resistant, so the print stays sharp through regular cleaning rather than washing out.
How well does it hold up to heavy traffic?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
The tight berber weave is the durable part — it's built to take heavy foot traffic without the surface breaking down, and the hobnail loop holds its texture rather than crushing flat the way a softer pile would. A mat that mats down stops scraping and starts looking worn, so that crush resistance is what keeps both the logo and the floor protection working.
The one thing that shortens its life is sunlight: the print fades in direct sun, so a covered or indoor spot is essential. Used under cover and cleaned regularly — vacuumed, or hosed off and hung to dry — it holds its look for years.
Can I put it outside?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Only under cover. Berber logo mats are made for indoor and covered-outdoor entries — under a canopy, in a vestibule, or inside a lobby. They're not built for full sun, because the print fades when it's exposed directly, and they're branding mats rather than coarse scrapers for mud and gravel. The best setup outdoors is a rugged scraper mat first to take the heavy debris, with the berber logo mat just inside or under the overhang where it stays clean, dry, and out of direct light.
What sizes can I get?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×12', and custom lengths are available in standard widths up to 20 feet — useful for a wide storefront entry or a long lobby walkway.
Size it to the traffic, not just the door opening. Aim to cover the six-to-eight steps it takes to dry a sole, so the mat protects the floor and shows the logo at full size rather than getting walked past in a stride or two.
What does it look like, and what colors are there?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
It has an upscale, low-profile look — the looped berber weave with a subtle hobnail texture reads as refined rather than promotional, which suits a polished lobby or reception area. There are 56 standard colors to build the logo and background from, so you can match a brand palette closely. One tip: skip very light background colors, since pale tones show tracked-in dirt faster — darker or neutral backgrounds keep the mat looking clean longer between cleanings.
Can it match our exact brand colors, and what artwork works best?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Colors are matched to a standard 56-color palette rather than exact PMS values, so it's a close brand match within that range rather than a precise ink match — worth knowing if your brand standard is strict. For artwork, bold logos and clear lettering reproduce beautifully; very fine detail, thin lines, gradients, and transparencies don't translate well to the woven surface. Send us your logo and we'll tell you straight whether it'll read well at mat scale or needs a small adjustment first.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
↑
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Interlocking Rubber TilesStarting at $17.00
Interlocking rubber tiles are the gym floor you can put down yourself. They snap together edge to edge — no glue, no adhesive, no installer — so a garage, basement, or home gym goes from bare slab to finished rubber floor in an afternoon. And because they lock rather than...
Interlocking rubber tiles are the gym floor you can put down yourself. They snap together edge to edge — no...
Interlocking rubber tiles are the gym floor you can put down yourself. They snap together edge to edge — no glue, no adhesive, no installer — so a garage, basement, or home gym goes from bare slab to finished rubber floor in an afternoon. And because they lock rather than bond, you can add to them, pull them up, or take them with you when the space changes.
What Interlocking Rubber Tiles Do Before Your Floor Pays for It
A workout floor takes a beating — dropped dumbbells, dragged equipment, foot traffic, sweat. On bare concrete or a finished floor, that wear lands directly on the surface. Interlocking tiles put a layer of dense rubber between the workout and the floor, soaking up impact and protecting what's underneath.
They also give you grip and a little cushion underfoot, which matters for safety and comfort during a session. Because each tile locks to the next, the surface holds together as a single floor instead of sliding mats — no shifting, no gaps to trip on, no edges curling up mid-workout.
Why Interlocking Tiles, and Why These
The whole idea of a tile is the locking edge. Each one snaps into its neighbors with no adhesive, so you cover exactly the area you want and can expand or rearrange it later — something a glued roll can't do. That makes tiles the easiest rubber floor to install, and the only one you can realistically take with you.
These are made from recycled rubber diverted from the waste stream, so the same density that makes them tough also keeps material out of a landfill. They're tested low for VOCs — the gases that flooring can off-gas indoors — and they contribute toward LEED credits, which matters on commercial and institutional projects.
They come in three thicknesses, from 1/4 inch up to 1/2 inch, so you can match the tile to the load, and in 19 colors with a standard 10% color fleck mixed into the rubber — so the floor can match a brand palette or simply look better than plain black.
Where Interlocking Tiles Belong, and Where They Don't
Tiles are the natural pick for spaces that change or grow: home and garage gyms, basements, multi-use rooms, studios, and any layout you might rearrange. The no-adhesive install means no damage to the floor below, which is ideal for a rental or a finished basement.
Where they're less suited is a dedicated heavy-drop zone — for repeated dropped barbells and Olympic lifts, our heavy-duty gym matting is built for that punishment. And for a large, permanent, wall-to-wall commercial floor, rolls give you fewer seams.
Tiles win on flexibility; rolls win on seamlessness; heavy-duty matting wins in the drop zone. All three are part of the wider gym flooring lineup, because different spaces call for different surfaces.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec Them
Three things decide whether tiles are right and which ones you need.
First, thickness against use. For bodyweight training, cardio, and general fitness, 1/4 inch to 3/8 inch is usually enough. For busier rooms and heavier equipment, step up to 1/2 inch. If you're regularly dropping loaded barbells, that's past what tiles are for — the heavy-duty matting is the surface built to absorb it.
Second, the coverage and layout. Each tile is 25 inches across including the locking tabs, so measure your space and plan for the border tiles you'll trim to fit walls, doorways, and equipment. Decide on color while you're at it — there are 19 to choose from.
Third, the subfloor. Tiles want a clean, flat, dry surface to lock over. They go down without adhesive and hold together by the locks and their own weight, so the prep is simple — but a level subfloor keeps the seams tight and the floor flat over time.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has matched surfaces to floors since 1964, and a tile floor is a friendly project once we know the room and how it gets used. We'll help you settle on a thickness, pick from the 19 colors, and work out the tile count so you order the right amount with the fewest offcuts.
We specify rather than install, so the focus is getting the spec and the layout right — and pointing you to recycled, low-emitting tiles that earn their place on a green-building project. Every order is backed by our one-year limited warranty.
Format Interlocking tiles — snap together, no adhesive Tile size 25″ across, including locking tabs (24″ square style also available) Thickness 1/4″ (6 mm), 3/8″ (9 mm), 1/2″ (12 mm) Material Recycled rubber, diverted from the waste stream Colors 19 colors, standard 10% color fleck Density 68.3 lb/ft³ (ASTM E96) Tensile strength 265 psi (ASTM D412) Hardness Shore A 65 ±5 (ASTM D2240) Slip resistance Coefficient of friction 0.84–0.90 (ASTM C1028) Abrasion 0.33–0.35 g loss, 2,000 cycles (Taber, ASTM D4060) VOC emissions < 0.05 mg/m³ (CDPH v1.2 — low-emitting) LEED Contributes toward MR and EQ credits Installation Snap-together over a clean, flat, dry subfloor; no adhesive Maintenance Sweep or vacuum; damp mop with a neutral cleaner Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
What are interlocking rubber tiles made of?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
They're made from recycled rubber — material diverted from the waste stream and bound into a dense, solid tile. That density is what does the work: at about 68 pounds per cubic foot with a firm Shore A 65 hardness, the rubber absorbs impact and stands up to equipment without compressing. The recycled content puts reclaimed material back to use, and the tiles test low for VOCs, so they're a sound choice for indoor air.
How durable are they, and what wears them out?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Built right, a rubber tile floor lasts many years — often a decade or more — because dense recycled rubber shrugs off foot traffic and equipment. The numbers back it up, with 265 psi tensile strength and very low abrasion loss in standard Taber testing.
What shortens their life is usually the wrong thickness for the load, gaps left between poorly fitted tiles, or harsh solvent cleaners. A thickness matched to use and a neutral cleaner keep them going.
How do interlocking tiles install — do I need glue?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
No glue. Each tile has interlocking edges that snap into the next, so the floor goes down as a connected sheet held by the locks and its own weight. Start from one corner, work across a clean, flat, dry subfloor, and trim the border tiles to fit walls and around racks.
Because there's no adhesive, you can lift and relock them later — which is what makes tiles so easy to live with, and so kind to the floor underneath.
What size are the tiles, and how many do I need?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Each interlocking tile is 25 inches across, including the locking tabs, so a handful covers a surprising amount of floor. Measure your space, then plan for the border tiles you'll trim to fit walls, doorways, and equipment.
Tell us the room dimensions and we'll help you work out the tile count — and whether a 24-inch square tile style suits a glued or loose-laid layout better for your room.
What colors do they come in?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Nineteen, which is unusual for gym flooring. Every tile comes with a standard 10% color fleck mixed into the rubber, in shades from grey, blue, and teal to red, green, gold and more, plus near-solid charcoal and black.
A commercial studio can match its brand palette, and a home gym can pick something that doesn't look industrial. Because the color is part of the rubber rather than a coating, it won't wear off underfoot.
