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Inspiring Ensuite Bathroom Ideas

27/05/2026
Read Time 8 mins
Written by Ryan Evans
Inspiring Ensuite Bathroom Ideas

Planning an ensuite bathroom can feel overwhelming when you're dealing with a tight footprint and a room that needs to earn its place off the bedroom it serves. This guide covers how to plan your ensuite from scratch, the practical and decorative choices that make a small space work harder, and how to keep the design feeling considered rather than thrown together.

How to plan an ensuite bathroom

Good planning saves money and prevents expensive changes once building work is underway. These are the five areas to get right before anything else.

1. Measure your space accurately

The minimum workable size for an ensuite is around 3 square metres, which gives you enough room for a toilet, basin, and shower enclosure. Anything under that becomes difficult to use comfortably. Measure the full floor area, but also note the ceiling height, window position, and door swing direction. This will give you an idea of what you’re working with and what you can fit in.

2. Check where your plumbing runs

The closer your ensuite is to an existing soil stack, the less expensive it is to connect. Running waste pipes over a long distance or around corners adds cost and may require lifting floorboards across the bedroom. Before settling on a location, check where your current drainage points are and consult a plumber early. Locating your shower, toilet, and basin on the same wall as the soil stack is the most cost-effective approach in most cases.

3. Decide which fixtures you actually need

Not every ensuite needs a bath. Most work well with a shower enclosure, toilet, and basin, which is the most practical combination for a compact space. If the main family bathroom already has a bath, a shower-only ensuite is the better call. Write down what the room needs to do daily and work backwards from that.

4. Plan your layout before you commit

The layout determines where every pipe, drain, and electrical connection goes. Once those are in place, moving them is costly. Sketch out two or three layout options and check each one for practical issues: can you open the shower door without hitting the toilet? Is the basin at a usable height with enough space on either side? Is there anywhere to hang a towel rail? If you're working with a contractor, share a dimensioned sketch before any work starts, not after.

5. Sort ventilation and lighting early

Ensuites are enclosed spaces with no natural airflow in most cases. A building regulations-compliant extractor fan is not optional; it is a requirement, and fitting it properly from the start prevents mould and moisture damage to adjoining bedroom walls. For lighting, think about a wall-hung mirror cabinet with integrated LED illumination, which does two jobs at once. Natural light through a frosted window is ideal if the layout allows it. Spotlights on a separate circuit from the extractor give you flexibility over mood and function.

For more advice on how to map out your ensuite, read our 10 planning tips for ensuite bathrooms.

Small ensuite ideas to maximise space

1. Fit a sliding or bi-fold shower door

A hinged shower door needs 700–800mm of clearance to open. In a compact ensuite, that clearance either doesn't exist or forces an awkward layout. Sliding shower doors and bi-fold shower enclosures fold or slide within their own footprint, which means you recover floor space without compromising the shower size.

For more space-saving ideas, read our article on how to design a small bathroom.

2. Use a corner basin

A standard basin needs wall space and projection. A corner basin sits diagonally across an unused corner and, in a small ensuite, that is often dead space that would otherwise hold nothing. Corner basins typically project 300–400mm from the wall, compared to 500–560mm for a standard basin. The saving sounds modest, but in a 160cm wide room, it is the difference between a comfortable layout and one that feels squeezed.

3. Choose a wall-hung vanity unit

Wall-hung vanity units are fitted to the wall, which means the floor is visible beneath them. This creates the appearance of more space and makes cleaning easier, which matters in a room where moisture collects. A 500mm or 600mm wall-hung unit gives you basin storage without eating into your floor plan, or for small ensuites, opt for a small vanity unit with a slim profile.

Find out more about the benefits of wall-hung vanity units and the available options.

4. Fit a wall-hung toilet

A wall-hung toilet projects 520–560mm from the wall rather than the 650–700mm of a standard close-coupled toilet. That 100–150mm difference is measurable in a small room. The cistern is concealed within a back wall frame, which also gives you a flat, uncluttered wall to tile. Installation is more involved than a floor-standing toilet and requires a solid wall or a correctly reinforced stud frame, so discuss this with your plumber at the planning stage.

5. Use large-format tiles throughout

Large tiles, 600x300mm or bigger, have fewer grout lines, allowing the eye to travel across the surface without interruption and creating the illusion of more space. Small mosaic tiles do the opposite. Using the same large tile on both the floor and the walls, known as continuous tiling, removes the horizontal break and makes the room feel taller. Light colours, like white, light grey, and warm stone, create an airy look, reinforcing this further. 

