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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
How to Measure Your Bathroom
how to

How to Measure Your Bathroom

Getting your bathroom measurements right before you buy anything is the single most important step in a bathroom renovation. Order a bath that's 50mm too long, or a vanity unit that blocks the door swing, and the whole room will be compromised. This guide covers exactly how to measure every key fixture in your bathroom, what to account for beyond the obvious dimensions, and how to avoid the most common planning mistakes. Why is it important to measure your bathroom? Unlike a living room, where furniture can be shuffled around, every fixture in a bathroom connects to plumbing, bolts to walls, or sits above drainage. Getting your bathroom dimensions wrong doesn't just mean returning a product. It can mean rerouting pipes or replastering walls. Accurate measurements give you a realistic picture of what will fit and what won't, long before anything is ordered. They also help your plumber or installer quote accurately, preventing expensive surprises mid-project. Measuring your bathroom dimensions Start here, before you think about individual fixtures. Measure the full length and width of the room at floor level. Don't assume the room is a perfect rectangle. Many UK bathrooms have slight variations between walls, so measure both the length and width at two points near each end of the wall, and use the smaller figure to be safe. Record the ceiling height too. This matters for tall storage units, heated towel rails, and any wall-hung fixtures that need to clear door frames or light fittings. Sketch the room on paper as you go, noting every measurement. A rough plan, even a hand-drawn one, is far more useful than a list of numbers. Measuring your door and window placements Mark the position of every door and window on your sketch. For doors, measure the width of the door itself and note which direction it opens. A door that swings inward will eat into your usable floor space and can rule out certain fixture positions entirely. For windows, note the height of the sill from the floor. This affects where a bath or shower enclosure can sit, and whether a radiator or vanity unit will obstruct the opening. Also note any window reveals or recesses, as these can sometimes be used to house shelving or a recessed cabinet. How to measure for a toilet Standard close-coupled toilets typically measure between 680mm and 800mm in length (projection from the wall), 360mm to 400mm wide, and sit at a rim height of around 400mm. Wall-hung toilets project less from the wall (usually 500mm to 560mm) because the cistern is concealed inside the wall. When measuring for a toilet, you’ll also need to consider: Soil pipe position: This is your starting point. If you're keeping the existing soil pipe, your toilet outlet needs to align with it. Moving a soil pipe is possible, but it adds a significant cost. For a back-to-wall or wall-hung toilet, check whether the existing pipework runs through the floor or the wall before choosing a model. Projection from the wall: Measure from the finished wall to the edge of where the pan will sit. You need a minimum of 600mm clear floor space in front of the toilet (we’ll cover more on this in the clearance section). Centred waste position: The distance from the wall to the centre of your soil pipe outlet is called the rough-in measurement. Most UK toilets are designed for a 180mm to 230mm rough-in, but always check the exact specifications of the model you're considering. Width and side clearance: Allow at least 200mm either side of the toilet pan centre to the nearest wall or obstacle. Cistern height: For close-coupled toilets, check that the cistern doesn't block the windowsill or any shelving above. How to measure for a basin or vanity unit Basins range from compact 360mm cloakroom models to full 800mm or larger countertop basins. Vanity units are typically 400mm to 1200mm wide, 450mm to 500mm deep, and 820mm to 850mm tall, including the basin. When measuring for a basin, consider: Available wall width: Measure the clear wall space where the basin will sit, accounting for any door swings, radiators, or adjacent fixtures that encroach on that area. Depth from the wall: Most floor-standing and wall-hung vanity units project 450mm to 500mm from the wall. Confirm you have that depth clear before the nearest obstruction, such as a toilet, bath edge, or door frame. Existing plumbing positions: Note where your hot and cold supply pipes and the waste outlet currently sit. Surface-mounted pipework can be chased in, boxed, or rerouted, but it adds cost and work. Ideally, choose a basin or vanity unit that aligns with your existing waste position. Wall construction for wall-hung units: Wall-hung vanity units need solid fixing. A masonry wall or a stud wall with correctly positioned noggins will take the load. A standard plasterboard partition without internal support will not. If your wall is hollow, check the unit weight and consider a freestanding vanity unit instead. Tap holes: Check whether your basin has one tap hole, two, or three, and buy taps that match. Switching from a one-hole basin to a three-hole model after ordering is not a simple swap. Mirror or cabinet above: If you're planning a mirrored cabinet above the basin, measure the height from the basin rim to the ceiling. Most