Are interlocking tiles a good choice for a home or basement gym?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
They're one of the best, especially when you don't want to glue anything down. The tiles lock together over a basement, garage, or spare-room floor with no adhesive and no damage to what's underneath, so they suit a rental or a finished space. You can floor just the training area, add tiles as the gym grows, and pull them up if you move. For the heaviest lifting, pair them with heavier matting in the drop zone.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
↑
Interlocking rubber tiles are the gym floor you can put down yourself. They snap together edge to edge — no glue, no adhesive, no installer — so a garage, basement, or home gym goes from bare slab to finished rubber floor in an afternoon. And because they lock rather than bond, you can add to them, pull them up, or take them with you when the space changes.
What Interlocking Rubber Tiles Do Before Your Floor Pays for It
A workout floor takes a beating — dropped dumbbells, dragged equipment, foot traffic, sweat. On bare concrete or a finished floor, that wear lands directly on the surface. Interlocking tiles put a layer of dense rubber between the workout and the floor, soaking up impact and protecting what's underneath.
They also give you grip and a little cushion underfoot, which matters for safety and comfort during a session. Because each tile locks to the next, the surface holds together as a single floor instead of sliding mats — no shifting, no gaps to trip on, no edges curling up mid-workout.
Why Interlocking Tiles, and Why These
The whole idea of a tile is the locking edge. Each one snaps into its neighbors with no adhesive, so you cover exactly the area you want and can expand or rearrange it later — something a glued roll can't do. That makes tiles the easiest rubber floor to install, and the only one you can realistically take with you.
These are made from recycled rubber diverted from the waste stream, so the same density that makes them tough also keeps material out of a landfill. They're tested low for VOCs — the gases that flooring can off-gas indoors — and they contribute toward LEED credits, which matters on commercial and institutional projects.
They come in three thicknesses, from 1/4 inch up to 1/2 inch, so you can match the tile to the load, and in 19 colors with a standard 10% color fleck mixed into the rubber — so the floor can match a brand palette or simply look better than plain black.
Where Interlocking Tiles Belong, and Where They Don't
Tiles are the natural pick for spaces that change or grow: home and garage gyms, basements, multi-use rooms, studios, and any layout you might rearrange. The no-adhesive install means no damage to the floor below, which is ideal for a rental or a finished basement.
Where they're less suited is a dedicated heavy-drop zone — for repeated dropped barbells and Olympic lifts, our heavy-duty gym matting is built for that punishment. And for a large, permanent, wall-to-wall commercial floor, rolls give you fewer seams.
Tiles win on flexibility; rolls win on seamlessness; heavy-duty matting wins in the drop zone. All three are part of the wider gym flooring lineup, because different spaces call for different surfaces.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec Them
Three things decide whether tiles are right and which ones you need.
First, thickness against use. For bodyweight training, cardio, and general fitness, 1/4 inch to 3/8 inch is usually enough. For busier rooms and heavier equipment, step up to 1/2 inch. If you're regularly dropping loaded barbells, that's past what tiles are for — the heavy-duty matting is the surface built to absorb it.
Second, the coverage and layout. Each tile is 25 inches across including the locking tabs, so measure your space and plan for the border tiles you'll trim to fit walls, doorways, and equipment. Decide on color while you're at it — there are 19 to choose from.
Third, the subfloor. Tiles want a clean, flat, dry surface to lock over. They go down without adhesive and hold together by the locks and their own weight, so the prep is simple — but a level subfloor keeps the seams tight and the floor flat over time.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has matched surfaces to floors since 1964, and a tile floor is a friendly project once we know the room and how it gets used. We'll help you settle on a thickness, pick from the 19 colors, and work out the tile count so you order the right amount with the fewest offcuts.
We specify rather than install, so the focus is getting the spec and the layout right — and pointing you to recycled, low-emitting tiles that earn their place on a green-building project. Every order is backed by our one-year limited warranty.
Format Interlocking tiles — snap together, no adhesive Tile size 25″ across, including locking tabs (24″ square style also available) Thickness 1/4″ (6 mm), 3/8″ (9 mm), 1/2″ (12 mm) Material Recycled rubber, diverted from the waste stream Colors 19 colors, standard 10% color fleck Density 68.3 lb/ft³ (ASTM E96) Tensile strength 265 psi (ASTM D412) Hardness Shore A 65 ±5 (ASTM D2240) Slip resistance Coefficient of friction 0.84–0.90 (ASTM C1028) Abrasion 0.33–0.35 g loss, 2,000 cycles (Taber, ASTM D4060) VOC emissions < 0.05 mg/m³ (CDPH v1.2 — low-emitting) LEED Contributes toward MR and EQ credits Installation Snap-together over a clean, flat, dry subfloor; no adhesive Maintenance Sweep or vacuum; damp mop with a neutral cleaner Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
What are interlocking rubber tiles made of?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
They're made from recycled rubber — material diverted from the waste stream and bound into a dense, solid tile. That density is what does the work: at about 68 pounds per cubic foot with a firm Shore A 65 hardness, the rubber absorbs impact and stands up to equipment without compressing. The recycled content puts reclaimed material back to use, and the tiles test low for VOCs, so they're a sound choice for indoor air.
How durable are they, and what wears them out?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Built right, a rubber tile floor lasts many years — often a decade or more — because dense recycled rubber shrugs off foot traffic and equipment. The numbers back it up, with 265 psi tensile strength and very low abrasion loss in standard Taber testing.
What shortens their life is usually the wrong thickness for the load, gaps left between poorly fitted tiles, or harsh solvent cleaners. A thickness matched to use and a neutral cleaner keep them going.
How do interlocking tiles install — do I need glue?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
No glue. Each tile has interlocking edges that snap into the next, so the floor goes down as a connected sheet held by the locks and its own weight. Start from one corner, work across a clean, flat, dry subfloor, and trim the border tiles to fit walls and around racks.
Because there's no adhesive, you can lift and relock them later — which is what makes tiles so easy to live with, and so kind to the floor underneath.
What size are the tiles, and how many do I need?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Each interlocking tile is 25 inches across, including the locking tabs, so a handful covers a surprising amount of floor. Measure your space, then plan for the border tiles you'll trim to fit walls, doorways, and equipment.
Tell us the room dimensions and we'll help you work out the tile count — and whether a 24-inch square tile style suits a glued or loose-laid layout better for your room.
What colors do they come in?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Nineteen, which is unusual for gym flooring. Every tile comes with a standard 10% color fleck mixed into the rubber, in shades from grey, blue, and teal to red, green, gold and more, plus near-solid charcoal and black.
A commercial studio can match its brand palette, and a home gym can pick something that doesn't look industrial. Because the color is part of the rubber rather than a coating, it won't wear off underfoot.
Are interlocking tiles a good choice for a home or basement gym?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
They're one of the best, especially when you don't want to glue anything down. The tiles lock together over a basement, garage, or spare-room floor with no adhesive and no damage to what's underneath, so they suit a rental or a finished space. You can floor just the training area, add tiles as the gym grows, and pull them up if you move. For the heaviest lifting, pair them with heavier matting in the drop zone.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
↑
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Safety Scrape Rubber MatsStarting at $46.00
A rubber scraper mat earns its place at the door by doing two jobs at once: pulling grit off shoes, and holding footing where a wet floor turns slick. Safety Scrape does both. Its molded grip surface bites in wet, greasy, and oily conditions that leave smoother mats treacherous,...
A rubber scraper mat earns its place at the door by doing two jobs at once: pulling grit off...
A rubber scraper mat earns its place at the door by doing two jobs at once: pulling grit off shoes, and holding footing where a wet floor turns slick. Safety Scrape does both. Its molded grip surface bites in wet, greasy, and oily conditions that leave smoother mats treacherous, so it works as well inside a wet kitchen as it does outside as an exterior scraper.
What Safety Scrape Does Before a Slick Floor Becomes a Claim
The trouble with most entrance mats shows up the moment the floor gets wet. A surface that grips when dry can go slippery underfoot, and that is exactly when a slip-and-fall claim starts. Safety Scrape is built for that moment. The cleated surface keeps traction in wet and oily conditions, and those same cleats scrape dirt and sand off shoes so loose grit does not track across the floor behind it.
Why Molded Nitrile, and Why This One
The mat is molded from solid nitrile rubber — a synthetic rubber that shrugs off oil, grease, and harsh chemicals instead of breaking down in them. That is why it holds up in kitchens and production areas where animal fats and cleaners would degrade a cheaper mat. The grip comes from cleats molded into the face, not a coating that wears off.
The traction is a tested rating, not just a textured look. Safety Scrape is certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute, the independent body that rates slip resistance, and it posts a static coefficient of friction — a standard grip measurement — of 0.74 dry under ASTM C1028-96, which sits in the high-traction range. It also passes the DOC FF1-70 surface-flammability standard.
Where It Belongs, and Where It Doesn't
Safety Scrape fits anywhere wet or oily footing meets incoming dirt: commercial kitchens, food-prep and processing areas, locker rooms, industrial workshops, and exterior building entrances in wet climates. It reads as utility-first, so it is at home behind the counter, at a service entry, or on an inclined walkway where safe footing matters more than polish. It is one of the exterior scraper and traction mats we carry, chosen for the wet-and-greasy end of that range.
