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Bathroom City Journal: Inspiration, Guides & Advice

Welcome to the Bathroom City Journal — your go-to destination for expert bathroom advice, design inspiration, and practical buying guides. Whether you're planning a full bathroom renovation or simply updating your space, our articles cover everything from choosing the right bathroom furniture and fittings to the latest trends in modern bathroom design. Explore our guides, tips, and ideas to help you create a stylish, functional bathroom that suits your home and budget.

Complete Guide to Buying a Bathroom
guides

Complete Guide to Buying a Bathroom

Buying a bathroom is one of the most significant home improvement decisions you will make. There are more products, more decisions, and more opportunities to get things wrong than almost any other room in the house. This guide takes you through the entire process, from setting a budget and planning your space to choosing every product and understanding what installation actually involves. Use it as your starting point and refer to the specialist buying guides linked throughout for deeper advice on individual products. How much does it cost to buy a bathroom? Before you look at a single product, set a realistic budget. This is the one step that prevents overspending more than any other. Bathroom costs fall into two categories: the products themselves and the cost of installation. Most people underestimate how much installation adds to the total. A bathroom suite costing £800 could easily sit within a total project cost of £4,000–£7,000 once labour, tiling, flooring, and ancillary materials are included. Products (suite, fixtures, and fittings): Budget level Product cost Budget £300 – £800 Mid-range £800 – £2,500 Premium £2,500 – £6,000+ Total project cost (products plus full installation): Budget level Total installed cost Cosmetic refresh £2,000 – £4,000 Full renovation, standard bathroom £4,000 – £8,000 High-end or large bathroom £8,000 – £15,000+ Read more: How Much Does a New Bathroom Cost? Suite or individual products: which should you buy? This is the first product decision to make, and it affects everything else. Buying a bathroom suite means purchasing a toilet, basin, and bath (or shower enclosure) as a coordinated package. Suites are designed to work visually and structurally together, and buying as a package is almost always more cost-effective than buying individually. The components share a common design language, simplifying decisions on style, proportion, and finish. Buying individual products gives more flexibility to mix styles and sizes, but requires more time to ensure compatibility and visual coherence. It suits renovations where one or two elements are being replaced rather than a full room change, or where a very specific product specification is needed that no suite package provides. For a full bathroom renovation, a suite is the practical starting point. For a partial refresh or a room with unusual dimensions, individual selection may give better results. Browse our full range of bathroom suites or take a look at our bathroom suite buying guide. Planning your bathroom Measure the room first Before choosing any products, measure the room accurately. This sounds straightforward. It is the step most commonly skipped or done poorly, and it results in products that do not fit, enclosures that cannot open properly, and layouts that don't work in practice. Measure: length, width, and ceiling height. Then measure and mark the positions of every fixed element: the door and its swing direction, window position and reveal depth, existing pipe positions (soil-pipe centre, supply pipes), and any structural elements such as load-bearing walls or chimney breasts. Measure the finished dimensions, not the bare ones. A 1200mm shower enclosure ordered against a 1240mm bare wall measurement becomes a problem when 40mm of tile depth on each side reduces the available opening to 1160mm. Read more: How to Measure Your Bathroom Plan the layout Draw the layout to scale on graph paper or using an online bathroom planner before committing to any products. Place the toilet first, as its position is dictated by the soil pipe, and changing it is one of the most expensive decisions in a renovation. Then work everything else around it. Minimum clearances to work to: 600mm in front of every fixture (standing and use space) 300mm either side of the toilet centreline where possible 700mm between facing fixtures Consider the door swing. A shower enclosure door that cannot open fully because it meets the toilet is a frustration you will encounter every single morning. Mark the door swing on your plan before finalising anything. Consider sightlines. The toilet should not be directly visible from the door when it opens. In open-plan properties or bathrooms adjacent to living areas, think about sound as well as sight. Related: Bathroom layout ideas Know your water pressure Water pressure determines which products you can install. Getting this wrong results in a shower that cannot deliver adequate pressure, or a mixer tap that performs poorly because it was specified for a system it is not compatible with. UK homes typically have one of three systems: Gravity-fed (low pressure): common in older homes, with a cold water tank in the loft feeding a hot water cylinder. Low pressure. Compatible with electric showers, power showers with an integrated pump, and separate hot and cold taps designed for low-pressure systems. Not compatible with most thermostatic mixer showers without a pump. Combi boiler (high pressure): no tanks required. Cold water is heated on demand. Consistent high pressure to all outlets. Compatible with thermostatic mixer showers, rainfall showerheads, and modern mixer taps and bath fillers. Unvented system (high pressure): mains cold water stored in a pressurised hot water cylinder. High, balanced pressure to both hot and cold. Compatible with multi-outlet shower systems, body jets, and wall-mounted taps. If you are unsure which system you have, ask your plumber before specifying any shower or shower valve. Moving pipework or adding a pump to compensate for a mismatched specification adds cost that could have been avoided. Choosing a bathroom style Style direction needs to be set before individual products are chosen. Without it, the bathroom ends up assembled rather than designed, and individual elements that look fine in isolation do not create a coherent room. Choose one: Modern and contemporary: clean lines, minimal ornamentation, concealed cisterns, wall-hung sanitaryware, and a restricted palette. Wall-hung vanity units, rimless toilets, frameless shower enclosures, and matt or brushed finishes are the typical product choices. Traditional and period: inspired by Victorian, Edwardian, or classic country-house aesthetics. Freestanding baths, slipper and roll-top baths, close-coupled toilets, chrome or gold fixtures, and traditional vanity units. The style rewards consistency – a single modern tap in a traditional bathroom reads as an oversight. Transitional: the broadest category, blending contemporary proportions with warmer finishes and some classical detailing. Suits most UK homes and ages well because it does not rely on trend-specific elements. Choose a finish and apply it consistently. Chrome, brushed brass, matt black, brushed nickel, or gold. Pick one and use it across taps, shower fittings, towel rail, and accessories. Mixing finishes across a bathroom creates visual clutter that is disproportionate to the cost of the individual items. With colour, white sanitaryware remains the most practical and timeless choice. It works with any tile, any paint colour, and any style direction. Grey, black, and gold bathroom furniture all offer strong style options without the inflexibility of coloured sanitaryware. Choosing your toilet Three main mounting types determine the look, installation requirements, and cleaning ease of the toilet: Close-coupled toilets have the cistern sitting directly on top of the pan. The most common type in UK bathrooms, straightforward to install and replace, and available at every price point. Back-to-wall toilets have the pan mounted against the wall with a concealed or semi-concealed cistern—a cleaner look than close-coupled, easier to clean around, and compatible with most standard bathroom layouts. Wall-hung toilets are mounted directly to the wall with no contact with the floor. The cistern is concealed within the wall behind a false wall or furniture unit. This must be installed during the first-fix stage of a renovation, before walls are closed. The pan height can be adjusted to suit the user. Floor cleaning is significantly easier. Rimless toilets have no hidden ledge under the rim where bacteria accumulate. They are easier to clean thoroughly and are worth considering across all mounting styles. Decide on the toilet type before the first fix begins. A wall-hung toilet requires a concealed cistern frame to be built into the wall. This cannot be added after tiling without significant disruption. Browse our full range of toilets or take a look at our toilet buying guide. Choosing your shower A bath or a shower is no longer a binary choice. Most bathrooms can accommodate both if the layout and budget allow. If choosing one, showers suit busy modern households where speed and convenience matter more than the experience of soaking. Baths suit households where that option is valued, particularly families with young children or anyone who will miss the bath within a year of removing it. Shower enclosures enclose the shower in a dedicated space, with a tray and glazed panels. Available in a wide range of formats: Quadrant enclosures: curved corner format, space-efficient Hinged enclosures: classic door format, suits larger enclosures Sliding door enclosures: no swing clearance required, suited to smaller bathrooms Frameless enclosures: minimal profile, high-end look Walk-in enclosures: open entry, no door required, suits larger spaces Confirm the exact finished dimensions before ordering tiles. The tile grid and grout lines need to work around the opening. Shower valves determine the showering experience more than the enclosure or showerhead. A thermostatic shower valve maintains a consistent water temperature regardless of pressure fluctuations elsewhere in the system. Available in concealed and exposed formats. Always confirm water pressure compatibility with your plumber before specifying. Electric showers heat water on demand from the mains cold supply, independent of the boiler. Suited to homes with low hot water availability or where reliability is a priority. See our electric showers. Related: Shower enclosure buying guide The bath is usually the largest item in the room and should be one of the first products confirmed. Its dimensions affect the layout of everything else. Inset baths sit within three walls with a bath panel on the exposed side. The standard choice for most UK family bathrooms. Freestanding baths require clear space on most or all sides and suit larger rooms. They are a strong aesthetic statement and work best when the rest of the room is designed around them rather than fitted around an existing layout. Shower baths have a widened end that creates usable standing space for showering while maintaining full bath length, the practical solution for smaller bathrooms where both functions are wanted in a limited footprint. Corner baths fit into a corner of the room and can work well in rooms with an awkward shape where a standard rectangular bath would leave wasted space. On materials: acrylic is lightweight, affordable, and retains heat reasonably well. Carronite baths reinforce acrylic with a composite backing for a more solid feel. Steel and cast iron baths are heavier but retain heat significantly better and have a longer lifespan. Confirm the bath dimensions against the finished room dimensions (after tiling) before ordering. Measure the access route from the front door to the bathroom, as large baths can be difficult to manoeuvre through narrow hallways or around tight stairwells. For help, read our bath buying guide or our standard bath size guide. Choosing your shower A bath or a shower is no longer a binary choice. Most bathrooms can accommodate both if the layout and budget allow. If choosing one, showers suit busy modern households where speed and convenience matter more than the experience of soaking. Baths suit households where that option is valued, particularly families with young children or anyone who will miss the bath within a year of removing it. Shower enclosures enclose the shower in a dedicated space, with a tray and glazed panels. Available in a wide range of formats: Quadrant enclosures: curved corner format, space-efficient Hinged enclosures: classic door format, suits larger enclosures Sliding door enclosures: no swing clearance required, suited to smaller bathrooms Frameless enclosures: minimal profile, high-end look Walk-in enclosures: open entry, no door required, suits larger spaces Confirm the exact finished dimensions before ordering tiles. The tile grid and grout lines need to work around the opening. Shower valves determine the showering experience more than the enclosure or showerhead. A thermostatic shower valve maintains a consistent water temperature regardless of pressure fluctuations elsewhere in the system. Available in concealed and exposed formats. Always confirm water pressure compatibility with your plumber before specifying. Electric showers heat water on demand from the mains cold supply, independent of the boiler. Suited to homes with low hot water availability or where reliability is a priority. See our electric showers. Related: Shower enclosure buying guide Choosing your basin The choice of bathroom basin and sink is closely tied to the storage decision. A pedestal or semi-pedestal basin looks neat but provides no storage. A vanity unit combines the basin with under-sink storage in a single footprint, making it the more practical choice for a main bathroom. Choose from: Wall-hung basins are fixed directly to the wall with no pedestal or furniture beneath. They create more floor space visually and make cleaning easier. Semi-pedestal basins feature a partial column that conceals the waste pipe without occupying the full floor space. A good middle ground between a full pedestal and a wall-hung option. Countertop basins sit on a surface or vanity unit rather than being integrated into it. A strong visual statement, popular in contemporary and luxury bathrooms. Size matters more than most people plan for. A basin that is too narrow for the space makes it difficult to use without splashing the floor or the wall. Choose the largest basin the layout can accommodate rather than the smallest one that technically fits. Related: Basin Buying Guide Choosing bathroom taps Taps are used multiple times a day, and the quality difference between a well-made tap and a cheap one is immediately apparent. Spend properly on taps relative to the rest of the bathroom; they are not the place to cut the budget. Basin taps are available as monobloc mixers (single-hole fittings with hot and cold mixed through one spout), pillar taps (separate hot and cold), or wall-mounted. Monobloc mixers require a single tap hole in the basin. Confirm the number of tap holes in your chosen basin before selecting taps. See our basin taps. Bath taps include deck-mounted (fitting through holes in the bath deck), freestanding floor-mounted (for freestanding baths), and wall-mounted options. For a freestanding bath, confirm whether you want taps through the bath or free-standing before ordering the bath itself – this affects whether tap holes are needed. See our bath taps. Choose one finish and apply it to all taps, the shower valve, the towel rail, and the room's accessories. A single, inconsistent finish in an otherwise coherent room is more noticeable than almost anything else. Note the water pressure compatibility. Mixer taps and thermostatic bath-shower combinations typically require a minimum working pressure to perform properly. Confirm compatibility with your plumber before purchasing, particularly if you are on a gravity-fed system. Related: Bathroom Tap Buying Guide Choosing bathroom furniture and storage Storage is the element most consistently underplanned in bathroom renovations. Toiletries, medicines, towels, cleaning products, hairdryers, and styling tools accumulate quickly. A bathroom without adequate storage looks cluttered within days of completion, regardless of how well everything else was specified. Vanity units integrate the basin with drawer or door storage underneath. Available as wall-hung units and freestanding vanities, in sizes from 500mm to 600mm and larger. For two-person bathrooms, a double sink vanity unit is worth considering. Read more: Vanity Unit Buying Guide Other bathroom storage includes: Mirrored cabinets serve double duty above the basin with a mirror and storage in one wall space. Tallboy cabinets use vertical space efficiently in rooms with limited floor area. Wall-hung bathroom cabinets keep the floor clear in smaller bathrooms and are available in a wide range of sizes. Fitted bathroom furniture creates a built-in look by running units across available wall space. Plan storage as part of the layout, not as an afterthought. Storage added after the room is completed rarely fits as well, costs more, and never looks as intentional. Related: Bathroom Furniture Buying Guide Choosing bathroom heating Bathroom heating does two things: it keeps the room comfortable to use, and it maintains a background temperature that controls condensation and dampness. Getting the heat output right for the room size is as important as the product's style. Heated towel rails are the standard choice for most UK bathrooms. They warm the room and keep towels dry and warm between uses. Available as plumbed (central heating), electric, or dual fuel. Dual fuel is the most flexible option – it connects to the central heating system in winter and runs on an independent electric element in summer without the boiler running. Bathroom radiators provide higher heat output than most towel rails and suit larger bathrooms where a towel rail alone cannot adequately heat the space. To help you find the one you need, you'll need to know the BTU output, which measures how much heat a radiator or towel rail produces. To calculate the BTU your bathroom needs, multiply the room volume (length x width x height in metres) by 153. Always check the product's BTU output against this figure before purchasing. Read more: Bathroom Heating Guide Once you find the one you need, be sure to position it on the coldest wall, typically external or under a window. The towel rail specifically should be within reach of the shower or bath exit, at a height where towels hang fully clear of the floor. Bathroom flooring and tiles Bathroom flooring must be waterproof or highly water-resistant and slip-resistant when wet. The main options: Ceramic and porcelain tiles are the most durable and water-resistant option. Any floor tile in a wet bathroom must have a minimum R10 slip-resistance rating. R11 or above for shower enclosures and wet rooms. Order at least 10% more than the calculated area to cover cuts, breakages, and future repairs. Luxury vinyl flooring is softer underfoot than tile, completely waterproof, and more forgiving in terms of slip resistance. See our bathroom vinyl flooring. Engineered wood suits bathrooms where warmth underfoot is a priority, but requires careful sealing and is less suited to wet rooms or bathrooms with poor ventilation. Bathroom tiles with full-height tiling in wet zones (shower walls, bath surround) are the most durable and hygienic option. Half-height tiling with moisture-resistant paint above is common in drier areas of the bathroom. Wet zones must be waterproofed (tanked) before any tiling takes place. Bathroom wall panels are an alternative to tiles, with no grout lines, faster installation, and easier cleaning. Bathroom Lighting and ventilation Lighting Bathroom lighting is regularly cut from budgets and consistently regretted. A single overhead light creates flat, unflattering illumination and leaves the mirror area poorly lit – which is precisely where task lighting matters most for grooming. Plan a minimum of two layers: Ambient lighting: ceiling-mounted LED spotlights to illuminate the room evenly. All bathroom lighting must carry an IP rating appropriate for the zone: minimum IP44 for Zone 2 (within 600mm of the bath or shower), IP45 for Zone 1 (directly over). Your electrician will advise. Task lighting: a backlit mirror, illuminated mirror cabinet, or dedicated wall lights on either side of the mirror. This is the light you actually use to apply makeup, shave, or carry out a skincare routine. All electrical work in bathrooms must comply with Part P of the Building Regulations and be carried out by a qualified electrician who can issue a certificate on completion. Related: Bathroom Lighting: An In-depth Guide Ventilation Good ventilation prevents condensation, mould, and long-term damage to decorating, grout, and sealant. An undersized or poorly positioned extractor fan will not keep up with the moisture generated by a shower or bath. To calculate the required extraction rate, multiply the room volume (length x width x height) by 15 (the minimum recommended air changes per hour for a bathroom). A fan rated below this figure will not adequately ventilate the room. Humidity-sensing fans activate automatically when moisture levels rise, useful in en-suites and rooms where the fan is regularly forgotten. The fan must vent to the outside, not into a ceiling void or loft space. See our bathroom extractor fans. Bathroom accessibility and future-proofing Accessible bathroom features are worth considering at the renovation stage, regardless of whether they are needed immediately. Building them in during a full renovation costs very little. Retrofitting them later can be expensive and disruptive. Practical considerations: Walk-in shower enclosures with low or level-access thresholds are easier to use for everyone and essential for those with limited mobility. Comfort-height toilets are easier to sit and stand from for older users and taller people- Grab rails can be incorporated into the design rather than added as an afterthought. Blocking in the wall behind tiles during the first fix allows grab rails to be fitted later without needing to find studs. Slip-resistant floor tiles and non-slip shower trays reduce the risk of falls for all users. Lever-style taps and thermostatic shower valves are easier to operate for those with limited grip or dexterity. When to splurge and when to save Here is a practical way to think about where money is best spent: Spend properly on: The shower valve and showerhead: you use these every day, and poor water pressure or temperature inconsistency is a daily frustration Taps: quality is immediately apparent in weight, feel, and longevity The toilet: a comfort height, soft-close, rimless toilet is used multiple times daily by everyone in the household Tiles: the largest visual surface in the room; cheap tiles look cheap and date quickly The vanity unit: daily use, hundreds of drawer and door openings a year More cost-conscious choices are reasonable for: Bathroom accessories, such as toilet roll holders, robe hooks, and soap dispensers, can be replaced later without disruption Bath panels are functional rather than visible in daily use Standard pipework and fixings that are hidden within the structure The buying process: what to do and in what order Set your budget, including a 10–20% contingency. Measure the room accurately in finished dimensions. Confirm your water pressure and plumbing setup. Draw the layout to scale and confirm the toilet position. Decide on suite or individual products. Choose your style direction and fixture finish. Select products in order of size: bath or shower enclosure first, then toilet, then basin, then storage, then taps and accessories. Confirm all products with your fitter before ordering. Check lead times and order everything before demolition begins. Confirm your contractor and agree on the sequence of work. For a full stage-by-stage checklist covering every decision from budget to sign-off, see our bathroom renovation checklist or our bathroom renovation mistakes to avoid guide for help avoiding the most common mistakes. Buying a bathroom FAQs How much does it cost to buy a new bathroom suite? A bathroom suite (toilet, basin, and bath or shower enclosure) costs between £300 and £800 at budget level, £800–£2,500 at mid-range, and £2,500 upwards for premium products. These are product costs only. Total installed costs, including labour, tiling, and materials, typically range from £4,000 to £8,000 for a standard full renovation. How much does it cost to buy a bathroom? The total cost of buying and installing a full bathroom in the UK ranges from around £2,000 for a cosmetic refresh (new suite, same layout, no plumbing changes) to £4,000–£8,000 for a full standard renovation, and £8,000–£15,000 or more for a large or high-specification bathroom. Labour typically accounts for 40–50% of the total cost. What should I buy first when buying a bathroom? Set your budget and measure the room before buying anything. Then confirm your water pressure and draw your layout to scale. Products should be purchased in order of size – the bath or shower enclosure first (the largest item), then the toilet, then the basin, then storage, then taps and accessories. Confirm all products with your fitter before ordering. What is the most important thing to get right when buying a bathroom? The layout. Specifically, the toilet position (governed by the soil pipe), the clearances around every fixture, and the door swing. These decisions affect every other choice in the room and are the most expensive and disruptive to change once the build is underway. Measure twice, plan on paper, and confirm with your fitter before ordering a single product. Ready to buy a bathroom? Browse our full range of bathroom suites, baths, shower enclosures, toilets, basins, vanity units, and bathroom furniture to start building your specification. If you would like to see products in person before committing, visit our Birmingham showroom in Tyseley, call us on 0121 753 0700 or book a consultation to talk to our expert team for any help and advice. Our team has been advising on bathroom purchases since 1986 and can help you work through layout, product selection, and budget in one conversation.
Read Time 19 mins
Shower Bath Ideas: Space-Saving Designs & Inspiration
advice

