The feasibility of waste glass recycling in ceramic tile production was assessed with special reference to fully vitrified products (porcelain stoneware). Soda-lime float or container glass was introduced, in replacement of sodic feldspar, in typical porcelain stoneware bodies (up to 10 wt.%) that underwent a laboratory simulation of tilemaking process, with a technological and compositional characterization of both fired and unfired tiles. Soda-lime glass had no significant effect on semi-finished products, but it influenced remarkably the firing behaviour, increasing shrinkage and closed porosity, decreasing open porosity and bulk density, and lowering mechanical and tribological performances. Waste glass promotes a more effective melting of quartz and a partial dissolution of mullite, leading to a more abundant and less viscous liquid phase, which accelerates the sintering kinetics. In conclusion, soda-lime glass can be used in small amounts (5% or less) with tolerable modifications of technological behaviour and performances of porcelain stoneware tiles. (C) 2002 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd and Techna S.r.l.