What it is not is a lobby showpiece. The molded surface is functional, not decorative, so for a customer-facing main entrance where presentation leads, a finished entrance mat usually carries the look better. Use Safety Scrape where the real job is footing and scraping — indoors or out.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
First, match the surface to the conditions. If the floor sees standing water, grease, or chemical splash, the nitrile build and cleated grip are the whole point — that is where Safety Scrape outperforms a smooth or fabric mat. In a dry, low-risk spot, a lighter mat may be enough.
Second, size it to the traffic path, not the doorway. Grit needs several footsteps on the mat to come off, and ISSA field data shows roughly 12 times more dirt enters a building during wet weather — which is also when footing is least stable. A mat too short for the path lets shoes skip both the cleats and the grip surface.
Third, plan placement and upkeep. A scraper works best paired with an absorbent mat just inside, so the scraper knocks off grit and the second stage takes the moisture. Lift and clear trapped grit underneath on a regular schedule, since debris packed beneath a mat is what shortens its life early.
Why Mats Inc.
We have specified entrance and safety matting since 1964, and we choose traction products by the test data, not the sales sheet. Safety Scrape earns its spot because its slip rating is independently certified and its nitrile build survives the kitchens and entrances that break down lesser mats. Tell us the conditions and the traffic path, and we will confirm it is the right call for your floor.
Safety Scrape — Specifications Material 100% nitrile rubber Surface Molded grip-surface cleats Thickness 3/16" (about 0.19") Slip resistance NFSI-certified high-traction; 0.74 dry static coefficient of friction (ASTM C1028-96) Flammability Passes DOC FF1-70 (surface flammability) Resistance Oil, grease, and chemical resistant Cleaning Hose or pressure-wash; deck brush with neutral-pH detergent; commercial-dishwasher safe; autoclave-sterilizable Standard sizes 2'×3', 3'×5', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×10' (approximate; rubber varies 3–5% with temperature) Best for Commercial kitchens, food processing, locker rooms, industrial workshops, wet or greasy areas, exterior entrances Frequently Asked Questions
What is Safety Scrape made of, and how slip-resistant is it really?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Safety Scrape is molded from solid nitrile rubber, with the grip cleats built into the face rather than coated on top, so the traction does not wear away. The slip resistance is a tested rating: it is certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute and posts a 0.74 dry static coefficient of friction under ASTM C1028-96, which sits in the high-traction range. It also passes the DOC FF1-70 surface-flammability standard. The cleats hold footing in wet and oily conditions — exactly where smooth mats turn slick.
How do I clean it, and how long should it last?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Cleaning is about as simple as commercial matting gets. Shake off the loose grit, then hose or pressure-wash it; for a deeper clean, scrub with a deck brush and a neutral-pH detergent and hang it to dry before putting it back. It is safe in a commercial dishwasher and can be sterilized in an autoclave where that is required. At a commercial placement, plan on several years of service. The habit that extends it is lifting the mat regularly to clear grit trapped underneath, since packed debris is what wears a mat out early.
Can I use it both indoors and outdoors, and will it stay in place?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Yes — it is built for both. Indoors it suits wet zones like kitchens, food-prep areas, and locker rooms; outdoors it works as an exterior scraper at building entrances, especially in wet climates. The mat is lightweight and flexible, which makes it easy to lift and clean, so on a smooth floor in a busy path it is worth checking that it sits flat and is not shifting. The best results come from placing it right where the wet meets the foot traffic, not off to the side of the path.
What sizes does it come in, and how do I pick the right one?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Safety Scrape comes in a set of standard sizes, from a compact 2-by-3-foot mat up to a 3-by-10-foot runner, with a few widths in between. The size that matters is the one matched to the actual traffic path — people need several steps on the mat for the cleats to do their work, so a mat chosen to look tidy rather than to cover where feet land lets shoes miss the grip surface entirely. Tell us the doorway width and how far the path runs, and we will point you to the size that fits.
Will it look out of place at a customer-facing entrance?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Its look is functional first. The molded grip surface reads as purpose-built — clean and intentional, but utilitarian rather than decorative. That suits service entries, back-of-house doors, and wet work zones perfectly. For a main lobby or a storefront where the entrance is part of the first impression, a more finished mat usually carries the look better. The simplest approach is to let the role decide: where safe footing is the real job, Safety Scrape looks exactly as serious as it is.
Does it come in different colors, or can I add a logo?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Safety Scrape is a single functional construction — a molded black grip surface — so it is not a color or logo product. The trade-off is deliberate: every part of the design works toward traction and scraping, not appearance. If you want a brand or a custom color at the door, that belongs on a logo or carpet-inlay construction built for print, which we can point you to. Where the priority is footing and dirt control, the standard surface is the right tool.
By Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO, Mats Inc.
↑
A rubber scraper mat earns its place at the door by doing two jobs at once: pulling grit off shoes, and holding footing where a wet floor turns slick. Safety Scrape does both. Its molded grip surface bites in wet, greasy, and oily conditions that leave smoother mats treacherous, so it works as well inside a wet kitchen as it does outside as an exterior scraper.
What Safety Scrape Does Before a Slick Floor Becomes a Claim
The trouble with most entrance mats shows up the moment the floor gets wet. A surface that grips when dry can go slippery underfoot, and that is exactly when a slip-and-fall claim starts. Safety Scrape is built for that moment. The cleated surface keeps traction in wet and oily conditions, and those same cleats scrape dirt and sand off shoes so loose grit does not track across the floor behind it.
Why Molded Nitrile, and Why This One
The mat is molded from solid nitrile rubber — a synthetic rubber that shrugs off oil, grease, and harsh chemicals instead of breaking down in them. That is why it holds up in kitchens and production areas where animal fats and cleaners would degrade a cheaper mat. The grip comes from cleats molded into the face, not a coating that wears off.
The traction is a tested rating, not just a textured look. Safety Scrape is certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute, the independent body that rates slip resistance, and it posts a static coefficient of friction — a standard grip measurement — of 0.74 dry under ASTM C1028-96, which sits in the high-traction range. It also passes the DOC FF1-70 surface-flammability standard.
Where It Belongs, and Where It Doesn't
Safety Scrape fits anywhere wet or oily footing meets incoming dirt: commercial kitchens, food-prep and processing areas, locker rooms, industrial workshops, and exterior building entrances in wet climates. It reads as utility-first, so it is at home behind the counter, at a service entry, or on an inclined walkway where safe footing matters more than polish. It is one of the exterior scraper and traction mats we carry, chosen for the wet-and-greasy end of that range.
What it is not is a lobby showpiece. The molded surface is functional, not decorative, so for a customer-facing main entrance where presentation leads, a finished entrance mat usually carries the look better. Use Safety Scrape where the real job is footing and scraping — indoors or out.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
First, match the surface to the conditions. If the floor sees standing water, grease, or chemical splash, the nitrile build and cleated grip are the whole point — that is where Safety Scrape outperforms a smooth or fabric mat. In a dry, low-risk spot, a lighter mat may be enough.
Second, size it to the traffic path, not the doorway. Grit needs several footsteps on the mat to come off, and ISSA field data shows roughly 12 times more dirt enters a building during wet weather — which is also when footing is least stable. A mat too short for the path lets shoes skip both the cleats and the grip surface.
Third, plan placement and upkeep. A scraper works best paired with an absorbent mat just inside, so the scraper knocks off grit and the second stage takes the moisture. Lift and clear trapped grit underneath on a regular schedule, since debris packed beneath a mat is what shortens its life early.
Why Mats Inc.
We have specified entrance and safety matting since 1964, and we choose traction products by the test data, not the sales sheet. Safety Scrape earns its spot because its slip rating is independently certified and its nitrile build survives the kitchens and entrances that break down lesser mats. Tell us the conditions and the traffic path, and we will confirm it is the right call for your floor.
Safety Scrape — Specifications Material 100% nitrile rubber Surface Molded grip-surface cleats Thickness 3/16" (about 0.19") Slip resistance NFSI-certified high-traction; 0.74 dry static coefficient of friction (ASTM C1028-96) Flammability Passes DOC FF1-70 (surface flammability) Resistance Oil, grease, and chemical resistant Cleaning Hose or pressure-wash; deck brush with neutral-pH detergent; commercial-dishwasher safe; autoclave-sterilizable Standard sizes 2'×3', 3'×5', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×10' (approximate; rubber varies 3–5% with temperature) Best for Commercial kitchens, food processing, locker rooms, industrial workshops, wet or greasy areas, exterior entrances Frequently Asked Questions
What is Safety Scrape made of, and how slip-resistant is it really?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Safety Scrape is molded from solid nitrile rubber, with the grip cleats built into the face rather than coated on top, so the traction does not wear away. The slip resistance is a tested rating: it is certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute and posts a 0.74 dry static coefficient of friction under ASTM C1028-96, which sits in the high-traction range. It also passes the DOC FF1-70 surface-flammability standard. The cleats hold footing in wet and oily conditions — exactly where smooth mats turn slick.