Shower Bath Ideas: Space-Saving Designs & Inspiration

Choosing the right bath comes down to three things: the size of your room, how you want to use it, and what you want it to look like. A compact bathroom doesn't have to mean settling for a basic small bath, and a larger room doesn’t necessarily suit any tub. This guide covers the most practical and considered bath ideas for both ends of the spectrum, from space-saving solutions for tight rooms to statement pieces that fill a generous floor plan with purpose. Small bath ideas for compact bathrooms Working with a smaller bathroom doesn't limit your options as much as you might think. The key is choosing a bath built for the space, rather than squeezing in something that wasn't designed for it. 1. A classic straight bath in a compact size The most practical small bathroom bathtub idea is a straight bath of a shorter length. Standard baths run at 1700mm, but shorter versions, from 1400mm up to 1600mm, give you a proper soak without eating into the rest of the room. Pair it with a wall-mounted basin and a close-coupled toilet to keep floor space free. If you're unsure which size works for your room, our bath size guide is worth a read before you buy. 2. A shower bath for double duty If you need a bath and a shower but only have room for one footprint, a shower bath is the answer. These are designed with a wider end at the showering side, giving you comfortable standing room without the floor space a separate enclosure would take. They come in various shapes and sizes, and you can add a bath shower screen rather than a curtain to keep the room feeling open and easy to clean. For more details on the different options, our shower baths guide covers everything you need to know. 3. A corner bath to utilise awkward space Corner baths sit diagonally or flush into a corner, freeing up more central floor space than a straight bath positioned against a wall. They’re a great bathtub design idea for square or near-square rooms where a long wall isn't available. The shape also tends to give a deeper soaking area, which is a welcome bonus.  4. A small bath suite A bath suite bundles the bath, basin and toilet into one coordinated layout, useful when you're planning a complete bathroom refresh and want everything to work together spatially from the outset. Getting the layout right from the start avoids costly adjustments later, and a suite takes the guesswork out of matching finishes. 5. A small bath with a fitted panel Whatever bath shape you choose, the panel matters more than people realise. A fitted bath panel in the same tone as your walls or floor tiles reads as part of the room rather than a separate object. This makes the bath feel less like a large piece of furniture dropped into a small space. For more advice on how to pick the right one for your room, read our bath panel ideas guide. 6. A hydrotherapy bath in a small footprint A smaller room doesn't rule out a more considered bathing experience. The Petite 1200 x 700 straight hydrotherapy bath fits into a compact footprint while offering genuine therapeutic benefits. If you're renovating a bathroom you plan to use seriously rather than just for a quick wash, it's a worthwhile step up. Large bath ideas for spacious bathrooms A larger bathroom earns a bath that's proportional to the space. These are the styles that hold their own in a bigger room, whether as a focal point or as part of a considered layout. 1. A freestanding bath as the centrepiece The most impactful design in a large bathroom is to position a freestanding tub at the centre or end of the bathroom, rather than against a wall. It reads like furniture, creating a clear focal point in the room. There are plenty of freestanding bath ideas, from clean-lined contemporary to classic roll-top. Pair with freestanding taps to complete the look without wall fixings complicating the floor plan. 2. A slipper or roll-top bath for period style If the room has high ceilings, original features or a traditional aesthetic, a slipper or roll-top bath fits naturally. The raised head end of a slipper bath is also more comfortable for longer soaks. They are one of the best bathtub ideas for characterful homes. Explore the different styles and sizes before buying in our slipper bath guide. 3. A large double-ended bath for shared use A double-ended bath has a central waste and a sloped end at both sides, so two people can use it at once without either being uncomfortable. They’re a great bath idea for larger family bathrooms or couples’ en-suites. Read more about the benefits of a two-person bath or explore our top baths for two people to find the best one for your space. 4. A whirlpool or Jacuzzi bath for a wellness focus If a bathroom has the space and plumbing to support it, a whirlpool bath changes how the room is used. It becomes somewhere people actually choose to spend time rather than just wash. For more information, read our ultimate guide to whirlpool baths. 5. A steel or cast-iron bath for lasting quality Cast iron and steel baths are heavier, denser and retain heat significantly longer than acrylic. They also age well. In a larger bathroom where the bath is the main event, the material quality shows. However, these baths are considerably heavier and require structural floor checks in older properties, so make sure to check before buying. 6. A long bath for full-length comfort In a larger bathroom, there's no reason not to go bigger. An 1800mm bath or 1900mm bath gives a genuinely comfortable soak at full stretch, providing plenty of leg room for every height. They're the practical choice for anyone who intends to use their bath regularly and wants it sized for their frame. The right bath idea for your bathroom starts with an honest look at what the room can take and what you actually want from it. Get both of those right, and the rest follows. Visit our Birmingham showroom to see the different options in person and speak to our team for more advice.
Read Time 5 mins
Inspiring Ensuite Bathroom Ideas
advice

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.
Read Time 8 mins
Bathroom Lighting Ideas: Zones, Styles & IP Ratings
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Bathroom Lighting Ideas: Zones, Styles & IP Ratings