6. Install a mirrored cabinet instead of a mirror

A flat mirror above the basin does nothing for storage. A mirrored cabinet with integrated LED lighting serves three purposes at once: reflection, lighting, and concealed storage for toiletries. It also keeps the wall surface clean, which matters when every surface in a small ensuite is visible.

Read our mirror cabinets buying guide for more help choosing the right one for your space.

7. Match the finish to your bedroom

An ensuite that opens directly off a bedroom reads as an extension of that room, not a separate space. If your bedroom has warm oak furniture, a vanity unit in a matching oak or walnut tone will carry the material through. If the bedroom palette is cooler, white or grey furniture reads more coherently. Tap and hardware finishes are the quickest way to create continuity: brushed brass, matt black, and chrome are all available across basins, shower valves, and towel rails. Consistent hardware throughout costs no more than mixing finishes and looks considerably more deliberate.

8. Opt for a frameless shower enclosure

Framed shower enclosures have a visible metal profile around every panel. In a small ensuite, that profile adds visual weight and makes the room feel heavier. Frameless shower enclosures use thicker glass, typically 8–10mm, and minimal or invisible hardware. The shower area becomes visually open rather than boxed in, which helps a compact ensuite feel less enclosed. They are more expensive than framed alternatives but the visual return in a small space is worth it.

9. Add a heated towel rail on a short wall

Towel storage is easy to overlook at the planning stage and becomes a problem once the room is finished. A heated towel rail on the shortest available wall, often behind the door or above the toilet cistern, solves two problems at once: it provides warmth and gives you somewhere to hang towels without a separate hook or rail taking up wall space.

Read our guide to bathroom heating to explore more options.

10. Keep sanitaryware consistent in style

A traditional toilet next to a modern basin and a clinical shower tray pulls the room in three directions at once. Even in a small ensuite bathroom, the fixtures should be coherent. A shower suite that includes a matched toilet, basin, and enclosure removes the guesswork and ensures the proportions are designed to work together. If you're buying separately, stick to the same style across all pieces, such as all square-edged modern, or all softer, rounded traditional.

11. Use bathroom wall panels instead of tiles

Bathroom wall panels are a single large sheet of waterproof material installed directly onto the wall. There are no grout lines, no cutting around fittings, just a completely flat surface that is very easy to clean. In a compact ensuite, the absence of grout lines gives the walls a calmer, more continuous appearance. They are also faster to install than traditional tiling, which can reduce labour costs, and come in stone-effect, wood-effect, and plain finishes to match your existing furniture and floor tiles.

12. Borrow light from the bedroom

If the ensuite wall adjoining the bedroom is internal and not load-bearing, consider a frosted internal window or a glazed internal door. Neither requires natural daylight from outside. The borrowed light from the bedroom makes the ensuite feel less closed-in, particularly at night when artificial light in a small tiled room can feel harsh. A frosted glass panel at a high level is a low-cost way to introduce this effect without compromising privacy.

13. Make the most of corners with a quadrant shower enclosure

Corners are the most underused area in a compact ensuite. A quadrant corner shower enclosure fits directly into a corner with a curved front, which keeps the centre of the room completely clear. The curved door also removes the sharp edge of a rectangular enclosure, which helps the room feel less cluttered. Quadrant enclosures typically start from 800x800mm, making them one of the most space-efficient shower options available. For a slightly larger footprint with more internal showering room, an offset quadrant enclosure gives you a rectangular base within the same corner-fitting format.

14. Go vertical with a wall-hung tallboy

Floor space runs out fast in a compact ensuite, but wall space rarely does. A wall-hung tallboy cabinet mounts directly to the wall and uses vertical height for storage rather than eating into the floor area. It is well suited to the narrow wall beside a shower enclosure or above a toilet cistern, spots that would otherwise hold nothing useful. Tallboys typically offer multiple shelves or drawers behind a closed door, keeping toiletries out of sight and the room looking tidy.

Explore more storage ideas for small spaces.


Even the smallest ensuite can feel practical, comfortable, and well considered with the right layout and fixtures in place. Focusing on space-saving sanitaryware, smart storage, and a consistent finish throughout will help the room feel more open and easier to use day to day. Plan carefully before any work begins, keep the design simple, and prioritise function first; the result will be an ensuite that works hard without feeling cramped.