How do I clean it, and how long should it last?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Cleaning is about as simple as commercial matting gets. Shake off the loose grit, then hose or pressure-wash it; for a deeper clean, scrub with a deck brush and a neutral-pH detergent and hang it to dry before putting it back. It is safe in a commercial dishwasher and can be sterilized in an autoclave where that is required. At a commercial placement, plan on several years of service. The habit that extends it is lifting the mat regularly to clear grit trapped underneath, since packed debris is what wears a mat out early.
Can I use it both indoors and outdoors, and will it stay in place?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Yes — it is built for both. Indoors it suits wet zones like kitchens, food-prep areas, and locker rooms; outdoors it works as an exterior scraper at building entrances, especially in wet climates. The mat is lightweight and flexible, which makes it easy to lift and clean, so on a smooth floor in a busy path it is worth checking that it sits flat and is not shifting. The best results come from placing it right where the wet meets the foot traffic, not off to the side of the path.
What sizes does it come in, and how do I pick the right one?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Safety Scrape comes in a set of standard sizes, from a compact 2-by-3-foot mat up to a 3-by-10-foot runner, with a few widths in between. The size that matters is the one matched to the actual traffic path — people need several steps on the mat for the cleats to do their work, so a mat chosen to look tidy rather than to cover where feet land lets shoes miss the grip surface entirely. Tell us the doorway width and how far the path runs, and we will point you to the size that fits.
Will it look out of place at a customer-facing entrance?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Its look is functional first. The molded grip surface reads as purpose-built — clean and intentional, but utilitarian rather than decorative. That suits service entries, back-of-house doors, and wet work zones perfectly. For a main lobby or a storefront where the entrance is part of the first impression, a more finished mat usually carries the look better. The simplest approach is to let the role decide: where safe footing is the real job, Safety Scrape looks exactly as serious as it is.
Does it come in different colors, or can I add a logo?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Safety Scrape is a single functional construction — a molded black grip surface — so it is not a color or logo product. The trade-off is deliberate: every part of the design works toward traction and scraping, not appearance. If you want a brand or a custom color at the door, that belongs on a logo or carpet-inlay construction built for print, which we can point you to. Where the priority is footing and dirt control, the standard surface is the right tool.
By Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO, Mats Inc.
↑
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Rubber Gym Flooring RollsStarting at $2.99
Rubber gym flooring rolls give you the most floor with the fewest seams. Where tiles and single mats leave you lines to manage, a roll lays down in long, continuous runs — cleaner to look at, faster to cover a big room, and harder for equipment to shift around. These...
Rubber gym flooring rolls give you the most floor with the fewest seams. Where tiles and single mats leave you...
Rubber gym flooring rolls give you the most floor with the fewest seams. Where tiles and single mats leave you lines to manage, a roll lays down in long, continuous runs — cleaner to look at, faster to cover a big room, and harder for equipment to shift around. These are recycled-rubber rolls built to take dropped weights and heavy machines without passing the damage into the floor below.
What Rubber Gym Flooring Rolls Do Before Your Subfloor Pays for It
Every dropped dumbbell and loaded barbell sends force somewhere. On a bare slab or a finished floor, that force goes straight into the surface — cracked tile, dented concrete, gouged wood, and noise that travels through the building. A rubber roll sits between the workout and the floor and absorbs most of that energy before it lands.
That's the real job here: protecting the subfloor, the equipment, and the people training. The rolls also knock down the noise and shock that carry to rooms below — independent testing rates them high for both airborne sound (STC 59) and impact sound (IIC 69), strong marks for a floor over an occupied space. And the dense surface gives shoes and equipment enough grip to stay put.
Why Recycled Rubber Rolls, and Why This One
These rolls are made from recycled tire rubber — SBR (styrene-butadiene rubber) bound with polyurethane — at about 92% recycled content, so the same density that makes them tough also keeps a lot of scrap tire out of a landfill. That density is real, 65 to 80 pounds per cubic foot, which is what lets the rubber absorb impact and stay flat under weights instead of bouncing.
They come in three thicknesses, from 1/4 inch up to 1/2 inch, so you can match the floor to the load instead of buying one thickness for the whole building. Thinner runs suit cardio and general fitness; the half-inch handles busier rooms and heavier equipment. Because they're cut to length, a roll can cover a full room edge to edge with very few seams. For the heaviest lifting — dropped barbells and Olympic platforms — our heavy-duty gym matting is the surface built for that punishment.
Color isn't an afterthought either. Beyond solid black, the rolls come in fleck blends across blues, grays, reds, greens and more, so a commercial studio can match a brand palette and a home gym can skip the plain-industrial look.
Where Rolls Belong, and Where They Don't
Rolls are at their best in big, open, more-or-less permanent floors: commercial gyms, school and team weight rooms, fitness studios, and full garage or basement builds where you want wall-to-wall coverage. The flat, continuous surface makes a large room look finished and stay put under heavy traffic.
Where they're not the easy answer is a space that changes often. If you expect to rearrange the room, move equipment between spots, or take the floor with you, interlocking tiles handle that better — they come up and go back down without adhesive.
And for a dedicated drop zone — a deadlift or Olympic platform — our heavy-duty gym matting is purpose-built to take repeated heavy drops, rather than rolling the whole room. Rolls are one option in the wider gym flooring lineup, because different spaces call for different surfaces.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec Rolls
Three things decide whether a roll is right and which one to order.
First, thickness against the load. For bodyweight training, stretching, and cardio, 1/4 inch to 3/8 inch is usually enough. For busier rooms and heavier equipment, the 1/2 inch gives you more cushion and protection. If you're regularly dropping loaded barbells, that's past what these rolls are for — the heavy-duty gym matting is the surface built to absorb it. Speccing thin to save on material is the most common way subfloors get damaged.
Second, the room and the length. Measure the actual training area, not the whole slab — rolls cut to any length, so you only cover what you use. Note the doorways, posts, and racks you'll trim around, and decide whether you want one continuous run or a couple of shorter pieces that are easier to handle.
Third, how it attaches. A roll can sit loose under light use, but most installs use double-sided tape or adhesive so edges stay down and seams stay tight, especially in high-traffic and commercial rooms. Let the rubber relax to room temperature first, then trim to fit — that keeps it from shifting or curling later.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has spent since 1964 figuring out which surface belongs on which floor, and rubber rolls are a straightforward call once we know the load and the room. We'll help you land on a thickness instead of guessing, work out how much length the space actually needs, and flag the install method that fits your subfloor.
We specify rather than install, so the advice is about getting the spec right the first time — not selling you more rubber than the room calls for. Every order is backed by our one-year limited warranty.
Material Recycled SBR (styrene-butadiene) tire rubber with polyurethane binder; ~92% recycled content Thickness options 1/4″ (6 mm), 3/8″ (9 mm), 1/2″ (12 mm) Roll width 4 ft (48″) Length Cut to length (standard runs 15–100 ft) Density 65–80 lb/ft³ Slip resistance Coefficient of friction > 0.9 (ASTM D2047) Acoustics STC 59 (airborne sound) / IIC 69 (impact sound) Durability Tensile > 220 psi; elongation 155%; tear 80 pli; abrasion < 1.7 g (1,000 cycles) Flammability Passes burning pill test Color options Solid black plus fleck blends — blues, grays, reds, greens, cocoa, and granite/sandstone tones Installation Acclimate to room temperature, trim to fit, secure with adhesive or double-sided tape Maintenance Sweep or vacuum; damp mop with a neutral cleaner Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
What are these rolls actually made of?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
They're made from recycled tire rubber — SBR, short for styrene-butadiene rubber — ground down and bound with polyurethane into a dense, solid sheet at about 92% recycled content. That density is the point, around 65 to 80 pounds per cubic foot: it's what lets the roll absorb the impact of dropped weights and stay flat under heavy machines instead of compressing or bouncing. It also puts a lot of scrap tire to good use instead of a landfill.
How long will rubber gym flooring rolls last, and what wears them out?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
In a normal gym, quality rubber rolls last many years — often a decade or more — because dense recycled rubber handles foot traffic and equipment without breaking down. What ends their life early is usually the wrong thickness for the load: a thin roll under a platform takes punishment it wasn't built for.
Standing water trapped underneath and harsh solvent cleaners can also shorten the life. A thickness matched to the load, and a neutral cleaner instead of solvents, go a long way.
Do I have to glue them down?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Not always. For a small, low-traffic area a roll can lie loose, held by its own weight. For most rooms — and almost any commercial floor — double-sided tape or adhesive is worth it, because it keeps the edges flat and the seams tight under daily use.
Whatever the method, let the roll relax to room temperature first and trim it to fit. Rubber that's been rolled tight needs time to settle before it lies flat.
How do I know how much to order if they're cut to length?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Measure the area you'll actually train on, not the entire floor — most home and garage gyms only need the working zone covered. Because the rolls are cut to any length, you order to that measurement rather than forcing the room to fit fixed sizes.
Map out where doorways, racks, and posts fall so we can plan trims and seams, and tell us if you'd rather have one long run or a few shorter pieces that are easier to move and lay.