Bathroom lighting is consistently under planned and consistently regretted. A single overhead fitting does one job reasonably well; it illuminates the room and fails at everything else. It casts shadows across the mirror, making grooming difficult. It flattens the room aesthetically. It provides no flexibility between a bright morning routine and a relaxed evening bath. Getting bathroom lighting right means thinking in layers: ambient light for the room as a whole, task lighting where you actually need it, and accent or mood lighting for the elements worth highlighting.  Why layered lighting matters in a bathroom A bathroom is used differently at different times of day. Morning: bright, functional, task focused. Evening: relaxed, warmer, lower intensity. A single overhead fitting cannot serve both well. Layered bathroom lights use multiple sources at different heights and intensities. This allows the room to adapt. The practical argument is as important as the aesthetic one. A bathroom mirror without dedicated lighting near it forces the user to work in their own shadow. Make-up applied under a ceiling spotlight often looks very different in natural light. Shaving or skincare in poor mirror light means missed detail. These are daily frustrations with a simple fix. Bathroom lighting zones and IP ratings All bathroom lighting must comply with the zone requirements defined by BS 7671. Every fitting installed in a bathroom must carry an IP (Ingress Protection) rating appropriate to its zone. This is a legal requirement, and all electrical work in a bathroom must be carried out by a Part P-certified electrician. Zone Location Minimum IP rating Zone 0 Inside the bath or shower tray/enclosure floor IP67 (total immersion) Zone 1 Above the bath or shower to 2.25m from the floor IP45 (IP65 recommended) Zone 2 600mm outside the bath or shower perimeter to 2.25m IP44 Outside zones Rest of the room IP44 recommended as best practice The zone around a bathroom basin within a 60cm radius of the taps is treated as Zone 2. Any light closer than this distance must carry at a minimum IP44. Read more: An In-Depth Guide to Bathroom Lighting  Ceiling lighting ideas for bathrooms Recessed LED downlights The most commonly installed and most practical bathroom ceiling light. Recessed spotlights sit flush with the ceiling, offer no surface for damp to accumulate, and are straightforward to clean. Available in fixed and tiltable formats. Tiltable allows direction to be adjusted after installation, which is useful for highlighting specific areas or correcting a placement that does not quite work as planned. For Zone 1 (directly above the bath or shower), choose fittings with an IP65 rating minimum. For Zone 2 and outside zones, IP44 is the minimum. Space downlights evenly across the room to avoid dark corners. A common mistake is installing a single central downlight or clustering them in the centre of the ceiling, leaving the room's perimeter in relative shadow. Square ceiling lights A square flush-mounted LED ceiling light is a clean, contemporary alternative to recessed spotlights. It provides even ambient illumination from a single fitting and suits bathrooms where the ceiling is too shallow for recessed installation. Pair with a separate mirror light for task lighting rather than relying solely on the ceiling fitting. Pendant lights Pendant lights in bathrooms are possible, provided they are positioned outside the bathroom zones and carry at least an IP44 rating. A pendant hung over a freestanding bath at a safe distance from the water creates a hotel-like aesthetic effect that overhead spotlights cannot replicate. In practical terms, pendants suit larger bathrooms with high ceilings where the hanging length can be sufficient to create visual impact without bringing the fitting close to water zones. Task and bathroom mirror lighting ideas Task lighting at the mirror is the most important single lighting decision in a bathroom. It directly affects how well the mirror functions and, therefore, how well the bathroom functions as a grooming space. Illuminated and backlit mirrors An illuminated bathroom mirror with integrated LED lighting solves the task lighting problem elegantly. It provides light at the mirror surface rather than from behind the user, and the integrated design means there are no separate wall lights to position, wire, and align. Backlit mirrors create a halo of light around the mirror edge, primarily an aesthetic effect that also provides ambient light. Front-lit mirrors direct light onto the face from the mirror surround, more effective as task lighting because it illuminates the user rather than the room. You can also find models with adjustable colour temperature with cooler tones for morning grooming and warmer tones for evening baths. A demister pad, available on most illuminated mirrors, keeps the glass clear of condensation, a practical feature if the mirror is used immediately after showering. Choose a mirrored cabinet for all these benefits but with extra storage.  Read more: Bathroom Mirror Ideas Wall lights flanking the mirror Two wall lights positioned either side of the mirror at face height (approximately 170cm from the floor) provide even, shadow-free task lighting. The light comes from the side rather than from above, which eliminates the downward shadow cast by ceiling fittings and is significantly more flattering for grooming tasks. The wall lights should be at the same height on both sides and spaced to frame the mirror rather than sitting immediately adjacent to it. They must carry IP44 as a minimum given their proximity to the basin zone. Mirror light bar above the mirror A single light bar mounted horizontally above the mirror is a simpler and more compact alternative to two flanking wall lights. It provides directional downward light onto the mirror area. Less flattering for face illumination than side-mounted lights but practical in bathrooms where wall space either side of the mirror is limited. Shower lighting ideas The shower area is often the poorest-lit part of a bathroom. Overhead ceiling lights do not reach effectively into an enclosed shower space, and frameless or partially open walk-in showers sit in the shadow of the ceiling fitting. Related: Shower Room Ideas A recessed downlight directly above the shower illuminates the shower space. In a walk-in shower, this makes a significant practical difference to visibility. In a frameless enclosure, it also highlights the tiles and fittings, making the shower a visual feature of the room rather than a dark corner. For a shower niche, a small LED strip or recessed niche light rated for the zone adds depth and draws attention to the storage feature. It is a detail that reads as considered rather than functional. Related: Walk-In Shower Ideas Bath lighting ideas Lighting around a bath is where bathroom lighting becomes truly atmospheric. A bath is used differently from a shower, and the lighting should reflect that. LED strip lighting concealed in a recess or shelf behind the bath creates indirect, low-level light that illuminates the floor around the bath without a visible fitting. This works particularly well in bathrooms with a freestanding bath that has clear space around it. A pendant above the bath is the most dramatic option for large bathrooms with high ceilings. Dimmable ceiling lights serve the bath area at lower intensity. A dimmer switch on the main ceiling circuit is one of the most cost-effective improvements to a bathroom's adaptability. Related: Bath Ideas Small bathroom lighting ideas In a small bathroom, lighting has to work harder because there is less room for multiple fittings. Prioritise the mirror An illuminated mirror or a single light bar above the mirror handles both task and ambient lighting simultaneously. In a small bathroom where a full ceiling grid of downlights is impractical, a well-lit mirror and one or two ceiling downlights are entirely sufficient.  Related: Bathroom Mirrors Buying Guide Use recessed fittings throughout.  Surface-mounted fittings in a small bathroom add visual clutter and reduce the sense of space. Recessed spotlights, a recessed ceiling fitting, and an illuminated mirror keep every fixture flush with its surface. Avoid a single central overhead light.  A single central ceiling fitting in a small bathroom leaves the edges of the room, the mirror area, and the shower in shadow. Two recessed spots, one over the basin area and one over the shower or bath end, with an illuminated mirror, is a better use of the same number of fittings. Related: Small Bathroom Ideas Bathroom lighting trends Warm white LED has largely replaced cool white across all bathroom applications. A colour temperature of 2,700–3,000K provides a warmer, more flattering light that suits both morning routines and evening use better than the clinical cool white. Smart and dimmable lighting through voice-controlled or app-controlled fittings that allow the bathroom lighting to be adjusted without physically touching a switch is increasingly common in mid to premium bathroom renovations. Illuminated mirrors as a standard expectation. In a well-specified bathroom renovation, a plain mirror above the basin with no dedicated lighting is increasingly seen as an incomplete installation. The illuminated mirror has become the standard rather than the upgrade. LED strip under vanity units. Concealed LED strip lighting along the underside of a wall-hung vanity unit creates a floating effect and provides low-level ambient lighting for nighttime visits without activating the full overhead circuit. Related: 11 Bathroom Trends In 2025 Bathroom lighting FAQs What is the best lighting for a bathroom?  Layered lighting that combines ambient ceiling light, task lighting at the mirror, and appropriate lighting for each zone. An illuminated mirror or wall lights flanking the mirror, recessed ceiling downlights, and, where relevant, a dedicated light above or within the shower area cover the functional requirements. Add a dimmer to the ceiling circuit for flexibility between day and evening use. What is the best lighting for a small bathroom?  An illuminated mirror handles both task and ambient lighting in one fitting. Supplement it with one or two recessed ceiling downlights positioned at the bath or shower end and over the basin. Avoid a single central overhead fitting as it leaves the mirror area in shadow. What are common bathroom lighting mistakes?  A single central overhead light. Ceiling lights that cast shadows onto the mirror. Fitting lights too close to water zones without checking IP ratings. Choosing cool white LED when warm white provides better ambience and more flattering task lighting. Not including a dimmer on the ceiling circuit. Installing lights at Zone 2 or closer without confirming IP compliance. Shop bathroom lighting at Bathroom City Bathroom lighting is one of the areas where an investment makes a difference to how the room feels and functions. It changes how you use the room, how well you can carry out grooming tasks, and how the room presents itself as a space rather than just a functional necessity. Related: The Perfect Bathroom Accessories Guide Browse our full range of bathroom lights, our illuminated bathroom mirrors or our bathroom accessories to complete your space. For advice on planning your bathroom lighting scheme, visit our Birmingham showroom, book a consultation, or call us on 0121 753 0700
Read Time 8 mins
How to Design a Timeless Family Bathroom
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How to Design a Timeless Family Bathroom

A family bathroom needs to do a lot. It has to work for toddlers and teenagers, cope with morning rush hours, and still look good doing it. Whether you're planning a full renovation or just want to make your existing space work better for your family, getting the design right from the start saves you a lot of frustration later. This guide covers family bathroom layouts, decorating ideas, and practical tips to help you create a space that works for everyone who uses it, every day. What is a family bathroom? A family bathroom is the main shared bathroom in the home, typically including a bath, a shower (separate or over the bath), a washbasin, and a toilet. Unlike an ensuite, it's accessible from a hallway or landing rather than through a bedroom, so every household member can use it independently. Family bathroom layout ideas Getting the family bathroom layout right is the most important decision you'll make. A well-planned layout makes the room feel bigger, keeps users out of each other's way, and means every fixture is easy to access. 1. The classic linear layout The most straightforward family bathroom layout places all fixtures along one or two parallel walls. The bath typically sits along the longest wall, with the toilet and basin on the opposite or adjacent wall. This layout keeps plumbing runs short and simple, reducing installation costs. It works well in a standard rectangular room of around 2.4m x 1.7m or larger. For a coordinated finish, consider a bathroom suite with matching fixtures. 2. The walk-in shower layout If your family showers more than it bathes, replacing a separate shower enclosure with a walk-in shower frees up significant floor space. This layout works especially well in a longer, narrower room where a traditional enclosure would eat into the walking space. Floor-level drainage removes the step-in threshold, making it a practical choice for all ages and removing the trip hazard. You can still include a bath on the opposite wall if you have the space. Read our walk-in shower ideas for more inspiration. 3. The L-shaped layout with separate zones In a larger family bathroom, an L-shaped layout lets you create distinct zones: a wet area for the bath and shower, and a dry area for the basin and toilet. This is one of the most practical family bathroom layout ideas if you have two people needing the space at the same time, as one can use the basin while the other showers. It also helps add a little more privacy. If your budget allows, a double sink vanity unit in the dry zone makes the morning routine considerably smoother. 4. The shower bath layout One of the most popular small family bathroom ideas is to replace a standard bath with a shower bath. A shower bath is wider at one end, giving more room to stand under the shower without giving up the bath entirely. They’re great for bathing little ones, giving you the convenience of a showerhead to rinse shampoo off easily. A shower bath fits a standard bath space (typically 1700mm x 700mm), so no structural changes are needed. Pair it with a hinged bath screen rather than a curtain for a cleaner, more durable finish. 5. The corner shower layout Fitting a quadrant or offset quadrant shower enclosure into a corner is one of the most effective small family bathroom ideas for opening up the central floor area. The curved front keeps the room feeling less box-like and gives you more usable space in the middle. Offset quadrant models are particularly useful if one wall is longer than the other, as you can prioritise floor space or shower size depending on which matters more. 6. The back-to-wall toilet layout A back-to-wall toilet unit conceals the cistern behind a fitted panel or wall, removing the bulky cistern box from view and making the room feel more open. They can also be installed at your chosen height, allowing them to be placed slightly lower down for better access for children. The clean front profile is easier to clean around, too, which matters in a busy family bathroom. This layout pairs well with a wall-hung vanity unit for a consistent floating aesthetic. 7. The fitted furniture layout In a larger family bathroom, fitted bathroom furniture runs the length of one wall and integrates the basin, storage and any appliances into one cohesive unit. It eliminates awkward gaps between pieces, looks considered, and provides far more storage than individual freestanding items. This is a great modern family bathroom idea for families with a lot of bathroom clutter to manage, as you can design the interior of the units to suit exactly what you need to store. 8. The compact family bathroom layout For genuinely tight rooms, good zoning makes all the difference. Place the bath or shower at the far end from the door, with the toilet and basin closer to the entrance. This keeps the wettest area away from door traffic and gives each zone a natural boundary. A small bath (from 1200mm or 1300mm) combined with a wall-hung basin and a slim close-coupled toilet can make even a very small room fully functional.  Read our guide to small bathroom storage ideas for more help with compact spaces. Family bathroom decorating ideas Style and practicality don't have to pull in opposite directions. These family bathroom design ideas cover everything from a full redecoration to small changes that make a real difference. 1. Create consistency with classic white sanitaryware White ceramics never date. A white basin, toilet and bath give you full freedom to change the wall colour, accessories and furniture finishes over time without replacing the main fixtures. It's the most practical base for a family bathroom because it's easier to see when things need cleaning. 2. Choose durable, easy-clean wall finishes Tiles are the proven choice for wet areas. Porcelain is harder and less porous than ceramic, making it more resistant to staining and moisture over time. Bathroom wall panels are a grout-free alternative that's genuinely easier to clean and increasingly popular in family bathrooms. Large-format tiles and panels both reduce the number of joints where mould can take hold, which matters a lot in a room that sees daily steam and splashing. 3. Use neutral or earthy tones for longevity Nature-inspired colours age well. Warm ochres, sandy beiges, soft greens and dusty earthy tones work across traditional and modern family bathrooms and are easy to refresh with new accessories or towels. If you want a bolder colour, use it on one wall or in the tile grout rather than throughout the whole room. That way, it's straightforward to update without a full redecoration. Keep wall finishes consistent across the room to make the space feel larger. 4. Add a statement mirror A well-chosen mirror does more than reflect. It adds light, creates a sense of depth, and can anchor the whole decorative scheme. Round mirrors soften a room full of hard angles, while oversized rectangular mirrors make a compact room feel noticeably more spacious. A mirrored cabinet is the most practical option for a family bathroom as it combines the visual benefits with concealed storage behind the glass.  Read our bathroom mirror cabinets buying guide for more help choosing. 5. Layer the lighting Most family bathrooms rely on a single ceiling light, which is rarely enough. Recessed downlights above the shower, a mirrored cabinet with integrated LED lighting above the basin, and an overhead bathroom light that covers the full room between them give you much better visibility for grooming, getting children ready, and creating a calmer atmosphere in the evening. Dimmable lights are a genuine improvement if you or your family use the bathroom for baths in the evenings. 6. Coordinate your taps and accessories Matching the finish of your taps, towel rails, toilet roll holder, and other bathroom accessories is one of the simplest ways to make a family bathroom look more considered. Chrome is the most forgiving to keep clean. Matt black and brushed brass both work well in modern family bathrooms but show water spots more easily. Pick a finish and stick to it throughout the room rather than mixing. 7. Introduce wood tones through furniture Wood-effect finishes on vanity units, mirror frames or bathroom cabinets add warmth to what can otherwise be a cold, hard room. Oak effect and walnut tones pair well with white sanitaryware and neutral tile colours, and work in both traditional and contemporary schemes. Just make sure to choose furniture with a moisture-resistant board, as solid timber can warp over time in a bathroom environment.  8. Use a heated towel rail as a focal point A heated towel rail is both a practical necessity and a decorating decision. A ladder-style rail in a contrasting finish (brushed nickel against white tiles, for example) draws the eye and adds structure to the wall. Designer radiator styles are available if you want something more unusual. Place it where towels are most needed: beside the shower or bath exit. It's one of the easier upgrades in an existing bathroom and makes a noticeable difference to how the room feels. Tips for making a bathroom more functional for every family member Good family bathroom design ideas go beyond aesthetics. A bathroom that works well for a four-year-old, a teenager, and an adult with different morning routines requires deliberate planning. Here are the practical adjustments that make the biggest difference. Install wall-hung units at a height that works for children: Wall-hung vanity units can be fixed at any height. Fitting the basin 750–800mm from the floor (rather than the standard 850mm) means younger children can reach it without a step stool, and it's still a comfortable height for adults. Choose lever taps for easier use: These are more manageable for small children and older family members to operate than a standard round head. A single-lever mixer is the most accessible option, as water temperature and flow are controlled with a single movement. Install a thermostatic shower valve: A thermostatic shower valve fixes the water temperature and prevents dangerous hot or cold surges if someone elsewhere in the house flushes a toilet or turns on a tap. They’re essential in a bathroom used by children. Add a height-adjustable shower handset: A shower riser rail with a sliding bracket lets you set the shower head at the right height for whoever is using it, from young children to tall adults, without removing and refitting anything. Fit a soft-close toilet seat: A soft-close toilet seat prevents the seat from slamming, which matters a lot with children in the house. It also lasts considerably longer than a standard seat because the hinge mechanism absorbs the impact rather than the plastic. Plan storage at different heights: Put everyday items children need within their reach on lower open shelves or a low floor-standing cabinet, and lock medicines and cleaning products in a high wall cabinet or mirrored cabinet with a catch. Use non-slip flooring: Wet bathroom floors are the most common source of household slips. Textured porcelain tiles with a good slip-resistance rating (R10 or above) or bathroom vinyl flooring with a non-slip surface both provide grip without compromising the look of the room. Add a second towel rail or extra hooks: One heated towel rail is rarely enough for a full family. Adding a secondary rail, a row of hooks on the back of the door, or a towel ring for each person eliminates the daily battle over whose towel is whose. Choose rimless toilets for easier cleaning: A rimless toilet has no inner ledge for bacteria and limescale to collect. In a family bathroom that sees heavy use, the difference in how easy it is to keep clean is significant. Most modern designs are available as both close-coupled and wall-hung options. Invest in adequate storage to keep surfaces clear: A busy family bathroom quickly becomes chaotic without enough storage. A vanity unit, a tallboy and a mirrored cabinet together give you enough capacity for most families without the room feeling cluttered. Read our bathroom storage ideas guide for more tips. A well-designed family bathroom balances practicality, comfort and style, creating a space that works smoothly for every member of the household. With the right layout choices, durable finishes and thoughtful storage, even the busiest mornings can feel more manageable. To explore the different options in person, visit our Birmingham showroom, where you can see the pieces up close and speak to the team who can help you plan and create the perfect family bathroom for your home.
Read Time 10 mins
Bathroom Storage Ideas
advice