cabinets are 600mm to 700mm tall and sit 150mm to 200mm above the basin rim. Read our bathroom vanity units height guide for more information on the different measurements. How to measure for a bath The most common UK bath sizes run from 1500mm to 1700mm long and 700mm to 750mm wide. Small baths start from 1200mm x 700mm for tight spaces. Freestanding baths need additional clearance on all sides. When measuring a bath, take note of: Alcoves or open walls: Most baths sit in an alcove. Measure the alcove width and length precisely. A bath that's even 20mm too wide won't sit properly against the tiling. If you're fitting a bath in an open position, note that you'll need access to at least one side for the waste and overflow connections. Bath length and room length: Measure the full length of the wall the bath will run along, then subtract any doorways, radiators, or other fixtures that occupy that wall. This gives you your maximum bath length. Waste and overflow position: Standard UK baths have the waste at the tap end. Measure where your existing waste outlet sits in the floor or wall and choose a bath accordingly. Left-hand and right-hand overflow options exist for corner baths, so check the spec carefully. Floor strength and bath weight: A standard acrylic bath filled with water can weigh upwards of 250kg. Cast iron and steel baths are significantly heavier. If you're replacing a bath on an upper floor, check that the floor joists can take the load. Bath panel clearance: If you're fitting bath panels, allow for the panel thickness (usually 15mm to 20mm) in your overall measurements. Shower over bath: If you're planning to install a shower bath, check the ceiling height (minimum 2000mm is recommended above the showerhead position) and the wall space for a bath shower screen. Our standard bath size guide covers the different dimensions in more detail to help you choose the right design for your bathroom size. How to measure for a shower enclosure Shower enclosures are sold by their tray footprint. Common sizes are 800mm x 800mm, 900mm x 900mm (square), and 1200mm x 800mm or 1200mm x 900mm (rectangular). Walk-in showers can run from 1000mm up to fully custom widths. Here’s what you will need to measure when deciding which shower enclosure will best fit your space: Available floor space: Measure the width and depth of the area you're allocating to the shower. Don't forget to account for the wall thickness of any studwork partition if you're creating a dedicated shower area. Door swing direction: A hinged or pivot door needs clear space in front of it to open. Measure this carefully in relation to the toilet, basin, and the room door. If space is tight, a sliding door or bifold door avoids the problem. Wall squareness: This is the step most people miss. Use a spirit level and a set square to check whether your walls meet at 90 degrees. A quadrant enclosure relies on a true corner. If your walls are out by more than 5 to 10mm, you'll need adjustable profiles or a different enclosure type. Ceiling height: Standard enclosures are typically 1850mm to 2000mm tall. Measure your ceiling height and confirm the enclosure fits without modification. Sloped ceilings in loft conversions need particular attention here. Drainage position: The waste outlet position in your floor determines which shower tray orientations will work. Rectangle trays can sometimes be rotated 90 degrees to align with an existing waste, but check the waste position on the tray spec first. Shower valve position: The thermostatic shower valve sits on the wall inside the enclosure. Allow for the valve position when choosing the enclosure width, and confirm there's enough wall space for a shower head and riser rail at a comfortable height. For more information on types and sizing, read our ultimate guide to shower enclosures. How to measure for bathroom furniture Bathroom furniture includes storage cabinets, tallboys, shelving units, and fitted furniture runs. Getting this right is less about plumbing and more about spatial planning. Here are some key measurements to note when planning for bathroom furniture: Wall-to-wall width for fitted runs: Fitted bathroom furniture is designed to span a specific wall. Measure the wall width at both floor level and at the height the units will sit, as older properties can have walls that taper. Use the smaller measurement. Floor-to-ceiling height for tall units: Measure from the finished floor to the underside of any coving or ceiling obstruction, not just to the ceiling itself. Depth and door clearance: Most bathroom wall cabinets project 120mm to 150mm from the wall, and floor-standing units are typically 300mm to 450mm deep. In a narrow bathroom, a deep unit opposite the toilet or shower door can create an obstruction. Measure the gap between the unit face and the nearest opposite fixture. Pipe and socket positions: Mark any pipes, sockets, or light switches that fall on the wall where furniture will be positioned. These may need boxing in, relocating, or working around. Weight and wall type: Wall-hung cabinets need to be fixed to a solid material. For hollow stud walls, use a stud finder to locate the timber and fix directly into it, or use cavity fixings rated for the cabinet's weight. For more storage ideas, read our guide to small bathroom storage ideas. Measuring for walkways and clearance zones Individual fixture measurements only tell part of the story. Fixtures