What colors do they come in?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
More than you might expect. The base is solid black, which hides scuffs and is the usual pick for hard-working commercial floors. From there, the rolls come in fleck blends — flecks of color mixed into the black rubber — in blues, grays, reds, greens, cocoa, and stone-like granite and sandstone tones.
A studio can pull its brand colors into the floor, and a home gym can land on something warmer than plain black. Because the color is in the material rather than a top coating, it won't wear off where you walk and train.
Will rubber rolls work in a home or basement gym, or are they just for commercial spaces?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Both. The same rolls that go into commercial gyms work just as well in a basement, garage, or spare-room setup — you're just covering a smaller area. In a basement, the impact absorption and noise dampening are a real plus over a finished room or bedroom below.
Pick a thickness that matches what you'll lift, cover the training zone, and a home space gets the same protected, finished floor a commercial gym has — without redoing the whole slab.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
↑
Rubber gym flooring rolls give you the most floor with the fewest seams. Where tiles and single mats leave you lines to manage, a roll lays down in long, continuous runs — cleaner to look at, faster to cover a big room, and harder for equipment to shift around. These are recycled-rubber rolls built to take dropped weights and heavy machines without passing the damage into the floor below.
What Rubber Gym Flooring Rolls Do Before Your Subfloor Pays for It
Every dropped dumbbell and loaded barbell sends force somewhere. On a bare slab or a finished floor, that force goes straight into the surface — cracked tile, dented concrete, gouged wood, and noise that travels through the building. A rubber roll sits between the workout and the floor and absorbs most of that energy before it lands.
That's the real job here: protecting the subfloor, the equipment, and the people training. The rolls also knock down the noise and shock that carry to rooms below — independent testing rates them high for both airborne sound (STC 59) and impact sound (IIC 69), strong marks for a floor over an occupied space. And the dense surface gives shoes and equipment enough grip to stay put.
Why Recycled Rubber Rolls, and Why This One
These rolls are made from recycled tire rubber — SBR (styrene-butadiene rubber) bound with polyurethane — at about 92% recycled content, so the same density that makes them tough also keeps a lot of scrap tire out of a landfill. That density is real, 65 to 80 pounds per cubic foot, which is what lets the rubber absorb impact and stay flat under weights instead of bouncing.
They come in three thicknesses, from 1/4 inch up to 1/2 inch, so you can match the floor to the load instead of buying one thickness for the whole building. Thinner runs suit cardio and general fitness; the half-inch handles busier rooms and heavier equipment. Because they're cut to length, a roll can cover a full room edge to edge with very few seams. For the heaviest lifting — dropped barbells and Olympic platforms — our heavy-duty gym matting is the surface built for that punishment.
Color isn't an afterthought either. Beyond solid black, the rolls come in fleck blends across blues, grays, reds, greens and more, so a commercial studio can match a brand palette and a home gym can skip the plain-industrial look.
Where Rolls Belong, and Where They Don't
Rolls are at their best in big, open, more-or-less permanent floors: commercial gyms, school and team weight rooms, fitness studios, and full garage or basement builds where you want wall-to-wall coverage. The flat, continuous surface makes a large room look finished and stay put under heavy traffic.
Where they're not the easy answer is a space that changes often. If you expect to rearrange the room, move equipment between spots, or take the floor with you, interlocking tiles handle that better — they come up and go back down without adhesive.
And for a dedicated drop zone — a deadlift or Olympic platform — our heavy-duty gym matting is purpose-built to take repeated heavy drops, rather than rolling the whole room. Rolls are one option in the wider gym flooring lineup, because different spaces call for different surfaces.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec Rolls
Three things decide whether a roll is right and which one to order.
First, thickness against the load. For bodyweight training, stretching, and cardio, 1/4 inch to 3/8 inch is usually enough. For busier rooms and heavier equipment, the 1/2 inch gives you more cushion and protection. If you're regularly dropping loaded barbells, that's past what these rolls are for — the heavy-duty gym matting is the surface built to absorb it. Speccing thin to save on material is the most common way subfloors get damaged.
Second, the room and the length. Measure the actual training area, not the whole slab — rolls cut to any length, so you only cover what you use. Note the doorways, posts, and racks you'll trim around, and decide whether you want one continuous run or a couple of shorter pieces that are easier to handle.
Third, how it attaches. A roll can sit loose under light use, but most installs use double-sided tape or adhesive so edges stay down and seams stay tight, especially in high-traffic and commercial rooms. Let the rubber relax to room temperature first, then trim to fit — that keeps it from shifting or curling later.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has spent since 1964 figuring out which surface belongs on which floor, and rubber rolls are a straightforward call once we know the load and the room. We'll help you land on a thickness instead of guessing, work out how much length the space actually needs, and flag the install method that fits your subfloor.
We specify rather than install, so the advice is about getting the spec right the first time — not selling you more rubber than the room calls for. Every order is backed by our one-year limited warranty.
Material Recycled SBR (styrene-butadiene) tire rubber with polyurethane binder; ~92% recycled content Thickness options 1/4″ (6 mm), 3/8″ (9 mm), 1/2″ (12 mm) Roll width 4 ft (48″) Length Cut to length (standard runs 15–100 ft) Density 65–80 lb/ft³ Slip resistance Coefficient of friction > 0.9 (ASTM D2047) Acoustics STC 59 (airborne sound) / IIC 69 (impact sound) Durability Tensile > 220 psi; elongation 155%; tear 80 pli; abrasion < 1.7 g (1,000 cycles) Flammability Passes burning pill test Color options Solid black plus fleck blends — blues, grays, reds, greens, cocoa, and granite/sandstone tones Installation Acclimate to room temperature, trim to fit, secure with adhesive or double-sided tape Maintenance Sweep or vacuum; damp mop with a neutral cleaner Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
What are these rolls actually made of?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
They're made from recycled tire rubber — SBR, short for styrene-butadiene rubber — ground down and bound with polyurethane into a dense, solid sheet at about 92% recycled content. That density is the point, around 65 to 80 pounds per cubic foot: it's what lets the roll absorb the impact of dropped weights and stay flat under heavy machines instead of compressing or bouncing. It also puts a lot of scrap tire to good use instead of a landfill.
How long will rubber gym flooring rolls last, and what wears them out?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
In a normal gym, quality rubber rolls last many years — often a decade or more — because dense recycled rubber handles foot traffic and equipment without breaking down. What ends their life early is usually the wrong thickness for the load: a thin roll under a platform takes punishment it wasn't built for.
Standing water trapped underneath and harsh solvent cleaners can also shorten the life. A thickness matched to the load, and a neutral cleaner instead of solvents, go a long way.
Do I have to glue them down?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Not always. For a small, low-traffic area a roll can lie loose, held by its own weight. For most rooms — and almost any commercial floor — double-sided tape or adhesive is worth it, because it keeps the edges flat and the seams tight under daily use.
Whatever the method, let the roll relax to room temperature first and trim it to fit. Rubber that's been rolled tight needs time to settle before it lies flat.
How do I know how much to order if they're cut to length?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Measure the area you'll actually train on, not the entire floor — most home and garage gyms only need the working zone covered. Because the rolls are cut to any length, you order to that measurement rather than forcing the room to fit fixed sizes.
Map out where doorways, racks, and posts fall so we can plan trims and seams, and tell us if you'd rather have one long run or a few shorter pieces that are easier to move and lay.
What colors do they come in?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
More than you might expect. The base is solid black, which hides scuffs and is the usual pick for hard-working commercial floors. From there, the rolls come in fleck blends — flecks of color mixed into the black rubber — in blues, grays, reds, greens, cocoa, and stone-like granite and sandstone tones.
A studio can pull its brand colors into the floor, and a home gym can land on something warmer than plain black. Because the color is in the material rather than a top coating, it won't wear off where you walk and train.
Will rubber rolls work in a home or basement gym, or are they just for commercial spaces?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Both. The same rolls that go into commercial gyms work just as well in a basement, garage, or spare-room setup — you're just covering a smaller area. In a basement, the impact absorption and noise dampening are a real plus over a finished room or bedroom below.
Pick a thickness that matches what you'll lift, cover the training zone, and a home space gets the same protected, finished floor a commercial gym has — without redoing the whole slab.
By Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing, Mats Inc.
↑
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Super Scrape Rubber Logo Mats$185.00Super Scrape Rubber Logo Mats put your logo on a mat that earns its place at the door. The nitrile rubber surface uses raised circular cleats to scrape dirt and water off shoes before they reach your floors, and the artwork is set into the rubber rather than coated...
Super Scrape Rubber Logo Mats put your logo on a mat that earns its place at the door. The...
Super Scrape Rubber Logo Mats put your logo on a mat that earns its place at the door. The nitrile rubber surface uses raised circular cleats to scrape dirt and water off shoes before they reach your floors, and the artwork is set into the rubber rather than coated on top — so the branding holds up through heavy traffic instead of scuffing away. They're among the most rugged of our outdoor logo mats, built for real commercial use indoors or out.