Bathroom Storage Ideas

Whether you're working with a compact ensuite or a full family bathroom, bathroom storage that actually works comes down to one thing: making every centimetre count. The right combination of wall-mounted cabinetry, built-in furniture and floor-level storage can take a cluttered room and turn it into something that feels considered and calm. This guide covers practical storage ideas for bathrooms of all sizes, to help you organise your space. Bathroom wall storage ideas Using vertical space well is one of the most effective ways to add storage without touching the floor plan. 1. Hang open shelves Open shelving is one of the most flexible creative bathroom storage ideas you can add to a room. A few well-placed shelves above the toilet, beside the basin or in an alcove give you space for everyday products without closing the room in. Keep them tidy with matching containers or small baskets to group items together. Shelves work especially well in smaller bathrooms where a full cabinet would feel heavy. 2. Fit a mirrored cabinet A mirrored cabinet does two jobs at once. It replaces the bathroom mirror you'd have fitted anyway, and gives you a concealed storage space behind it for medicines, toiletries and anything else you'd rather keep out of sight. They're particularly useful above basins where counter space is limited. Most models come with adjustable internal shelves, so the depth works for everything from cotton pads to tall bottles. For more help choosing, read our bathroom mirror cabinets buying guide. 3. Add a wall-hung cabinet A wall-hung cabinet sits flush to the wall, keeping the floor beneath it clear and making the room feel larger and much easier to clean around. They're a good option if you want enclosed storage without the footprint of a freestanding unit. Available in a range of widths and finishes, they can sit alongside a vanity unit to create a coordinated look or function as standalone storage in a spare bathroom. Check your wall type before fitting to make sure your wall can handle the weight. Read our guide to wall-hung vanity units for more information. 4. Use a tallboy unit A tallboy is a tall, narrow cabinet, usually around 300–350mm wide, designed to slot into tight spaces. The narrow footprint means it fits between a toilet and a wall, in the gap beside a basin unit, or at the end of a run of fitted furniture without taking up much width at all. Despite its slim profile, the height provides a surprising amount of internal shelf space. They’re a good option when you need more storage but genuinely have very little room left to work with. 5. Consider a wall-hung vanity unit Wall-hung vanity units fix directly to the wall, leaving the floor beneath completely clear. That gap makes the room feel bigger and makes mopping the floor considerably easier. It also means you can set the height to suit whoever uses the bathroom most, which is a practical advantage over floor-standing units. These need a solid wall behind them (or a stud wall with the right support in place), so check before you commit. Our wall-hung vanity units guide has everything you need to know about fitting and specification. 6. Add a towel rail A heated towel rail does the obvious job of keeping towels warm, but the right model can hold multiple towels at once on separate bars, reducing the need for additional hooks or rails elsewhere in the room. It also keeps towels off the floor and off chairs, which makes a genuine difference to how tidy the bathroom looks day to day. They’re available in chrome, black, brushed nickel and gold finishes, so there's a style to match most schemes. Bathroom cabinet storage ideas Cabinetry is where the real storage work happens. Getting the specification right, not just the style, is what makes the difference between a bathroom that functions well and one that looks good but frustrates you daily. 7. Choose a vanity unit with integrated storage A vanity unit combines your basin with a cabinet beneath, which is the single most efficient use of that space in the room. Drawer-based designs are more practical than door-and-shelf combinations as they let you see and reach everything without rooting around at the back. If space allows, go wider: a 600mm or 800mm unit will hold noticeably more than a compact 400mm option. Read our guide to vanity units for more details on the different options. 8. Use a corner vanity unit A corner vanity unit fits into the corner of the room and makes use of a spot that would otherwise sit empty. They're a clever solution in smaller bathrooms, freeing up the main wall space for other fixtures while still giving you a basin and storage in one. If you're working with a cloakroom or compact ensuite, this is often the most efficient layout choice available. See our small bathroom storage ideas guide for more on getting the most from a compact space. 9. Organise cabinet interiors with dividers and tiered trays Even the best cabinet becomes a jumble if the interior isn't organised. Tiered shelf inserts, pull-out trays and drawer dividers mean every product has a place, and you can find things without emptying the whole unit. Group items by use and put the things you reach for daily at the front. Bathroom floor space storage ideas Free floor space in a bathroom often goes unused. Strategic placement of the right products can add significant storage without making the room feel busy or cramped. 10. Make use of the space at the end of your bath The floor space at the end of a freestanding or built-in bath is an overlooked storage spot. A low stool, a small shelf unit, or a bath caddy are all practical ways to keep towels, products, and accessories within easy reach without adding wall fixtures. If your bath has a panel, the space beneath it is worth considering as well. Read our bath panel ideas guide for more inspiration. 12. Place a slim floor-standing cabinet or caddy in a tight gap The narrow gap beside a toilet, between a shower enclosure and a wall, or at the side of a bath is often exactly the right width for a slim floor-standing storage unit. A unit 150–200mm wide can hold a reasonable amount, including rolled towels, spare toilet rolls, bottles and cleaning products. Look for units with adjustable shelves so you can fit taller items when needed. 13. Utilise space underneath cupboards The gap beneath a wall-hung vanity unit or wall-hung cabinet is easy to overlook, but it's genuinely usable space. A row of small baskets on the floor directly beneath a floating unit keeps rolled towels, spare products or cleaning supplies within reach without cluttering the worktop. Hooks fixed to the underside of a cabinet work well for hairdryers, straighteners or hanging wash bags, keeping leads off the floor and surfaces clear. 14. Use accessories that work harder Bathroom accessories like shower caddies, toilet roll holders and towel rings all take up wall or floor space, so it makes sense to choose ones that carry more than one function. A shower basket with multiple tiers holds far more than a single-shelf option and keeps the shower organised. A toilet roll holder with a storage shelf on top keeps spares accessible without needing a separate unit. They’re small choices, but they add up across the whole room. Good bathroom storage doesn't have to mean starting from scratch. Solutions that fit your space and routine, and make smarter use of what you already have, can go a long way. If you need more help planning your bathroom design or want to explore storage options in person, visit us at our Birmingham showroom, where our staff will be happy to help.
Read Time 6 mins
Downstairs Toilet Ideas
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Downstairs Toilet Ideas

A downstairs toilet is a practical addition to any home, but it's also one of the most underused opportunities for good design. Small doesn't mean you have to compromise. Whether you're planning a full renovation or a simple refresh, with the right cloakroom ideas, you can turn a forgotten, underused space into something genuinely considered. This guide covers the best downstairs bathroom ideas to inspire your project, from compact layouts to bold finishes, with practical advice on what actually works in a tight space. Get the design right first time with a cloakroom suite Getting the basics right is essential. A cloakroom suite pairs a compact close-coupled or wall-hung toilet with a small basin, giving you everything you need in one matched set. It takes the guesswork out of pairing products and ensures proportions work in a small room. Look for suites where the basin width sits between 400mm and 500mm, which is the sweet spot for a functional yet space-conscious layout. 2. Go wall-hung to gain floor space The best small downstairs toilet designs use the floor as your most precious asset. A wall-hung toilet mounts to a concealed cistern frame inside the wall, lifting the pan clear of the floor and making the room feel noticeably bigger. It also makes cleaning significantly easier. The concealed cistern does require a solid or suitably reinforced wall, so check with your installer before committing. Pair it with a wall-hung basin for a fully floating look. 3. Fit a corner basin to reclaim the room One of the smartest small cloakroom ideas is using a corner basin. Fitting neatly into an otherwise dead corner, it saves 15 to 20cm of clearance compared to a standard wall-hung basin positioned flat to the wall. That might not sound like much, but in a room measuring 80cm by 150cm, it makes a real difference to circulation space. Corner basins work well in both traditional and modern interiors, so they don't limit your design direction. 4. Use a back-to-wall toilet unit for discreet storage A back wall toilet unit conceals the cistern behind a furniture panel, creating clean lines and adding a small amount of storage. It's a practical choice for cloakroom toilets where you want the visual tidiness of a wall-hung toilet without the structural work of installing a wall frame. Units come in a range of finishes, from gloss white to matt grey and charcoal, so there's flexibility to match your wider scheme. 5. Install a small vanity unit for hidden storage Storage is a persistent problem in compact downstairs toilets, so a small vanity unit is a great small cloakroom idea that solves it cleanly. Cloakroom vanity units typically start at 400mm wide and house the basin above, with a cupboard below to keep hand soap, spare toilet roll, and cleaning products out of sight. Wall-hung vanity units are particularly effective, as raising the unit off the floor gives the illusion of more space. 6. Make a statement with dark walls Modern cloakrooms often lean into bold colour rather than away from it. Dark walls, whether painted or tiled, actually read well in small rooms because they remove the visual boundaries of the space. Deep navy, forest green, and charcoal all work well. Pair a dark wall finish with brushed brass basin taps and a white ceramic basin for contrast. A small room with strong design intent always looks more considered than a plain white box. 7. Choose matt black fittings for a modern finish Modern downstairs toilet ideas often feature matt-black fixtures as the finishing touch that pulls a scheme together. A matt black basin tap paired with matching black bathroom accessories, such as a toilet roll holder and towel ring, creates a cohesive look without requiring a complete room redesign. Matt black works particularly well against white sanitaryware and lighter wall tiles, giving a high-contrast finish that photographs and ages well. 8. Go traditional with a classic cloakroom look Luxury downstairs toilet designs don't always mean minimal. A traditional toilet paired with a traditional basin and vanity unit creates a warm, characterful cloakroom that suits period properties particularly well. Add a traditional bathroom tap in chrome or gold, and finish with tongue-and-groove wall panelling for a classic look that feels timeless rather than trend-led. 9. Use gold accents for a touch of luxury If you’re looking for luxury downstairs toilet ideas that can be achieved without a complete refit, gold finishes add warmth and richness to an otherwise simple scheme. Swap out a chrome tap for a gold bathroom tap, and add gold bathroom accessories such as a towel hook or heated rail, and the room becomes instantly more premium. If your cloakroom sees a lot of use, brushed brass is slightly more forgiving than polished gold and hides water marks better. 10. Add a mirrored cabinet to double up on function In a tight, small cloakroom, a mirrored cabinet above the basin does two jobs at once. It provides a mirror for you and your guests and adds concealed storage behind the glass. Recessed mirrored cabinets sit flush to the wall for a neat finish, but require enough wall depth to house them. Surface-mounted versions are simpler to install. No matter which you choose, the mirror also bounces light around the room, reflecting and extending light in a windowless cloakroom. 11. Use large-format tiles to make the room feel bigger Tile choice has a significant effect on how spacious a downstairs toilet feels. Large-format tiles (600mm x 600mm or bigger) have fewer grout lines, which reduces visual noise and makes the floor and walls read as one continuous surface. Running the same tile across both floor and walls reinforces this effect further. Pale stone-effect tiles work well for a clean, open feel. If you want more personality, a patterned floor tile with plain wall tiles is a reliable way to add character without overwhelming the room. 12. Bring in a proper light fitting Lighting is consistently overlooked in cloakroom design ideas, but it matters more than most people expect. A downstairs toilet with no natural light relies entirely on artificial lighting, and a single ceiling bulb rarely does the room justice. A wall-mounted light on either side of the mirror gives even, flattering light at face height, which is far more practical for a cloakroom toilet. Consider a warmer light colour temperature (2700K to 3000K) to avoid the room feeling clinical. 13. Warm the space with a heated towel rail A heated towel rail in a downstairs toilet does two things. It keeps the room warm enough to be comfortable year-round, and it gives guests somewhere to dry their hands on a proper towel. Slim ladder-style rails fit even the narrowest walls without feeling intrusive. An electric towel rail is the simplest to install if you're not extending the central heating system, and modern models include timers so they only run when needed. A well-planned downstairs bathroom repays the effort many times over. Whether you go bold with colour and black fittings or keep it classic with a traditional suite, the principles are the same: use the wall space, choose compact sanitaryware that's been designed for smaller rooms, and don't skip the finishing details. Browse our full range of bathroom fixtures online or visit us in our Birmingham showroom, where our team can help you plan your cloakroom layout.
Read Time 6 mins
Loft Bathroom Ideas
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Loft Bathroom Ideas

