Sidcup R10 kitchen vinyl — grip when it's wet
Kitchen vinyl only needs one thing to fail — a wet floor and a slick surface. In Sidcup we fit R10 slip-rated safety vinyl that keeps its grip when it's wet, so no one slips carrying pans across the kitchen.
What non-slip kitchen vinyl in Sidcup actually involves
Kitchen vinyl only needs one thing to fail — a wet floor and a slick surface. In Sidcup we fit R10 slip-rated safety vinyl that keeps its grip when it's wet, so no one slips carrying pans across the kitchen.
1930s pine boards over joists — usually need a 6mm ply overlay before LVT or vinyl.
Three things that decide a vinyl fit in Sidcup
- Sheet seams
Sheet vinyl in a typical Sidcup kitchen is usually a single drop — no seam, no water-ingress risk.
- Subfloor
On older 1930s bay-fronted semis we overlay with ply before laying vinyl so the boards underneath don't telegraph through.
- Coving
For bathrooms we can cove the vinyl up the wall 100mm to seal the floor properly.
- R10 slip rating — grip when wet
- Full sheet, welded joins in bigger kitchens
- Wood, tile and abstract effects available
- Ideal for family kitchens with young children
Recap — R10 safety vinyl across DA14/DA15 kitchens.
"Two under-5s, endless spills, no slips." — Sidcup family kitchen
Postcodes: DA14/DA15 · Routes: the A20 · Common build: 1930s bay-fronted semis.
Covering Sidcup Hill, Halfway Street, New Eltham border.
Non-Slip Kitchen Vinyl jobs we've finished nearby



Non-Slip Kitchen Vinyl in Sidcup — common questions
Yes — the cushioned backing absorbs impact. Ceramic tiles crack, safety vinyl doesn't. Standard call across Sidcup Hill kitchens.
Mop and warm soapy water. The grip texture is fine enough that dirt doesn't sit in it. Standard household cleaning is enough.
Sheet for kitchens — one welded piece means zero water ingress. Tile format is a wet room and commercial thing. All Sidcup kitchen fits go sheet.
Modern R10 ranges look identical to standard — wood-effect, tile-effect, abstract patterns all available. The grip is in the top layer, not visible from a normal viewing height.