The logo is digitally printed on a polymeric film, then heat-pressed into the nitrile rubber so it becomes part of the mat. That process reproduces photo-realistic detail — multi-color artwork, tones, and gradients all come through cleanly, which is what separates these printed floor mats from simple one-color welcome mats. You get 150 standard colors to work from, with PMS matching available — up to four PMS colors per design — when a logo has to be exact.
The raised cleats give the mat a high-traction surface that's certified by the National Floor Safety Institute, which matters at a wet entrance where a slip turns into a liability claim. The all-nitrile build also resists oils and chemicals, so the mat holds up at tougher doorways — entries near commercial kitchens, service bays, and manufacturing floors — not just clean lobby entrances. It works indoors or out, though under constant direct sun the printed color softens over time.
The mat comes in standard sizes from 2.5' x 3' up to 6' x 8', so most entrances are covered without custom cutting — what's custom is the artwork, built to your logo and colors. Cleaning is simple: shake or sweep off loose debris and hose it down, or have it commercially laundered. Plan to replace it when the cleats wear smooth or the printed color has faded enough to lose its punch at the door.
Material Nitrile rubber (oil- and chemical-resistant) Logo / image Digitally printed polymeric film, heat-pressed into the rubber Thickness 3/16" (0.1875") Surface Raised circular cleats; high-traction Traction rating NFSI Certified high-traction Colors 150 standard; PMS matching available (up to 4 per design) Standard sizes 2.5'×3', 3'×4', 3'×5', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×8', 6'×6', 6'×8' Use Indoor and outdoor Care Hose off, sweep, or commercially launder Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How well does the logo hold up outdoors and under heavy traffic?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Better than a surface-printed mat. The artwork is printed on a film and heat-pressed into the nitrile rubber, so it's set into the mat instead of sitting on top as a coating that can scuff or peel. Under heavy door traffic, the raised cleats usually wear smooth before the logo gives out. Outdoors, direct sun is the limiting factor — the color softens gradually over the years rather than failing all at once.
Can you match our exact brand colors?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Yes. There are 150 standard colors to work from, which covers most logos as they are. When a brand needs precise color, PMS matching is available for up to four colors per design. Because the image is digitally printed before it's pressed into the rubber, photo-realistic detail holds up — multi-color marks, gradients, and fine type come through cleanly instead of being simplified into flat blocks.
What artwork do you need from us, and how detailed can the logo get?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Print-ready artwork works best — vector files or high-resolution images reproduce most cleanly. The process handles real detail, including photo-realistic images, multi-color designs, and shaded tones. As a rule of thumb, keep text at least half an inch tall and lines at least a sixteenth of an inch thick so they hold up in production. Send us the logo and the size you need, and we'll confirm how it reproduces before anything is made.
Can these go near kitchens or areas with oil and chemicals?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Yes — that's one of the real advantages of nitrile rubber. Standard rubber softens and breaks down with regular oil and chemical exposure, while nitrile resists both. That lets the mat hold up at doorways near commercial kitchens, auto and service bays, manufacturing floors, and food-service areas, where a standard logo mat would degrade.
By Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO, Mats Inc.
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Super Scrape Rubber Logo Mats put your logo on a mat that earns its place at the door. The nitrile rubber surface uses raised circular cleats to scrape dirt and water off shoes before they reach your floors, and the artwork is set into the rubber rather than coated on top — so the branding holds up through heavy traffic instead of scuffing away. They're among the most rugged of our outdoor logo mats, built for real commercial use indoors or out.
The logo is digitally printed on a polymeric film, then heat-pressed into the nitrile rubber so it becomes part of the mat. That process reproduces photo-realistic detail — multi-color artwork, tones, and gradients all come through cleanly, which is what separates these printed floor mats from simple one-color welcome mats. You get 150 standard colors to work from, with PMS matching available — up to four PMS colors per design — when a logo has to be exact.
The raised cleats give the mat a high-traction surface that's certified by the National Floor Safety Institute, which matters at a wet entrance where a slip turns into a liability claim. The all-nitrile build also resists oils and chemicals, so the mat holds up at tougher doorways — entries near commercial kitchens, service bays, and manufacturing floors — not just clean lobby entrances. It works indoors or out, though under constant direct sun the printed color softens over time.
The mat comes in standard sizes from 2.5' x 3' up to 6' x 8', so most entrances are covered without custom cutting — what's custom is the artwork, built to your logo and colors. Cleaning is simple: shake or sweep off loose debris and hose it down, or have it commercially laundered. Plan to replace it when the cleats wear smooth or the printed color has faded enough to lose its punch at the door.
Material Nitrile rubber (oil- and chemical-resistant) Logo / image Digitally printed polymeric film, heat-pressed into the rubber Thickness 3/16" (0.1875") Surface Raised circular cleats; high-traction Traction rating NFSI Certified high-traction Colors 150 standard; PMS matching available (up to 4 per design) Standard sizes 2.5'×3', 3'×4', 3'×5', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×8', 6'×6', 6'×8' Use Indoor and outdoor Care Hose off, sweep, or commercially launder Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How well does the logo hold up outdoors and under heavy traffic?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Better than a surface-printed mat. The artwork is printed on a film and heat-pressed into the nitrile rubber, so it's set into the mat instead of sitting on top as a coating that can scuff or peel. Under heavy door traffic, the raised cleats usually wear smooth before the logo gives out. Outdoors, direct sun is the limiting factor — the color softens gradually over the years rather than failing all at once.
Can you match our exact brand colors?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Yes. There are 150 standard colors to work from, which covers most logos as they are. When a brand needs precise color, PMS matching is available for up to four colors per design. Because the image is digitally printed before it's pressed into the rubber, photo-realistic detail holds up — multi-color marks, gradients, and fine type come through cleanly instead of being simplified into flat blocks.
What artwork do you need from us, and how detailed can the logo get?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Print-ready artwork works best — vector files or high-resolution images reproduce most cleanly. The process handles real detail, including photo-realistic images, multi-color designs, and shaded tones. As a rule of thumb, keep text at least half an inch tall and lines at least a sixteenth of an inch thick so they hold up in production. Send us the logo and the size you need, and we'll confirm how it reproduces before anything is made.
Can these go near kitchens or areas with oil and chemicals?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
Yes — that's one of the real advantages of nitrile rubber. Standard rubber softens and breaks down with regular oil and chemical exposure, while nitrile resists both. That lets the mat hold up at doorways near commercial kitchens, auto and service bays, manufacturing floors, and food-service areas, where a standard logo mat would degrade.
By Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO, Mats Inc.
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Dri-Dek Interlocking TilesStarting at $2.66
12" x 12" interlocking modular tiles for those areas where safety and comfort are critical. Open design allows water and debris to fall through the tile and out the drain. Tiles snap quickly together and can be easily trimmed to fit wall to wall applications. Perfect for showers, saunas,...
12" x 12" interlocking modular tiles for those areas where safety and comfort are critical. Open design allows water...
- 12" x 12" interlocking modular tiles for those areas where safety and comfort are critical.
- Open design allows water and debris to fall through the tile and out the drain.
- Tiles snap quickly together and can be easily trimmed to fit wall to wall applications.
- Perfect for showers, saunas, locker rooms, or any work station.
- Contains Oxy-B1 vinyl to inhibit growth of mold, mildew, and bacteria.
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- 12" x 12" interlocking modular tiles for those areas where safety and comfort are critical.
- Open design allows water and debris to fall through the tile and out the drain.
- Tiles snap quickly together and can be easily trimmed to fit wall to wall applications.
- Perfect for showers, saunas, locker rooms, or any work station.
- Contains Oxy-B1 vinyl to inhibit growth of mold, mildew, and bacteria.
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Cross-Over MattingStarting at $46.00
Cross-Over Matting is a loop-pile entrance mat that scrapes debris and moisture off shoes at the door while starting to dry them — the middle step in a layered entrance setup, between the coarse mat outside and the absorbent mat inside. The looped olefin surface is abrasive enough to clean...
Cross-Over Matting is a loop-pile entrance mat that scrapes debris and moisture off shoes at the door while starting to...
Cross-Over Matting is a loop-pile entrance mat that scrapes debris and moisture off shoes at the door while starting to dry them — the middle step in a layered entrance setup, between the coarse mat outside and the absorbent mat inside. The looped olefin surface is abrasive enough to clean shoes and resilient enough to hold its look in steady commercial traffic.
What Cross-Over Matting Does Before Dirt and Water Reach Your Floor
Dirt and water come into a building on shoes — and one mat at the threshold usually can't catch all of it. ISSA field data shows a building takes on up to 12 times more dirt during wet weather, and it takes six to eight steps to walk a sole dry. The most effective entrances use more than one mat to catch debris in stages.
Cross-Over is built to be the middle of that sequence. Its abrasive loop-pile surface scrapes off the grit and moisture a coarse outdoor mat leaves behind, and the sturdy olefin fibers begin drying the shoe before someone steps onto the floor or onto a softer absorbent mat further in. It's non-absorbent by design — it cleans the shoe and passes it along rather than soaking up and holding water.