A loft conversion bathroom is one of the most rewarding bathroom projects you can take on, and one of the most technically demanding. Sloping ceilings, limited headroom, awkward eaves, and complex drainage routes all require solutions that a standard bathroom does not. Get those solved correctly, and you get a private, elevated retreat that adds real value to the property. This guide covers everything from layout decisions and product choices to the practical realities of waterproofing, drainage, and building regulations. Can you put a bathroom in your loft? Yes, in most cases. Just make sure that you have enough headroom in at least part of the space, access to a soil stack (or the means to connect one), and compliance with Building Regulations covering structure, drainage, electrics, and ventilation. Most loft bathrooms are installed as en-suites attached to a loft bedroom. Some larger loft conversions accommodate a full family bathroom. The size and scope depend on the conversion type and the available floor area after bedroom space is allocated. Related: What Is An Ensuite Bathroom? Everything You Need To Know Regarding planning permission, an internal bathroom installation within an existing permitted development loft conversion typically does not require planning permission. If the loft conversion itself required permission (as some do, particularly in conservation areas or for listed buildings), your planning consent documentation will confirm what is covered. Always check before proceeding. Loft bathroom layout: what to plan first Headroom determines everything The most critical constraint in a loft bathroom is headroom. Building Regulations require a minimum headroom of 2 metres over at least part of the bathroom floor for the space to count as habitable. In practice, you need 2 metres over the shower in particular; anything less is uncomfortable and may not meet the minimum requirement. Position the shower and basin where the ceiling height is greatest, typically beneath the ridge. The toilet and bath can sit under lower sections of the ceiling because you are seated or lying down when using them. Eaves areas (below 1.5m) are ideal for built-in storage rather than primary fixtures. Related: Bathroom Layout Ideas Soil pipe position Every bathroom needs a connection to the soil stack for toilet waste. In a loft, this often means a long soil pipe runs back down through the building to connect to the existing stack. The position of the toilet in the loft is largely dictated by where this pipe run can be routed most practically. Where a direct soil stack connection would be excessively complex or expensive, a macerator pump (Saniflo or similar) allows the toilet waste to be pumped to the stack along a smaller-bore pipe. This is a practical, widely used solution for loft bathrooms. Note that macerator toilets are not suitable for all waste types – confirm the specification with your plumber. Water pressure Loft bathrooms are on the top floor. In gravity-fed systems, this means reduced pressure at the loft level, often insufficient for a standard shower or mixer tap without a pump. A combi boiler or unvented cylinder system delivers adequate pressure regardless of height. Check your system before specifying any shower valve or tap. An electric shower heats water on demand from the cold mains supply and is independent of water pressure or boiler type – a practical solution in loft bathrooms where pressure is a concern. Related: What Are The Different Types Of Showers? Choosing The Right One For Your Bathroom Loft conversion bathroom ideas A loft conversion creates a bathroom unlike any other in the house. The space is rarely rectangular, the ceiling rarely flat, and the constraints, headroom, drainage routes, water pressure, and structural load, require decisions that a ground-floor renovation never demands. These ideas address the loft conversion bathroom specifically, working with its characteristics rather than against them. Make the sloped ceiling a feature, not a problem Every loft conversion bathroom has a sloped ceiling somewhere. The instinct is to minimise it, to hide the slope behind a false wall or pull furniture away from the low end. The better approach is to deliberately design around it. A sloped ceiling painted in a deep, contrasting colour – navy, forest green, charcoal – reads as a design intention rather than a limitation. Combined with a pale wall and floor, it creates a cocooning effect that suits a private ensuite well. Alternatively, tongue-and-groove or timber cladding applied to a sloped ceiling adds texture and warmth that flat painted plasterboard cannot achieve. It suits a Scandi, rustic, or traditional aesthetic particularly well. Choose compact and space-saving sanitaryware Standard bathroom products are sized for standard rooms. In a loft conversion bathroom where every dimension is tighter, compact sanitaryware makes a genuine difference to how the room lives. A small vanity unit at 400–500mm wide takes up less horizontal wall space than a standard 600mm unit and provides under-sink storage without dominating a narrow room. A wall-hung toilet with a slimline concealed cistern reduces projection from the wall by 100–150mm compared to a close-coupled toilet – in a loft bathroom where every millimetre matters, that projection directly affects circulation space. Related: 9 Things To Consider When Choosing A Vanity Unit  Semi-pedestal and wall-hung basins allow the floor beneath them to remain visible, thereby increasing the perceived floor area of the room. Combined with a mirrored cabinet above the basin, you get storage, a mirror, and task lighting in a single slim fitting. Heating a loft conversion bathroom Loft-conversion bathrooms lose heat faster than bathrooms at lower levels because the roof structure encloses them. Insulation standards in the loft space directly affect how warm the bathroom is and how much it costs to heat. A heated towel rail as the primary heat source is the standard choice. In a loft bathroom, which is harder to heat than a ground-floor room, a dual-fuel rail with an electric element offers year-round flexibility and can be boosted when central heating alone is insufficient. Related: Buyers Guide To Bathroom Heating What are the common problems with loft conversions?  In bathrooms specifically: insufficient headroom for showers, inadequate water pressure at shower height, complex toilet drainage routes, and condensation problems from poor ventilation. All are solvable at the design stage with the right products and professional advice. Discovering them mid-project is more expensive. Small loft ensuite ideas Most loft en-suites are compact. The available space after the bedroom is often just enough for a shower, toilet, and basin. These ideas make the most of it. Related: Small Bathroom Ideas Fit a walk-in shower under the highest point The shower is the fixture that demands the most headroom. Position it directly under the ridge and use a walk-in enclosure or frameless screen rather than a framed enclosure with a door. The absence of a door frame reduces the visual bulk in a small space. Put the bath under the slope If the loft ensuite is large enough to include a bath, the sloped ceiling is actually an asset. A bath requires you to lie down, so you are not standing under the low ceiling – it sits perfectly under the eaves where headroom is below 1.8m. A freestanding bath positioned here becomes a design feature rather than a compromise. See our standard bath size guide for help choosing the right length.  Related: The Different Types of Baths Use the eaves for built-in storage Eaves at 600–900mm height are exactly the right dimensions for low drawer units, shelving, or recessed storage. Built-in eaves storage uses space that would otherwise be wasted and eliminates the need for freestanding furniture that takes up usable floor space. Install a Velux window or roof light Natural light transforms a loft bathroom. A roof window or Velux brings daylight from directly above, which is more effective than a vertical window on a sloped wall. It also supports ventilation – many roof windows are openable, reducing the workload on the extractor fan and addressing condensation far more effectively than mechanical ventilation alone. Loft shower room ideas A loft shower room – no bath, just shower, toilet, and basin – is the most practical layout for a compact loft conversion with limited floor area. Related: Shower Room Ideas  Specify a ceiling-mounted shower head In a loft shower room, the shower is often positioned beneath the ridge where the ceiling is at its highest. A ceiling-mounted rainfall shower head uses this height to best advantage, creating a significantly more luxurious experience than a wall-mounted head in the same position. Pair it with a concealed thermostatic valve for a clean, minimal look. Related: How To Choose The Right Shower Head Use colour contrast to separate the shower zone In a loft shower room where the ceiling slopes over part of the space, using a different tile in the shower zone emphasises the natural division that the ceiling already creates. A dark tile in the shower area, set against a lighter tile or painted wall elsewhere, defines the shower as a deliberate feature rather than a practical necessity. Wall-hung toilet and basin Wall-hung sanitaryware keeps the floor clear throughout the room, which matters particularly in a loft where the visual floor area needs to feel as generous as possible. A small vanity unit or semi-pedestal basin against the tallest wall maximises the use of the straight section of the room. Design ideas for loft bathrooms Light and airy: white and pale tones The most consistent recommendation for any compact loft bathroom is a light colour palette. White or off-white tiles, white sanitaryware, and pale-painted areas reflect light from the roof window, making the space feel significantly larger. Gold or brushed brass accents add warmth without adding visual weight. Bold: colour from floor to ceiling Smaller spaces can carry bold colour more confidently than larger rooms because there is less surface to fill. A deep green, navy, or terracotta applied to walls, ceiling, and any painted surface simultaneously creates a cocooning effect that feels intentional rather than oppressive. This approach works particularly well in a loft bathroom where the sloped ceiling is part of the design rather than a constraint to work around. Natural materials Wood-effect tiles or panels, stone-effect porcelain, and brushed brass fixtures create a warm, textural quality that suits a loft space well. Bathroom wall panels in a wood or stone effect are especially practical in a loft bathroom because they are easy to install against the angles and surfaces created by a sloped ceiling. Ventilation in a loft bathroom Without adequate ventilation, a loft bathroom develops condensation and mould faster than a bathroom at any other level. Hot, moist air from showers and baths rises and has nowhere to go in a loft unless actively extracted. This is where having a bathroom extractor fan is a good idea. The fan must vent to the outside through the roof, not into the loft void. Venting into the loft void deposits moisture directly into the building's structure. This is a building regulation requirement, not a preference. See our bathroom extractor fans for the right options. Related: How To Prevent And Get Rid Of Mould In The Bathroom Ready to plan your loft bathroom? A loft bathroom is one of the most technically demanding bathroom projects in a domestic property, and one of the most rewarding when done well. Our team has helped many customers plan bathrooms for challenging spaces. Call 0121 753 0700, visit our Birmingham showroom, or book a consultation.  Want more advice? Read our Bathroom Planning Guides for more ideas or take a look at our Bathroom Buying Guides to help you find the best products for your loft. 
Read Time 9 mins
Wet Room Ideas: Designs, Tiles & Inspiration
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Wet Room Ideas: Designs, Tiles & Inspiration