Why a Loop-Pile Olefin Surface, and Why This One
The surface is a loop pile built from polypropylene ribbon yarn and continuous filament yarn — a combination that gives it an abrasive, hard-wearing texture rather than a soft plush one. That loop scrapes debris off the bottom of shoes and resists crushing, so it keeps its cleaning bite and its appearance instead of matting down into flat lanes under traffic.
The olefin fiber resists fading and crushing, which is what lets a loop-pile mat keep a tidy, finished look at a visible entrance over time. The loop construction reads richer than a flat ribbed mat, so it suits a lobby or front-of-house spot where appearance counts — while still doing real scraping work.
Underneath is a DINP-free PVC vinyl backing that grips the floor and protects it from whatever the mat scrapes off. It holds the mat flat on hard floors and low carpet, and at 5/16 inch the whole mat stays low enough not to catch a door swing or trip a foot at the edge.
Where It Belongs (and Where It Doesn't)
Cross-Over fits interior, medium-traffic entrances — convenience stores, restaurants, hotels, theaters, museums, and convention centers, where a steady stream of people crosses the threshold and the entrance is on view. It's certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute, so it gives a safe surface where shoes arrive wet.
Where it falls short is as a building's only mat or as an outdoor scraper. It's the middle of a system, not the whole system: against heavy mud it wants a coarse scraper ahead of it, and because it's non-absorbent, a wet climate benefits from an absorbent mat inside it to finish the drying. Outdoors and in full weather, it isn't the right construction.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
Three things decide whether Cross-Over fits your entrance.
First, the rest of your matting. Cross-Over works best as the middle mat — a coarse scraper outside, this loop-pile mat at the door, and an absorbent mat inside. If it's going in alone, be honest about how much dirt and water it'll face, because one mat rarely catches it all.
Second, the size. Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', and larger sizes over 6 feet — up to 11'9" — are made by seaming. Plan for that seam on the widest runs, and size the mat to cover the steps it takes to dry a sole, not just the doorway.
Third, the floor and the finish. The vinyl backing suits hard floors and low carpet and protects the surface beneath. If the mat will sit out in the open rather than wall-to-wall, order edged ends — standard rolls ship without edging unless you ask for it.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has specified commercial entrance matting since 1964, so we don't just sell you a mat — we help you build the entrance. For a real front door we'll map the whole sequence, from the coarse scraper outside to the loop-pile mat at the threshold to the absorbent mat inside, and tell you where Cross-Over fits in yours. We match construction to traffic and size to the doorway. For the rest of the indoor range, see our all indoor entrance mats.
Specifications Type Indoor entrance mat, medium traffic Surface Loop-pile olefin (polypropylene ribbon + continuous filament yarn) Surface behavior Non-absorbent, abrasive; scrapes debris and moisture, begins drying; resists fading and crushing Pile weight 18 oz/yd² Thickness 5/16" Backing DINP-free PVC vinyl (4 lb vinyl strength, ASTM D624 die-T) Flammability Passes DOC-FF-1-70 Traction Certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute (NFSI) Colors Brown, Gray (two-tone) Standard sizes 2'×3', 3'×4', 3'×5', 3'×6', 3'×8', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×8', 4'×10', 6'×10' Custom / roll sizes Over 6' up to 11'9" (seamed); rolls 3'×60', 4'×60', 6'×60' Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How does a loop-pile mat clean shoes?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
The surface is a loop pile made from polypropylene ribbon and filament yarn — a tough, slightly abrasive texture rather than a soft plush one. As a shoe crosses it, the loops scrape grit and surface moisture off the sole, and the olefin fibers start drying the shoe. It's non-absorbent on purpose: instead of soaking up and holding water like a plush mat, it cleans the shoe and passes it along, which is why it works best as one mat in a layered entrance rather than the only one.
Will it crush down or fade in a busy entrance?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's built to resist both. The loop-pile construction is crush-resistant, so it holds its texture instead of matting flat into shiny traffic lanes, and the olefin fiber resists fading, so the color stays even at a visible entrance. Those two things are what usually go first on a loop mat, and they're the ones this construction is made to hold.
It's rated for medium interior traffic — convenience stores, restaurants, hotels, and similar spots. Pushed past that, or left to face heavy mud alone, any loop mat loads up and wears faster, so the way to get years out of it is to keep it to medium traffic with coarser debris handled ahead of it.
Can I use it by itself, or outdoors?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's designed as the middle mat in a layered entrance, not a standalone or an outdoor mat. The best setup is a coarse scraper outside to take heavy debris, Cross-Over at the threshold to scrape off what's left and start drying, and an absorbent mat just inside to finish — because Cross-Over is non-absorbent, it doesn't hold much water on its own. Used alone at a busy or wet door, more gets past it than you'd want; outdoors, it isn't built for the weather.
What sizes can I get?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', and it comes in 60-foot rolls. Larger mats over 6 feet — up to 11'9" — are made by seaming panels together, so a wide lobby run is possible, just with a seam in it.
Size the mat to the traffic path, not only the door, so it covers the steps it takes to dry a sole. If it'll sit out in the open rather than wall-to-wall, ask for edged ends — standard rolls ship without edging unless you specify it.
What does it look like, and what colors are there?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
The loop-pile surface has a richer, more textured look than a flat ribbed or rubber mat, which is why it suits a front-of-house entrance — a hotel lobby, a restaurant, a museum — where the floor is on display. It comes in two two-tone colors, Brown and Gray, both designed to blend with common interior schemes and hide tracked-in dirt between cleanings. The two-tone effect helps the mat read as finished rather than utilitarian while it does its work.
Can I get it in a custom size or with our logo?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
On size, yes within limits — beyond the standard sizes, widths over 6 feet up to 11'9" are made by seaming, so you can cover a wider entrance with a seam in the mat. On a logo, no: Cross-Over is a plain two-color loop mat, not a printed or logo construction. If you want branding at the door, that's a different product — a logo mat — and we can point you to one. For a clean, hard-wearing mat that looks the part at a front entrance, Cross-Over does that without the artwork.
By Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO, Mats Inc.
↑
Cross-Over Matting is a loop-pile entrance mat that scrapes debris and moisture off shoes at the door while starting to dry them — the middle step in a layered entrance setup, between the coarse mat outside and the absorbent mat inside. The looped olefin surface is abrasive enough to clean shoes and resilient enough to hold its look in steady commercial traffic.
What Cross-Over Matting Does Before Dirt and Water Reach Your Floor
Dirt and water come into a building on shoes — and one mat at the threshold usually can't catch all of it. ISSA field data shows a building takes on up to 12 times more dirt during wet weather, and it takes six to eight steps to walk a sole dry. The most effective entrances use more than one mat to catch debris in stages.
Cross-Over is built to be the middle of that sequence. Its abrasive loop-pile surface scrapes off the grit and moisture a coarse outdoor mat leaves behind, and the sturdy olefin fibers begin drying the shoe before someone steps onto the floor or onto a softer absorbent mat further in. It's non-absorbent by design — it cleans the shoe and passes it along rather than soaking up and holding water.
Why a Loop-Pile Olefin Surface, and Why This One
The surface is a loop pile built from polypropylene ribbon yarn and continuous filament yarn — a combination that gives it an abrasive, hard-wearing texture rather than a soft plush one. That loop scrapes debris off the bottom of shoes and resists crushing, so it keeps its cleaning bite and its appearance instead of matting down into flat lanes under traffic.
The olefin fiber resists fading and crushing, which is what lets a loop-pile mat keep a tidy, finished look at a visible entrance over time. The loop construction reads richer than a flat ribbed mat, so it suits a lobby or front-of-house spot where appearance counts — while still doing real scraping work.
Underneath is a DINP-free PVC vinyl backing that grips the floor and protects it from whatever the mat scrapes off. It holds the mat flat on hard floors and low carpet, and at 5/16 inch the whole mat stays low enough not to catch a door swing or trip a foot at the edge.
Where It Belongs (and Where It Doesn't)
Cross-Over fits interior, medium-traffic entrances — convenience stores, restaurants, hotels, theaters, museums, and convention centers, where a steady stream of people crosses the threshold and the entrance is on view. It's certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute, so it gives a safe surface where shoes arrive wet.
Where it falls short is as a building's only mat or as an outdoor scraper. It's the middle of a system, not the whole system: against heavy mud it wants a coarse scraper ahead of it, and because it's non-absorbent, a wet climate benefits from an absorbent mat inside it to finish the drying. Outdoors and in full weather, it isn't the right construction.
Three Things to Check Before You Spec It
Three things decide whether Cross-Over fits your entrance.
First, the rest of your matting. Cross-Over works best as the middle mat — a coarse scraper outside, this loop-pile mat at the door, and an absorbent mat inside. If it's going in alone, be honest about how much dirt and water it'll face, because one mat rarely catches it all.
Second, the size. Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', and larger sizes over 6 feet — up to 11'9" — are made by seaming. Plan for that seam on the widest runs, and size the mat to cover the steps it takes to dry a sole, not just the doorway.
Third, the floor and the finish. The vinyl backing suits hard floors and low carpet and protects the surface beneath. If the mat will sit out in the open rather than wall-to-wall, order edged ends — standard rolls ship without edging unless you ask for it.