A wet room is a fully waterproofed, open-plan shower space where the floor drains directly rather than into a tray. There are no steps, no enclosure threshold, and – depending on the design – no door at all. The result is a bathroom that is easier to clean, visually more open, and genuinely accessible for all ages. This guide covers wet room ideas across every size and style, with practical advice on layout, tiles, screens, and fittings. What makes a wet room different from a shower room? A shower room contains a shower enclosure, a defined unit with walls, a tray, and usually a door. A wet room removes the tray and the entire enclosure structure. The floor is tanked (fully waterproofed), graded toward a central or linear drain, and the shower head, valve, and any screens are mounted directly to the wall or floor. For shower room ideas check out our guide. The open-plan nature of a wet room suits contemporary and minimalist aesthetics well. It also supports accessibility; there are no steps or thresholds to navigate, which makes wet rooms a strong choice for anyone planning for reduced mobility. Small wet room ideas Small bathrooms benefit from wet room conversions more than most people expect. Removing the tray and enclosure eliminates the visual boundaries that make a small bathroom feel like a series of compartments. The room becomes a single continuous space. Related: Small Bathroom Ideas Use a single glass screen rather than a full enclosure In a small wet room, a single glass screen, positioned to contain splash rather than enclose the shower entirely, keeps the room open. A 700–900mm wetroom screen on a support arm directs water toward the drain without boxing in the shower area. The rest of the room remains visually connected to the shower space. Browse our frameless shower enclosures and walk-in showers with screen options suited to a wet-room format. Related: Walk-in Shower Ideas for Small Bathrooms Match the floor and wall tile Using the same tile on floor and walls – particularly in the shower zone – unifies the space and makes the wet room feel deliberate rather than assembled. It also reduces the visual complexity that makes small rooms feel cluttered. When the floor tile requires a specific slip rating (R10 minimum, R11 in the shower zone), choose the floor tile first, then select the wall tile to complement it. Related: Wet Wall vs Tiles Keep wall-hung fixtures throughout A wall-hung toilet and wall-hung vanity unit keep the floor clear, which matters more in a wet room than in a standard bathroom because the entire floor is part of the water management system. Furniture sitting on the floor disrupts the drainage gradient, allowing damp to accumulate beneath it. Ensuite wet room ideas An ensuite wet room is one of the most effective ways to maximise a small, attached bathroom. Removing the tray and enclosure structure makes the space feel larger than its dimensions suggest, and the absence of a door threshold suits a bedroom connection well. Related: Ensuite Bathroom Ideas Use a linear drain for a seamless finish A linear drain running along one wall rather than a central circular drain allows the floor gradient to be created in a single plane rather than sloping toward a central point. This is particularly effective in ensuite wet rooms where the floor area is narrow, as the gradient is simpler to build and the drain line provides a clean visual line at the base of the shower wall. Opt for a tinted or privacy screen In an ensuite that opens directly from the bedroom, a tinted glass screen adds privacy without closing off the shower area from the rest of the room. Grey-tinted glass maintains the open feel of a wet room while providing a degree of visual separation that clear glass does not. See our shower enclosures and cubicles range for screen options. Luxury wet room ideas A wet room provides the right canvas for a genuinely luxurious shower experience. The absence of a tray and enclosure puts the focus entirely on the quality of the fittings, the tile selection, and the lighting. Install a ceiling-mounted rainfall head A ceiling-mounted rainfall shower head suits a wet room format better than almost any other shower configuration. Without an enclosure to contain splash, the large-format head creates an immersive, open experience that a wall-mounted fixed head cannot replicate. Add body jets Body jets mounted at torso height on the wet-room wall add a spa-like dimension to the shower. Combined with a rainfall head and a thermostatic concealed valve with multiple outlets, the result is a genuinely hotel-standard shower in a domestic setting. Confirm water pressure compatibility with your plumber before specifying a multi-outlet system. Specify brushed brass or matt black fittings In a wet room where the valve, shower head, drain, and any support arms are all visible, the finish choice is prominent. Brushed brass adds warmth to natural stone tiles and complements biophilic or spa-inspired aesthetics. Matt black reads as clean and graphic against white or grey tiles. Both are widely available across shower valves and shower head ranges. Read more: Spa Bathroom Ideas Use large natural stone or stone-effect tiles Natural stone tiles, such as slate, marble, or high-quality stone-effect porcelain, add the visual richness that justifies the investment in a luxury wet room. Large-format tiles with minimal grout lines maximise the stone surface and reduce interruptions. Remember that natural stone requires stone-specific sealant and stone-safe cleaning products. Accessible wet room ideas A wet room is one of the best bathroom choices for anyone with reduced mobility, disability, or anyone planning for later life.  Disabled wet room ideas The priority in a disabled wet room is creating a space that supports independent use safely, without unnecessary compromise on aesthetics. Most of the features that make a wet room accessible are best built in at the design stage. Level access from the outset The fundamental advantage of a wet room for a wheelchair user or someone with limited mobility is the absence of steps or thresholds. The floor is continuous from the main bathroom floor into the shower zone, graded toward the drain. For full wheelchair access, the shower zone should be a minimum of 1500 x 1500mm to allow a wheelchair to turn within it. Grab rails Grab rails at the shower entry, along the shower wall, and adjacent to the toilet are essential safety features in an accessible wet room. The key is to plan for them before tiling begins. Installing timber noggins between the wall studs during the first fix allows grab rails to be fixed securely at any point without needing to find a stud after the tiles are down. This is the most commonly missed step and the most expensive to correct later. Fold-down shower seat A wall-mounted fold-down shower seat provides a stable seated showering option without permanently occupying floor space when not in use. Position it at approximately 480mm from the floor – the standard transfer height from a wheelchair. Allow adequate floor space beside the seat for assisted transfers if needed. Thermostatic shower valve A thermostatic shower valve with a pre-set temperature limit is important in any bathroom used by someone who may have reduced sensation or slower reaction time. It prevents scalding regardless of pressure fluctuations elsewhere in the system. A concealed valve with large, easy-to-operate controls is the most practical choice. Related: What Are Shower Valves? Lever taps Lever-operated basin taps require significantly less grip and dexterity than traditional crosshead or rotary designs. A single lever monobloc mixer is easier to operate with one hand or a fist than separate hot and cold controls. A comfort height toilet A comfort height toilet sits 450–480mm from the floor rather than the standard 380–400mm. The extra height makes sitting and standing significantly easier for users with reduced leg strength or mobility. A wall-hung toilet is particularly useful as the height can be set during installation to suit the specific user rather than accepting a factory-set dimension. Slip-resistant flooring Floor tiles in a disabled wet room should carry a minimum R11 slip resistance rating throughout the shower zone. R12 is preferable for the main floor if the user will be moving on a wet surface with bare feet or in socks. Choose a tile with a textured surface that provides grip without being uncomfortable underfoot. Contrasting finishes For users with visual impairment, contrasting colours between the floor and wall, the grab rail and the wall behind it, and the basin and the surface it sits on significantly improve spatial orientation and reduce the risk of disorientation in a wet environment. This does not require a visually jarring scheme – a slightly deeper floor tile against a lighter wall tile, and a dark grab rail against a light-tiled wall - is both effective and aesthetically considered. Wet room ideas for the elderly An elderly wet room does not need to look different from any other well-designed wet room. The features that support safe, comfortable use by an older person are largely the same features that make any wet room better – they are just applied with more intention. Prioritise fall prevention Falls in the bathroom are the most common cause of serious injury in older adults in UK homes. The key risk points are: stepping in and out of the shower or bath, walking on wet floors, and reaching for towels or products from unstable positions. A wet room removes the first risk entirely. Slip-resistant flooring, correctly positioned grab rails, and a fold-down seat address the others. Design for reduced grip and reach As hand grip reduces with age, the operation of the tap and fitting becomes harder. Specify lever taps, push-button or lever shower controls, and rocker light switches rather than small toggle switches. Avoid products with very small controls or requirements for simultaneous two-handed operation. Underfloor heating Cold bathroom floors are a genuine deterrent to bathroom use in winter for older adults. Electric underfloor heating on a timer warms the floor before the bathroom is used, significantly reducing discomfort and the risk of muscle cramps on cold surfaces. It also dries the wet room floor faster after showering, reducing the window of slip risk. A heated towel rail within reach of the shower exit Position the heated towel rail so a warm, dry towel is within arm's reach from the shower, without having to cross a wet floor. This is practical for any user, but particularly important for an older person who may be less stable when wet and stepping onto a cold floor. Good lighting  Adequate lighting reduces falls and makes the bathroom more pleasant to use. Install a motion-sensing or automatically activated night light at a low level for nighttime visits, removing the need to locate and operate a light switch in a dark room. Related: Bathroom Lighting Ideas Futureproofing the design  If installing a wet room for someone currently mobile, design it to support reduced mobility in future. This means installing the noggins for grab rails now, even if rails are not fitted immediately, specifying a comfort-height or adjustable-height toilet, and leaving adequate clear floor space for potential future walking aid use. Doing this at the installation stage is almost free. Doing it retrospectively means cutting through finished tiles. Wet room shower ideas The shower fittings in a wet room are more prominent than in a standard shower room – there is no enclosure to frame them, so the valve, head, and any support arms are fully visible against the tiled wall. Getting the shower specification right matters both functionally and aesthetically. Rainfall shower head ideas for wet rooms A rainfall shower head is ideally matched to the wet room format. The large-format head, wide water dispersal, and immersive experience suit the open, unenclosed nature of a wet room better than a directional wall-mounted head does. Ceiling-mounted rainfall head. A ceiling-mounted head – typically 300mm square or round – delivers water from directly above, creating an experience closer to standing in warm rain than using a conventional shower. With no splash enclosure directing the water, the ceiling mount places the water where it falls most naturally: straight down into the shower zone and toward the drain. Browse our shower heads for ceiling-mount options. Wall-mounted rainfall head on a ceiling arm. Where a ceiling supply is unavailable, a long horizontal ceiling arm extending from the wall allows a rainfall head to be positioned centrally above the standing area without running a supply through the ceiling. A practical alternative in a wet room retrofit where ceiling pipework would be disruptive. Combination with a handset. A concealed thermostatic valve with a diverter allows the same supply to feed both a ceiling-mounted rainfall head and a wall-mounted handset on a slide rail. The handset is practical for rinsing, washing hair without standing under the head, and cleaning the wet room floor. Two outlets, one valve, and one wall surface – the most capable and cleanest shower setup in a wet room. Walk-in wet room shower ideas A walk-in configuration in a wet room – where there is no door at all, and the shower is entered freely from the room floor – is the most open and accessible shower format available. Single glass screen for splash containment. A single fixed panel or wetroom screen positioned at the entry side of the shower zone keeps the main splash contained without enclosing the space. The screen can be clear glass for maximum visual openness, tinted for privacy, or frameless for minimal visual presence. Linear drain along the back wall. A linear drain running along the wall at the back of the shower zone creates a clean, uninterrupted floor surface with a single drainage line rather than a central circular drain. In a walk-in wet room, the linear drain is barely visible from the entry and gives the floor a seamless, architectural quality. Feature wall within the shower zone. With no enclosure defining the shower area, a feature wall serves as the visual anchor. A different tile, a deeper colour, a textured or fluted surface, or a bathroom wall panel in a stone or marble effect on the shower back wall distinguishes the shower zone from the rest of the room without any structural division. Concealed valve for a clean wall surface. In a walk-in wet room, the shower wall is fully exposed. A concealed thermostatic valve recessed into the wall leaves only the slim valve plate and controls visible, keeping the tile surface as clean as possible. An exposed bar valve is also a strong choice in an industrial or traditional aesthetic where the fitting itself is part of the visual. Small wet room shower ideas A small wet room does not need to compromise on the shower experience. The shower fittings are the most important specification in any wet room – they are what you use every day, and a small room with a well-specified shower is more satisfying to use than a large room with a poor one. Compact concealed valve. In a small wet room, a single-outlet concealed thermostatic valve with a ceiling-mounted or wall-mounted fixed head is the cleanest and most compact shower setup. No exposed pipework, no riser rail taking up wall space, just the valve plate and the head. Overhead shower, however small the space. Even in a small wet room, a 200–250mm fixed head mounted slightly above head height delivers a significantly better experience than a small riser head. The head size and position matter more to the daily shower experience than the wet room's floor area. Use the full height of the wall. In a small wet room, tiling from floor to ceiling and running the tile right up to the ceiling makes the space feel taller and more generous. Stopping at a dado or half-height draws attention to where the ceiling is. Going full height draws the eye upward instead. A niche rather than a shelf or caddy. Any shelf, caddy, or bottle balanced on the edge of the shower zone adds visual clutter to a small wet room. A recessed niche built into the shower wall at first fix takes no depth from the room, and the tiles are flush with the surrounding surface. Even in the smallest wet room, a 300x300mm niche provides enough storage for daily essentials. Wet room tile ideas Tile choice in a wet room is more constrained than in a standard bathroom because the floor must meet specific slip-resistance requirements, and all surfaces must be fully waterproof. Floor tiles must carry a minimum R10 slip resistance rating. In the main shower zone, R11 or above is recommended. Larger tiles work well on wet room floors because fewer grout lines mean fewer places for water to pool. A 600x600mm or larger rectified porcelain tile is a practical and visually strong choice. Wall tiles in a wet room can go larger without the same constraints. Floor-to-ceiling large-format tiles in a single colour or stone effect reduce grout lines, creating a clean, hotel-like surface. Feature walls within the shower zone are one of the most impactful design decisions in a wet room. A single wall in a different tile, such as a patterned geometric, a deep colour, a textured or fluted format, anchors the shower visually without requiring structural changes. Use bathroom wall panels as an alternative to tiles for the feature wall: no grout lines, faster installation, and a seamless surface.  Grout colour matters more in a wet room than in a standard bathroom because grout lines are everywhere. Light grout on a light tile is the most forgiving choice for maintenance. Dark grout on dark tiles looks strong but can reveal calcium deposits in hard-water areas. Contrasting grout emphasises the tile pattern, so use it intentionally, not accidentally. Related: Bathroom Tile Ideas Wet room waterproofing A wet room must be fully waterproofed before any tiling is carried out. This is the most important technical consideration in the entire project, and it cannot be skipped or reduced. Tanking, the application of a waterproof membrane to the floor and walls, is carried out after the screed is laid and before tiles go on. The floor screed is also graded toward the drain at this stage. A professional must complete both the gradient and the membrane. A wet room that leaks damages the subfloor, the ceiling below, and any adjacent walls. The repair cost always exceeds the cost of doing the waterproofing correctly in the first place. Wet room ideas FAQs Is a wet room a good idea?  For most households, yes. Wet rooms are easier to clean than standard shower rooms, feel more spacious than their dimensions suggest, and suit accessible design requirements well. The main considerations are the higher installation cost (waterproofing and screeding add to the budget) and the fact that the entire floor of the room gets wet rather than just the shower tray. What are the disadvantages of a wet room?  The whole floor gets wet during showers, so it takes longer to dry between uses than in a shower room with a tray. Installation is more complex and expensive than a standard shower. If waterproofing is done poorly, leaks can cause significant structural damage. The open format also means steam spreads more freely throughout the room – a well-specified extractor fan is essential. How much does a wet room cost in the UK? A basic wet room installation starts at around £2,500–£3,500 for a small ensuite, excluding tiles and fittings. A full family bathroom conversion with premium tiles and fittings costs between £5,000 and £10,000. The waterproofing and screeding work represents the biggest cost differential compared to a standard shower room installation. Related: How Much Does a New Bathroom Cost? Start planning your wet room A wet room is a commitment to a particular kind of bathroom experience. Open, accessible, easy to clean, and visually uncluttered; it removes the structural complexity of trays, enclosures, and doors and replaces it with a room that functions as a single, continuous space.  For personalised advice on your specific room size and layout, visit our Birmingham showroom, book a consultation, or call 0121 753 0700. For more inspiration or help, view our Wet room buying guide.
Read Time 15 mins
Shower Room Ideas: Designs for Every Space
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Shower Room Ideas: Designs for Every Space

A shower room is one of the most efficient uses of bathroom space in a UK home. No bath taking up floor area, no compromise on the shower itself, and a layout that can be designed entirely around how you actually use it. Whether you are converting a spare bedroom into an ensuite, making the most of a compact landing space, or simply replacing a bath you never use, this guide covers every approach, from small shower rooms that work hard in tight footprints to walk-in and wet room designs that feel genuinely spacious. What is a shower room? A shower room is a bathroom without a bath. It typically contains a shower enclosure or wet area, a toilet, and a basin. In some layouts, particularly compact ones, the toilet and basin are the only other fixtures. In larger rooms, storage, a vanity unit, and a heated towel rail all sit comfortably alongside the shower. The distinction matters because shower rooms can be fitted into spaces that would never accommodate a bath, and that opens up possibilities that a full bathroom simply cannot offer. Small shower room ideas  Small shower rooms are where design decisions matter most. Every centimetre count, and a poorly planned small shower room feels cramped even if the dimensions are not particularly tight. A well-planned one feels surprisingly generous. Related: Small Bathroom Ideas Go for a walk-in shower over an enclosure In a small shower room, a walk-in shower with a simple glass screen rather than a full enclosure with a door removes the door swing from the equation entirely. That one change can free up 60–80cm of practical floor space. A single fixed panel or a wetroom screen keeps water contained without the visual bulk of a framed enclosure. See our range of large showers and walk-in showers and frameless shower enclosures. Related: Walk-in Shower Ideas for Small Bathrooms Use large-format tiles Large tiles with minimal grout lines reduce visual clutter dramatically in a small shower room. A 600x600mm or 600x1200mm tile used on both floor and walls creates a seamless surface that the eye reads as a single plane rather than a grid of small squares. The room appears larger because there is less to look at. Running the same tile from floor to ceiling in a small shower room, particularly the shower area, is one of the most effective space-expanding techniques available. Related: Bathroom Tile Ideas Keep the colour palette tight Colour drenching, using the same colour on walls, ceiling, and floor, is one of the most consistently recommended approaches for small spaces. It blurs the edges of the room, preventing the eye from finding the boundaries. This does not mean everything must be white. A confident single colour applied throughout reads as intentional rather than cramped. If you prefer contrast, use it for a single feature rather than as a general scheme. One wall in a different tile or colour reads as a design decision. Four different colours in a small room reads as unresolved. Wall-hung everything In a small shower room, floor clearance makes the room feel larger because the eye can trace the floor all the way across the space. A wall-hung toilet and a wall-hung vanity unit or wall-hung basin keep the floor visible and the room feeling open. Combine them with a slim mirrored cabinet above the basin and you have storage without bulk. Build in a shower niche A recessed niche in the shower wall replaces caddies, shelves, and bottles balanced on the tray edge with a flush, tiled recess that adds no depth to the space and looks intentional. It must be built in at the first fix stage before tiling; it cannot be added afterwards. Decide the position and size before the plumber and tiler start. Ensuite shower room ideas An ensuite shower room is almost always compact. Most UK ensuite conversions use a former bedroom corner or landing space, and the practical constraints of headroom, soil pipe position, and available floor area shape what is achievable. These ideas work specifically within those constraints. Related: Ensuite Bathroom Ideas Prioritise the shower specification over the enclosure size In a tight ensuite, the quality of the shower experience matters more than its physical footprint. A 900x900mm enclosure with a well-specified thermostatic concealed shower valve and a proper rainfall shower head delivers a significantly better daily experience than a larger enclosure with a basic bar valve and a small, fixed head. Related: What Are Shower Valves? Use the eaves In a loft ensuite, particularly, eaves that seem unusable are actually one of the best assets in the room. Low areas under a sloping ceiling are ideal for housing storage, built-in shelving, a vanity unit, or a recessed area for the toilet cistern. Position the shower in the area with the greatest ceiling height, which in most loft rooms is directly below the ridge. Choose a quadrant enclosure or offset quadrant In an ensuite where the shower must share floor space with a toilet and basin, a quadrant enclosure or offset quadrant enclosure sits into a corner and uses that corner space more efficiently than a rectangular enclosure in the same position. The sliding door of most quadrant enclosures also removes door swing from the equation. Related: The Ultimate Guide to Shower Enclosures Mirror the full width of the basin wall A full-width mirror above the basin runs from wall to wall rather than sitting as a discrete framed piece. It visually doubles the room's apparent width and bounces light around the space. Pair it with good task lighting directly above or on either side for a compact ensuite that feels well-considered rather than simply squeezed in. Related: Bathroom Mirror Ideas Walk-in shower room ideas A walk-in shower is the statement choice for any shower room, no matter the size. In a larger room, it becomes the centrepiece. Even in a smaller room, the open entry and absence of a door create a different feel, more like stepping into a dedicated wet space than entering an enclosure. Go frameless for maximum visual openness A frameless shower enclosure with 10mm glass and minimal fixings is the cleanest expression of a walk-in shower. The glass almost disappears, the tiles are uninterrupted, and the shower fittings become the visual focus rather than the structure around them. Pair a ceiling-mounted rainfall head with a concealed valve For a walk-in shower, the strongest specification is a ceiling-mounted rainfall shower head paired with a wall-mounted concealed thermostatic valve. The ceiling head fills the open space of the walk-in shower in a way that a wall-mounted head does not, and the concealed valve keeps the wall surface clean and minimal. Use wall panels instead of tiles Bathroom wall panels in the shower area eliminate grout lines entirely. A large-format panel in a marble or stone effect creates a seamless wet area that is both easier to clean and visually very strong. In a walk-in shower where the walls are prominent, this approach works especially well. Add a shower bench or built-in ledge A walk-in shower has the footprint to accommodate a built-in bench along one wall or a continuous ledge at the base of the opposite wall. A bench is practical for shaving legs, resting products, and accessible showering. It also gives the shower a more complete, designed feel. Tiled in the same material as the walls, it reads as part of the room rather than an addition. Modern shower room ideas Modern shower room design is defined more by restraint than by trend. The products that date quickest are the ones most tied to a specific moment. The shower rooms that hold up are the ones built on good bones and consistent finish choices. Related: Modern Bathroom Ideas Choose one fixture finish and apply it throughout Pick one and use it for the shower valve, shower head, taps, towel rail, and accessories, whether it’s chrome, brushed brass, matt black, or brushed nickel. Mixing finishes is the most common small decision that undermines an otherwise well-designed room. It is also one of the hardest things to fix without replacing individual items. Opt for a rimless toilet and back-to-wall or wall-hung mounting In a shower room where every surface is visible and there is no bath to draw the eye, the toilet is a prominent fixture. A rimless toilet, or one with a back-to-wall or wall-hung design looks significantly cleaner than a close-coupled toilet and makes the floor easier to clean. Pair it with a vanity unit in a contemporary finish for a coherent, modern look. Related: Toilet Buying Guide Use a digital shower for precision control A digital shower valve with programmable temperature settings and a wireless interface is the most technically advanced shower experience available. It eliminates cold starts, maintains exact temperature regardless of pressure fluctuations elsewhere in the system, and can be controlled before you step in. In a premium modern shower room, it is the specification that most clearly distinguishes the room from a standard fit. Keep lighting layered A single overhead downlight in a shower room does not do enough. Plan at least two layers: ambient ceiling lighting for the room overall and task lighting at the mirror for grooming. In the shower itself, a recessed IP65-rated downlight directly above the shower area illuminates the space properly rather than leaving it in the shadow of the ceiling light. See our bathroom extractor fans and accessories for the practical elements that complete the room. Related: Bathroom Lighting Ideas Style directions for shower rooms Minimal and monochrome shower rooms White walls, white sanitaryware, matt black or chrome fixtures. No pattern, no colour, no decoration beyond the tile itself. This approach relies entirely on proportion, tile quality, and fixture specification. Done well, it looks exceptional. Done poorly, it looks clinical. The difference is in the detail, the weight of the glass, the quality of the valve, and the precision of the grout lines. Read more: Minimalist Bathroom Ideas Spa-inspired shower rooms Warm neutrals, natural stone-effect tiles or wall panels, brushed brass or brushed gold fixtures, concealed valve, and a ceiling-mounted rainfall head. The focus is on texture and warmth rather than colour. Plants that thrive in humidity such as eucalyptus, ferns, or trailing pothos suit this aesthetic well and require very little maintenance in a shower room environment. Read more: Spa Bathroom Ideas Industrial shower rooms Exposed valves, grid-format shower screens, matt black fixtures, and concrete or dark stone-effect tiles. A deliberate roughness to the surfaces combined with precisely specified metalwork. The black shower door and black shower enclosure formats suit this direction particularly well. Traditional shower rooms A traditional towel rail, chrome or gold fixtures, a close-coupled toilet, and a basin with period detailing. Wall tiles in classic formats like metro, bevelled, or herringbone in white or soft colour, rather than large-format slabs. The shower enclosure should be framed rather than frameless to stay consistent with the aesthetic. Read more: Traditional Bathroom Ideas Nature-inspired shower rooms Green cabinetry, natural stone or stone-effect tiles, brushed brass, wood-effect surfaces where permitted. The aim is warmth and organic texture rather than clinical precision. A gold shower enclosure sits well in this direction. Wall hung vanity units in sage, olive, or forest green are the most common anchor colour in this aesthetic currently. Shower room ideas FAQs How much should a shower room cost? A full shower room renovation typically costs between £3,500 and £8,000 for a standard space including all products, labour, tiling, and finishing. Compact ensuite conversions in existing space start lower, around £2,500–£4,500, depending on plumbing complexity. A premium specification including a frameless enclosure, concealed valve, and designer tiles, pushes costs higher. Labour accounts for roughly 40–50% of the total in most UK shower room projects. Related: How Much Does a New Bathroom Cost? How do you design a very small shower room?  Start with a walk-in shower or a sliding door enclosure to remove the door swing. Use large-format tiles from floor to ceiling to reduce visual clutter. Choose wall-hung sanitaryware to free up floor space. Apply a single colour or material throughout rather than mixing. Build in a shower niche rather than using caddies or shelves. Keep accessories minimal and consistent in finish. What shower style is trending? Walk-in and wet room formats continue to grow at the expense of traditional framed enclosures. Brushed brass and matt black are the dominant fixture finishes. Fluted glass shower screens – with their textured vertical ribbing – are increasingly popular. Concealed valves paired with ceiling-mounted rainfall heads represent the most premium shower setup. Arched shower screens are gaining ground as an architectural detail in otherwise minimal rooms. Ready to design your shower room? A shower room is one of the most rewarding bathroom projects to get right. When a bath is removed from the equation, the entire room can be designed around the shower itself. Whether you are converting an unused bedroom into an ensuite, replacing a bath you stopped using years ago, or simply redesigning a shower room that has never worked as well as it should, the range of products available means the result does not have to reflect the constraints of the space.  Browse our full range of shower enclosures and bathroom accessories to start specifying your shower room. Our Birmingham showroom is open seven days a week, where you can see our products or speak to a member of our expert team. Call us on 0121 753 0700, book a consultation, or visit us in Tyseley for hands-on advice from the team.
Read Time 10 mins
Bathroom Layout Ideas
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Bathroom Layout Ideas

Whether you're starting from scratch or rethinking what you already have, getting your bathroom layout right is the most important decision you'll make in the whole renovation. Before you choose tiles, taps or a vanity unit, the position of your fixtures determines how the room functions every single day. This guide covers bathroom layout ideas for different room types, with practical step-by-step instructions on how to design a bathroom layout that works for your space. 10 bathroom layout ideas for every room type 1. The single-wall layout Everything, including your bath, toilet and basin, runs along one wall. It's the most straightforward bathroom layout design and suits narrow or compact rooms where plumbing can be kept to a single run. Fitting all three on one wall reduces pipework, which can lower installation costs. The trade-off is that it can feel tight if the room is very narrow. This design works best in bathrooms roughly 1.5m wide and at least 2.5m long, where there's enough floor space to stand and move freely. 2. The wet room layout The shower is open plan, with no tray or enclosure, and the entire floor is waterproofed and drained. A wet room bathroom layout works well in both small and large rooms. In a tight space, removing the enclosure frees up valuable floor area. In a larger room, it creates a genuinely open feel. However, sloped floors and adequate drainage are non-negotiable. Wall type matters too. This bathroom layout requires solid masonry or properly tanked stud walls. Explore our range of walk-in showers or read our walk-in shower ideas guide for more inspiration. 3. The small bathroom layout with a separate shower and bath Fitting both a bath and a shower into a compact room is one of the most common challenges in UK homes. The key is choosing the right fixtures. A shower bath with a fitted bath-shower screen can replace a standalone shower enclosure entirely, saving significant floor space. Alternatively, placing a small bath along one wall and a compact quadrant shower enclosure in the corner opposite can work well in rooms from around 4m². Read our guide to designing a small bathroom with a shower and bath for more ideas. 4. The long, narrow bathroom layout A long, narrow bathroom layout typically means a room that's around 1.6–2m wide and 3m or more in length. The most effective approach is to place the bath at the far end, on the short wall, the basin in the middle and the toilet nearest the door. This creates a natural flow without the room feeling like a corridor. Wall-hung fittings help here. A wall-hung basin and wall-hung toilet keep the floor clear, which makes a narrow room feel noticeably wider. 5. The L-shaped bathroom layout An L-shaped bathroom layout uses two perpendicular walls to separate wet and dry zones. The shower or bath sits in the longer arm; the toilet and basin occupy the shorter return. This works particularly well in rooms that have an awkward corner or recess. It's also a practical way to create a degree of privacy between the toilet and the rest of the room without adding a partition wall. An L-shaped bathroom suite can simplify the planning process if you're starting fresh. 6. The rectangular bathroom layout A rectangular bathroom layout is the most common room shape in UK homes and gives you the most options. The two most practical approaches are: a bath on the long wall, with the toilet and basin facing each other on the short walls; or a bath on the short end wall, with the toilet and basin lined up along the length. The second arrangement tends to feel more open. In a generous rectangular room, there's space for a separate walk-in shower alongside the bath. This is the bathroom layout with a bath and shower setup that most homeowners opt for. 7. The ensuite floor plan Space is almost always the constraint with an ensuite. Most ensuite floor plans work within 2–4m², which usually means choosing two or three fixtures rather than all four. A toilet, basin and shower are the typical combination. Compact wall-hung toilets and corner basins free up floor space considerably. A bifold shower door folds flat against the frame rather than swinging into the room, which matters in a tight space. Find more ideas in our guide to ensuite bathrooms. 8. The master bathroom layout A master bathroom layout typically has the luxury of more floor space, often 6m² or more. That opens up options: a freestanding bath as a centrepiece, a separate double-width walk-in shower, a double sink vanity unit, or all three. Zone the room deliberately. Place the bath where it'll be seen first when you walk in. Position the shower where it's private but easy to access. Keep the toilet in a corner or partially screened if the room allows. Good storage matters too, making sure the room doesn’t look cluttered or cramped. Read our bathroom storage guide for more guidance on making the most of your space. 9. The square bathroom layout A square room is one of the more flexible bathroom layout shapes, but it can be wasted if fixtures are simply lined up along one wall. The better approach is to use opposing walls. Place the bath or shower on one wall, and the toilet and basin on the wall directly facing it. This opens up the centre of the room and creates a clear route through. In a larger square room, a freestanding bath positioned away from the wall entirely becomes a practical option, not just an aesthetic one. Square rooms also suit a symmetrical bathroom layout design particularly well, where paired wall-hung basins or matching storage units sit on either side of a central mirror. 10. The cloakroom layout A cloakroom is often a very small room measuring around 1.2m x 1.6m or thereabouts, and typically contains only a toilet and basin. Every centimetre counts. A cloakroom suite is the most efficient purchase, as the toilet and basin are sized and designed to work together in a compact footprint. Placing the basin on the wall adjacent to the toilet, rather than opposite it, leaves more clear floor space to stand. Wall-hung options are particularly effective here, too. How to design a bathroom layout Good bathroom layout design doesn't start with choosing products. It starts with understanding what you're working with. Follow these six steps, and you'll avoid the expensive mistakes that come from guessing. 1. Measure your space Get the exact dimensions of the room in millimetres, not centimetres or approximate feet. Measure the width and length at floor level, and note the position of every door, window, and radiator. Measure door swing too, so you know how much clear space you need at the entrance. These numbers are the foundation of your bathroom floor plan. If they're wrong, everything built on them is wrong. Take measurements at least twice. 2. Find out where your soil pipe and drains are This is the step most people skip, and it's the one that causes the most problems later. Your soil pipe (the large pipe that carries waste from the toilet) is fixed, and moving it is expensive. Your existing drain positions also affect where the bath and shower can go without major groundwork. The toilet must be within a certain distance of the soil pipe, typically no more than 6 metres for a standard gravity-fed system. Knowing where these are before you draw up bathroom layout plans saves you from designing something you can't actually build. 3. Check what types of walls and floors you have Wall type affects what you can fix to them and how they need to be waterproofed. Solid masonry walls take most fixings without issue. Timber stud walls need noggins in the right places for wall-hung basins and toilets. Without them, the fixings won't hold the load.  Solid concrete floors don't allow for under-floor drainage changes without significant work. Suspended timber floors do, but they need to be assessed for condition and load-bearing capacity. Make sure you know what you have before finalising your bathroom layout design. 4. Decide what fixtures you want Once you know the constraints of the room, decide what fixtures you need and which you'd like but could drop if space doesn't allow. Start with the non-negotiables (usually toilet and basin), then work through baths, shower enclosures, and vanity units in order of priority. For a full overview of what to think about when choosing a bathroom suite, our buying guide covers it in detail. Having a clear priority order means that when space is tight, you know what to compromise on first. 5. Find out the dimensions of each fixture Every fixture you're considering has specific dimensions, and those dimensions need to fit your room with clearance space around them. Building regulations recommend at least 600mm clear space in front of a toilet and 1000mm clearance for a shower door to open fully. Standard baths are 1700mm x 700mm, but small baths start from 1300mm x 700mm, and shower enclosures range from 700mm x 700mm upwards. Don't assume. Check the exact product dimensions against your room measurements before committing. 6. Draw out a plan Once you know how big your room is, what will fit and where they need to go in line with your existing plumbing, draw out a plan. You don't need professional software. Graph paper works. Or use a free online bathroom floor plan tool. Draw the room to scale (1:20 is straightforward: 1mm on paper equals 20mm in real life). Mark the door, windows, soil pipe and existing drain positions. Then place your fixtures to scale and check that clearances work. A drawn bathroom layout plan will show you problems that aren't obvious in your head. Walk through the space on paper; can you open the shower door without hitting the basin? Does the toilet door clear the bath? Small issues on paper are easy to fix. The same issues discovered mid-installation are not. Getting your bathroom layout right at the planning stage can make all the difference between a space that works effortlessly and one that feels frustrating day to day. Take your time with the planning steps above, and if you need further help or have questions about our bathroom fixture measurements, get in touch with our customer care team or visit us in person at our Birmingham showroom.
Read Time 8 mins
How to Unblock a Toilet
how to