Why Mats Inc.
Mats Inc. has specified commercial entrance matting since 1964, so we don't just sell you a mat — we help you build the entrance. For a real front door we'll map the whole sequence, from the coarse scraper outside to the loop-pile mat at the threshold to the absorbent mat inside, and tell you where Cross-Over fits in yours. We match construction to traffic and size to the doorway. For the rest of the indoor range, see our all indoor entrance mats.
Specifications Type Indoor entrance mat, medium traffic Surface Loop-pile olefin (polypropylene ribbon + continuous filament yarn) Surface behavior Non-absorbent, abrasive; scrapes debris and moisture, begins drying; resists fading and crushing Pile weight 18 oz/yd² Thickness 5/16" Backing DINP-free PVC vinyl (4 lb vinyl strength, ASTM D624 die-T) Flammability Passes DOC-FF-1-70 Traction Certified high-traction by the National Floor Safety Institute (NFSI) Colors Brown, Gray (two-tone) Standard sizes 2'×3', 3'×4', 3'×5', 3'×6', 3'×8', 3'×10', 4'×6', 4'×8', 4'×10', 6'×10' Custom / roll sizes Over 6' up to 11'9" (seamed); rolls 3'×60', 4'×60', 6'×60' Warranty 1-year limited (Mats Inc.) Frequently Asked Questions
How does a loop-pile mat clean shoes?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
The surface is a loop pile made from polypropylene ribbon and filament yarn — a tough, slightly abrasive texture rather than a soft plush one. As a shoe crosses it, the loops scrape grit and surface moisture off the sole, and the olefin fibers start drying the shoe. It's non-absorbent on purpose: instead of soaking up and holding water like a plush mat, it cleans the shoe and passes it along, which is why it works best as one mat in a layered entrance rather than the only one.
Will it crush down or fade in a busy entrance?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's built to resist both. The loop-pile construction is crush-resistant, so it holds its texture instead of matting flat into shiny traffic lanes, and the olefin fiber resists fading, so the color stays even at a visible entrance. Those two things are what usually go first on a loop mat, and they're the ones this construction is made to hold.
It's rated for medium interior traffic — convenience stores, restaurants, hotels, and similar spots. Pushed past that, or left to face heavy mud alone, any loop mat loads up and wears faster, so the way to get years out of it is to keep it to medium traffic with coarser debris handled ahead of it.
Can I use it by itself, or outdoors?
Answered by Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO
It's designed as the middle mat in a layered entrance, not a standalone or an outdoor mat. The best setup is a coarse scraper outside to take heavy debris, Cross-Over at the threshold to scrape off what's left and start drying, and an absorbent mat just inside to finish — because Cross-Over is non-absorbent, it doesn't hold much water on its own. Used alone at a busy or wet door, more gets past it than you'd want; outdoors, it isn't built for the weather.
What sizes can I get?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
Standard sizes run from 2'×3' up to 6'×10', and it comes in 60-foot rolls. Larger mats over 6 feet — up to 11'9" — are made by seaming panels together, so a wide lobby run is possible, just with a seam in it.
Size the mat to the traffic path, not only the door, so it covers the steps it takes to dry a sole. If it'll sit out in the open rather than wall-to-wall, ask for edged ends — standard rolls ship without edging unless you specify it.
What does it look like, and what colors are there?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
The loop-pile surface has a richer, more textured look than a flat ribbed or rubber mat, which is why it suits a front-of-house entrance — a hotel lobby, a restaurant, a museum — where the floor is on display. It comes in two two-tone colors, Brown and Gray, both designed to blend with common interior schemes and hide tracked-in dirt between cleanings. The two-tone effect helps the mat read as finished rather than utilitarian while it does its work.
Can I get it in a custom size or with our logo?
Answered by Jinna Hopson, Vice President of Marketing
On size, yes within limits — beyond the standard sizes, widths over 6 feet up to 11'9" are made by seaming, so you can cover a wider entrance with a seam in the mat. On a logo, no: Cross-Over is a plain two-color loop mat, not a printed or logo construction. If you want branding at the door, that's a different product — a logo mat — and we can point you to one. For a clean, hard-wearing mat that looks the part at a front entrance, Cross-Over does that without the artwork.
By Dustin Thompson, Owner & CEO, Mats Inc.
↑
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Heronair MattingStarting at $588.00
Certified slip resistant with excellent drainage, Heronair is a versatile workplace floor mat suitable for a wide range of environments and industries. Durable Construction: Designed to withstand heavy use, making it ideal for high-traffic areas. Slip-Resistant Surface: Features a textured surface to prevent slips and falls, enhancing safety. Easy...
Certified slip resistant with excellent drainage, Heronair is a versatile workplace floor mat suitable for a wide range of...
Certified slip resistant with excellent drainage, Heronair is a versatile workplace floor mat suitable for a wide range of environments and industries.
- Durable Construction: Designed to withstand heavy use, making it ideal for high-traffic areas.
- Slip-Resistant Surface: Features a textured surface to prevent slips and falls, enhancing safety.
- Easy to Clean: Low-maintenance design ensures quick and easy cleaning, promoting hygiene.
- Comfortable Underfoot: Provides cushioning and comfort for people standing or walking for extended periods.
- Versatile Use: Suitable for various environments, including workplaces, retail spaces, and industrial areas.
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Certified slip resistant with excellent drainage, Heronair is a versatile workplace floor mat suitable for a wide range of environments and industries.
- Durable Construction: Designed to withstand heavy use, making it ideal for high-traffic areas.
- Slip-Resistant Surface: Features a textured surface to prevent slips and falls, enhancing safety.
- Easy to Clean: Low-maintenance design ensures quick and easy cleaning, promoting hygiene.
- Comfortable Underfoot: Provides cushioning and comfort for people standing or walking for extended periods.
- Versatile Use: Suitable for various environments, including workplaces, retail spaces, and industrial areas.
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Custom Logo & Personalized Mats
These mats are created with your one-of-a-kind logo, symbol and/or name imprinted on mat.
- #0227 Berber Inlay Logo Mat – Interior
- #3559 Super Scrape Impression Logo Mat – Exterior
- #0105 Vinyl Link Mat – Exterior or Interior, Surface Mounted or Recessed
Interior Mats & Runners
These mats are plain mats (no logos), typically used inside the main entrance of apartment offices to keep tracked in dirt & moisture to a minimum. These mats are also used in covered parking garages & in front of elevators.They come in many sizes, colors & designs. Some are specifically designed to stay in place on top of carpet.
- #0303 Wonder-Pro Olefin Mats & Matting
- #0311 Cross-Over Mats & Matting
- #105 Tri-Grip Nylon Carpet Mats – gripper back used on top of carpet
- #200 Waterhog Classic Mat
Exterior Mats, Runners & Coating
These mats are typically located in the exterior areas of your property. They are usually made of rubber or some type of plastic scraper material. They are designed to drain and dry quickly. In addition, we can supply a non-slip / non-skid coating (WP70) to paint on slippery concrete areas.
- #0310 Fore-Runner Mats & Matting
- #385 Brush Hog Plus Mat
- #265 Wayfarer Mat (backed)
- #400 Safety Scrape Rubber Mat
Stair Treads, Risers, Landing Tiles & Adhesives
Mats, Inc. offers rubber, vinyl & metal coverings for apartment stairways & stairwells. We have an extensive line of commercial stair treads and stair covers designed for light, medium & heavy traffic in an array of colors & patterns. Stair Treads with Grit Strips for the visually impaired can also be provided. Many of our treads have matching stair risers & landing materials.
- #0501-375 Medium Duty Vinyl Stair Tread
- #0501-622 Diamond Design Rubber Stair Tread
- #0501-787 Disc-O Tread Rubber Stair Tread
- #0500 Renovation Metal Stair Tread – Exterior use
- #0501-633 Outdoor Recycled Rubber Stair Tread – Exterior use
Gym & Weight Room Mats
Many of today’s apartment homes appeal to health conscience clientele due to the inclusion of gym facilities. Mats, Inc., carries gym floor matting for apartment workout facilities.
Pool, Shower & Locker Room Matting
Apartment & Condominium pool facilities may require anti-slip & drainage mats to control slips & falls in wet areas. Mats, Inc. has mats designed for use in Shower, Locker Rooms & Pool Areas. In addition, you may want to use abrasive, anti-slip, self-adhesive tapes for consistently slippery areas.
- #0613 Dri-Dek Interlocking Tiles
- #0614 Floorline Vinyl Matting
- #0614HA Heron Air Vinyl Matting
- #3510 Safety Track Non-Slip Tape – Resilient – Black
Desk Chair Mats
Apartment Offices and Condominiums may choose to purchase custom-sized desk chair mats to protect floors and carpet from scratches & damage due to the caster wheels on desk chairs. Our desk chair mats are heavier duty than those typically found at local office supply stores.
Roof Mats & Pads
Lastly, Mats, Inc. can provide Roof Mats / Pads & Roof Walkway Matting used on apartment building roofs to protect roof & facilitate repairs.