How to Unblock a Toilet

A blocked toilet is one of those problems that demands immediate attention. The good news is that most blockages can be sorted at home in under an hour, with no plumber required. This guide covers the best ways to unblock a toilet, from the quickest fixes to what to do when nothing seems to be working. Before you start: assess the situation Check the water level first. If the bowl is full, do not flush again. A second flush on a blocked toilet will cause it to overflow. Turn off the water supply valve (usually found behind or beneath the cistern) to prevent this. Move anything stored on the floor nearby, put on rubber gloves, and lay down old towels around the base of the toilet to protect the floor. Equipment you will need Depending on which method you try, you may need some or all of the following: A heavy-duty toilet plunger (bell-shaped, not a flat sink plunger) Washing-up liquid or dish soap Bicarbonate of soda and white vinegar A toilet auger (also called a drain snake) Cling film Rubber gloves Old towels or newspaper for the floor A bucket Ways to unblock a toilet Most blockages respond to one of the methods below. Start with one, then work your way through the list if that doesn’t work. The right approach depends on how severe the blockage is and what you have available. 1. How to unblock a toilet with a plunger A good toilet plunger is the easiest way to unblock a toilet and should be your first call. You need a bell-shaped (flange) plunger, not the flat variety designed for sinks. Place the plunger over the drain hole so it forms a full seal. Push down slowly to remove air, then pull back sharply. This creates suction that can dislodge the blockage. Repeat with firm, steady strokes for 15 to 20 seconds. Use controlled force. Aggressive plunging can crack the porcelain or damage the pan. Flush to check. If the water drains normally, the blockage has cleared. If the bowl still won't drain, repeat the process two or three more times before moving on to another method. 2. How to unblock a toilet with dish soap This is a useful method when you don't have a plunger to hand. It works by lubricating the blockage so it slips through the pipe. Squirt a generous amount of washing-up liquid (roughly half a mug) into the toilet bowl. Leave it for 20 to 30 minutes to work into the blockage. Pour half a bucket of hot water (not boiling) into the bowl from around waist height. The force of the water helps push the loosened debris through. Leave for 10 to 15 minutes, then flush. If the water level drops after flushing, the blockage has shifted. Repeat if needed. 3. How to unblock a toilet with baking soda and vinegar This is a reliable way to unblock a badly blocked toilet without chemicals. The reaction between bicarbonate of soda and vinegar creates a fizzing action that can break down the organic matter causing the clog. Pour one cup of bicarbonate of soda directly into the toilet bowl. Wait two minutes, then slowly pour two cups of white vinegar. You will see it fizz immediately. Leave the mixture to work for at least 10 minutes, ideally 30. Flush and check whether the water drains freely. For stubborn blockages, double the quantities and leave overnight. 4. How to unblock a toilet with a toilet auger A toilet auger (or drain snake) is the most effective tool for clearing a badly blocked toilet that isn't responding to a plunger. It reaches further into the pipe and can physically break up or retrieve the obstruction. Wear rubber gloves and feed the curved end of the auger into the toilet bowl. Rotate the handle clockwise to push the cable further down into the drain. When you feel resistance, you've reached the blockage. Continue rotating to break the clog apart, or turn anticlockwise to pull debris back out. Remove any retrieved material and dispose of it in the bin. Flush several times to clear any remaining debris. 5. How to unblock a toilet with cling film Using cling film to unblock a toilet is an unconventional method, but it works on toilets full of water where pressure can be used to force the blockage through. It's most effective on high-pressure water systems. Dry the toilet rim and bowl edge with an old towel so the cling film sticks properly. Stretch three layers of cling film tightly over the entire toilet opening, pressing it firmly to the rim to create an airtight seal. Flush the toilet. The rush of water will cause the cling film to balloon upwards. Press down firmly on the ballooned cling film. This creates a reverse pressure that pushes the blockage forward. Remove the cling film carefully and flush to check. When to call a professional If the toilet is still blocked after trying all of the above, or if multiple drains in the house are slow or blocked at the same time, call a plumber. Gurgling sounds from other drains, bad smells, or water coming up in unexpected places are signs of a deeper blockage in the main sewer line that needs professional intervention. How much does it cost to unblock a toilet? Plumbers in the UK typically charge between £60 and £200 to unblock a toilet, depending on the severity and time required. Most minor blockages are cleared within the hour. Emergency call-outs will cost more. What not to do when unblocking a toilet A few common mistakes make the problem worse, not better. Don't keep flushing: If the toilet is blocked, repeated flushing fills the bowl and causes overflow. Don't use chemical drain cleaners: Bleach and commercial drain unblockers won't break down a physical obstruction. They can also corrode pipes, crack porcelain and release harmful fumes. Don't use a flat sink plunger: It won't create a proper seal over a toilet drain and won't generate enough suction. Don't pour boiling water in: Hot water is fine, but boiling water can crack a porcelain toilet pan. Don't use excessive force with an auger: Pushing too hard can scratch or chip the porcelain inside the bowl. What causes a toilet to become blocked, and how to prevent it Most toilet blockages are preventable. As a rule, make sure to flush only the three Ps: pee, poo, and paper. Other common causes of blockages include: Wet wipes and "flushable" wipes: These do not break down like toilet paper and are one of the most common causes of blockages in UK homes. Sanitary products: Tampons, nappies and pads absorb moisture and expand significantly in the pipe. They should be put in the bin. Too much toilet paper in one flush: This is particularly an issue with low-quality paper that doesn't break down quickly. Children flushing objects: Such as toys, cotton buds, and other small items that should never go near a toilet bowl. Low-flush toilets: Some older models lack the pressure to fully clear the bowl in one flush. Upgrading to a modern rimless toilet or a wall-hung toilet with an efficient cistern can make a significant difference. Limescale and mineral build-up: Over time, scale narrows the pipe bore and makes blockages more likely. Regularly cleaning your toilet and checking the cistern for leaks helps maintain good water pressure, which reduces the chance of blockages. Even a slow leak from the cistern can drop pressure enough to stop the bowl flushing cleanly. If your toilet is giving you consistent trouble, it may be time for a replacement. Browse our full range of toilets or read our guide on tips for finding the best toilet for your bathroom to find the right fit.
Read Time 6 mins
How to Care for Bathroom Furniture
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How to Care for Bathroom Furniture

Bathrooms are one of the hardest-working rooms in any home, and the furniture in them takes a daily hit from steam, water, toothpaste, and cleaning products. Good bathroom maintenance is less about grand overhauls and more about small, consistent habits. Get those right, and your bathroom furniture will look and perform as well in ten years as it does on day one. How to care for vanity units and bathroom cabinets Vanity units and bathroom cabinets, including mirrored cabinets and tallboys, are typically made from MDF with a painted, foil-wrapped, or lacquered finish and share a common vulnerability: moisture. Here is how to maintain your vanity units and bathroom cabinets to keep them functioning properly and looking good. Clean every day: Wipe surfaces with a soft, damp cloth and a mild, pH-neutral cleaner, then dry immediately. Avoid leaving standing water, as this is the most common cause of swelling and long-term damage.  Care for your specific finish: Use a dry microfibre cloth for high-gloss or lacquered units and polish occasionally. Check for water damage: Inspect under basins regularly for drips from waste pipes or overflow connections, as even slow leaks can go unnoticed and cause significant internal damage over time. Maintain fittings: Check hinges and soft-close mechanisms once or twice a year, tightening any loose screws. Replace worn dampers where needed to maintain smooth operation without replacing the entire unit. How to care for a basin Bathroom basins are most commonly made from vitreous china, though stone basins are becoming more popular. The material determines how you care for it, but a few habits apply across all types. Clean gently: Use a mild cleaner and a soft cloth. Abrasive cleaners scratch the glaze on vitreous china, making future stains harder to remove. For limescale around the waste, apply a targeted limescale remover on a cloth rather than pouring it directly into the basin. Seal stone and composite basins: These are more porous than vitreous china and need sealing periodically, typically once a year. Never use acidic cleaners on stone, as they can permanently etch the surface. Check the trap: Inspect the waste trap underneath for debris build-up once or twice a year. Slow drainage is almost always a blockage in the trap, and clearing it is straightforward with the right tools. How to care for a toilet Toilets are low-maintenance by design, but a few checks will keep yours working properly for longer. Here is what to stay on top of. Check seat fixings annually: Loose fixings cause the seat to shift sideways, putting stress on the pan. Tightening takes two minutes. If you do need a new toilet seat, our guide on how to replace a toilet seat covers the full process for swapping one out. Clean under the rim: If you have a traditional rimmed toilet, this is where limescale and bacteria accumulate most. Rimless toilets have no inner ledge, making them significantly easier to keep hygienic with less effort. Watch the cistern: If the toilet runs continuously or the flush weakens, check the fill valve and flush valve. Catching this early prevents limescale build-up from forcing a more complicated repair later. How to care for a shower Shower enclosures and trays take a daily soaking, which makes consistent upkeep more important here than anywhere else in the bathroom. Here is how to keep yours in good condition. Squeegee the glass after every shower: It takes about fifteen seconds and prevents hard water deposits from baking onto the surface. A water-repellent glass treatment applied every few months makes an even bigger difference.  Inspect door seals and magnetic strips: Seals harden and crack over time, letting water escape onto the floor. Most are inexpensive and straightforward to replace, and far cheaper than dealing with water-damaged flooring. Check tray sealant annually: Whether your tray is stone resin or acrylic, inspect the sealant at the join between the tray and enclosure each year. Cracks allow water behind the enclosure and into the wall or subfloor. Reseal promptly when you spot deterioration. Clear the waste regularly: Hair and soap residue build up quickly. Slow drainage puts extra stress on the trap and waste connection below, so clear blockages as soon as you notice them. For more guidance on giving your shower a deep clean, read our guide on cleaning and maintaining your shower enclosure, or check out our guide to cleaning a shower head. How to care for heated towel rails and radiators Heated towel rails and designer radiators are generally low-effort to maintain, but a couple of annual checks will keep them running efficiently and looking good. Bleed once a year: Trapped air reduces heating efficiency. If any section of the radiator is cold while the rest is warm, bleeding it will fix the problem. Clean the exterior carefully: Wipe down regularly with a soft, damp cloth. On chrome finishes, dry off afterwards to prevent water spotting. On anthracite or matt finishes, avoid abrasive cleaners entirely. A damp cloth is all that's needed. Check radiator valves: Inspect radiator valves for dripping or corrosion around the valve body. A failing valve caught early is a straightforward fix; left too long, it becomes a much more disruptive repair. How to care for a bath Bath panels are often the most overlooked part of the bathroom, but they're worth maintaining properly. Most are MDF with a painted finish or acrylic facing, both of which need protecting from water ingress. Wipe down regularly: Use a mild cleaner and dry off splashes promptly. Don't let water sit against the panel surface or pool at the base. Check the sealant annually: Inspect where the panel meets the floor and bath surround. A cracked or missing sealant lets water seep behind the panel and into the subfloor. Resealing is a straightforward job and should be done straight away when needed. For more help, read our guide on how to seal a bath. Keep access clear: Ensure bath panels are fitted with access hatches or can be removed easily for plumbing inspections. A panel siliconed shut with no access point will cause serious problems if a pipe needs attention later. For more information on keeping your bath hygienic, read our full guide to cleaning a bath. How to care for a bathroom mirror Bathroom mirrors are exposed to steam and humidity every day. Daily maintenance goes a long way in keeping the surface clear and the backing intact. Clean with a microfibre cloth: Apply glass cleaner to the cloth rather than spraying directly onto the mirror face. This protects the edges and any frame from moisture seeping behind the glass, which degrades the silvering over time. Protect framed mirrors from moisture: Wooden and MDF frames are particularly vulnerable near showers. Wipe them down after use and ensure the bathroom is properly ventilated to reduce ambient humidity. Check your ventilation: An extractor fan that's working effectively makes a notable difference to how well every surface in the bathroom holds up. See our range of bathroom extractor fans if yours isn't keeping pace with moisture levels. How to care for taps and brassware Bathroom taps come in a wide range of finishes, and the finish determines how you clean and maintain them. Getting this wrong is one of the most common causes of premature wear. Chrome: The hardest-wearing finish and the easiest to maintain. Wipe with a damp cloth after use to prevent limescale from building up. For existing limescale, use a proprietary remover, but rinse thoroughly and dry off afterwards, as acid-based products left on chrome will dull the finish. Matt black and brushed brass: Require more care. Avoid acidic or abrasive cleaners entirely. Many manufacturers advise against using any cleaning product on these finishes and instead recommend using warm water and a soft cloth. Brushed nickel and brushed gold: A mild, non-abrasive cleaner is generally safe, but always check the manufacturer's guidance for your specific product. Dry the finish after cleaning to prevent water marks. Regardless of finish, inspect tap cartridges and washers if you notice any dripping. Constant moisture around the base accelerates wear on surrounding surfaces. Caring for different bathroom furniture materials Most bathroom furniture is built from one of two core materials: MDF (medium-density fibreboard) or MFC (melamine-faced chipboard). They look similar from the outside but behave differently. Knowing which you have affects how you should care for it. MDF is made from wood fibres compressed with resin under heat and pressure. It’s dense and smooth, and takes paint and foil finishes well, which is why it's used in higher-quality furniture. However, unprotected MDF swells when wet and won't recover. The outer finish is what stands between the board and moisture, so avoid anything that chips or strips it, dry off standing water immediately, and check the underside of units around waste pipe connections regularly. MFC uses a chipboard core with a melamine sheet bonded to the surface and is typically found in more budget-conscious furniture. The melamine facing is hardwearing and moisture-resistant, but the chipboard core deteriorates quickly once water gets in. If the surface is chipped or cut around hinge fixings, water will penetrate fast. Check the fixings regularly and immediately reseal any exposed chipboard edges with an appropriate edge sealant. Day-to-day care for both is the same: use a soft cloth with a mild cleaner and dry off immediately. The difference is how quickly damage spreads once water gets past the surface. To keep finishes intact and address any deterioration early, both materials will serve you well long-term. Caring for different finishes The finish on bathroom furniture often determines how quickly it wears. Here's what you need to know about the most common ones. Gloss white finishes show marks easily but are very easy to wipe clean. Use only soft cloths and mild cleaners. Gloss will yellow over time if exposed to direct sunlight for long periods. Matt grey and matt navy finishes are fashionable and fairly forgiving, but they show water marks more obviously than gloss. Dry off splashes as they happen rather than leaving them to dry naturally. Wood-effect foil wraps look great, but the edges are the vulnerable point. Water that gets under a lifting edge will cause the foil to peel further. Keep edges dry, and if a small lift appears, a tiny amount of appropriate adhesive applied promptly will prevent it from spreading. Gold and brass finishes on furniture and brassware require the most careful handling. Many are PVD-coated (physical vapour deposition), which is durable but not invincible. Avoid any acidic or abrasive cleaners. Warm water and a soft cloth are enough for regular upkeep. Tips for maintaining a bathroom Good bathroom maintenance doesn't have to be time-consuming. It requires the right habits applied consistently. Here's what makes the biggest difference. Run your extractor fan during every shower or bath and for at least 15 minutes afterwards: Humidity is the underlying cause of most bathroom furniture damage. If condensation regularly forms on walls and furniture long after use, your ventilation isn't adequate. Open a window whenever possible: Combined with an extractor fan, this clears moisture from the room far faster and reduces the strain on furniture, mirrors, and sealant. Inspect every silicone seal annually: Including on the bath, shower tray, basin, and any wall-mounted furniture. Look for cracks, gaps, or discolouration and reseal anything that needs it. Check all visible waste pipes and trap connections: Such as under basins for drips or moisture, at least once a year. A slow drip caught early is a five-minute fix; one left unnoticed is a cabinet replacement. Inspect tap cartridges and flush mechanisms for wear: Dripping taps and running cisterns are both signs that components need attention. Test your extractor fan: Hold a piece of tissue to the grille. If it doesn't hold the tissue firmly, the fan needs servicing or replacing. Check all cabinet hinges and door fixings: Tighten anything that's worked loose before it puts stress on the frame. For a thorough annual clean, see our guide on how to deep clean your bathroom.  Sometimes bathroom maintenance means knowing when it’s better to replace rather than repair, as ongoing issues can lead to costly damage. However, well-maintained furniture lasts significantly longer, so consistent care is key. If you’re planning an update, explore our bathroom furniture range or visit our Birmingham showroom to see it in person.
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