need to work together in the same space. The general guidance for a comfortable bathroom is a minimum of 600mm clear floor space in front of every fixture you actively use. In small bathrooms, some of these zones can overlap slightly, but 400mm is the realistic minimum before a space becomes genuinely difficult to use. Door swings need their own clear zone. A standard 762mm door swings a 762mm arc. If a door opens into the bathroom, that arc cannot be obstructed by a toilet, basin, or towel rail. Allow 700mm to 800mm between facing fixtures (for example, a vanity unit on one wall and a toilet or bath on the opposite wall). Less than this, and the room will feel and function like a corridor. Tips for measuring your bathroom Keep these in mind throughout the process: Stick to one unit of measurement: Work entirely in millimetres throughout. Mixing metres and centimetres is how mistakes happen. Measure twice: Always take each measurement at least twice and confirm that they match before recording them. Measure at floor level and mid-wall: Walls in older properties can bow or slope. Take width and depth measurements at floor level, mid-height, and near the ceiling to check for any inconsistencies. Note vertical measurements too: The height of existing pipe outlets, waste positions, and soil pipe entries all affect which products will work without rerouting. Sketch it out, then try different layouts: A simple floor plan on squared paper (or using a free online bathroom planner) lets you test multiple arrangements before committing. Moving a pencil mark costs nothing. Moving a soil pipe does. Account for tiles and finishes: If you're retiling, your finished wall will sit proud of the existing surface by at least 10 to 15mm. Build this into your measurements for recessed cabinets and fitted units. Don't forget door and drawer clearances: A vanity unit drawer that runs into the toilet is easy to spot on a plan, but easy to miss when you're just measuring the wall. Once your measurements are confirmed, the rest of the planning becomes much more straightforward. If you need help at any stage, our team is here to assist. Call us on 0121 753 0700 or visit our Birmingham showroom, where we can guide you through layouts and product choices.
Read Time 10 mins
How to Fix a Dripping Tap: Step-by-Step Guide
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How to Fix a Dripping Tap: Step-by-Step Guide

A dripping tap is one of the most fixable problems in the home, yet one of the most commonly ignored. A single dripping tap can waste up to 25 litres of water a day, which adds up to more than 9,000 litres a year, and a meaningful increase in your water bill if you are on a meter. In most cases, the repair takes under an hour, costs a few pounds in parts, and requires no specialist skills. This guide covers every type of tap and every type of drip, with step-by-step instructions for each. How much water does a dripping tap waste? Before deciding whether to fix it yourself or call a plumber, it helps to understand what the drip is actually costing. A slow drip, roughly one drop per second, wastes around 25 litres per day. A faster, more persistent drip can waste considerably more. Over a year, a single dripping tap on a metered supply can add between £20 and £100 to your water bill, depending on the severity of the leak and your water tariff. Beyond the cost, an unfixed drip rarely stays the same. A worn washer that causes a slow drip will deteriorate further, and what starts as a minor nuisance can become a more significant leak that causes staining, damage to the area below the sink, or a more expensive repair. What type of tap do you have? Identifying your tap type before starting is essential. Different tap types use different internal mechanisms and require different parts. Attempting to replace a rubber washer in a tap that uses a ceramic cartridge will not fix the drip. Compression valve taps (traditional taps)  These require a full turn or more to reach full flow. Inside, a rubber washer is compressed against a valve seat to stop the water flow. When the washer wears out or hardens, it stops sealing properly, allowing water to drip through. This is the most common cause of dripping in older taps. [IMAGE] Ceramic disc taps (modern taps)  These turn on with a quarter- or half-turn. Inside, two ceramic discs rotate against each other to control water flow. When the discs become cracked, chipped, or contaminated with limescale, the seal breaks down. These taps use a ceramic cartridge rather than a rubber washer. [IMAGE] Monobloc mixer taps  A single-lever or single-knob tap that controls both flow and temperature. These typically use a ceramic cartridge. A drip from the spout usually means the cartridge needs to be replaced. A drip or leak around the base of the spout is usually a worn O-ring. [IMAGE] Pillar taps  Separate hot and cold taps, each with its own valve. Traditional in design, typically with a compression valve mechanism. Repair follows the same process as compression valve taps above. [IMAGE] Related: Bathroom Taps Buying Guide Where is the drip coming from? The location of the drip tells you which part has failed. Where the drip is What it means What needs replacing From the spout when tap is off Worn washer or faulty cartridge Rubber washer or ceramic cartridge Around the base of the handle Worn O-ring on the valve Valve O-ring Around the base of the spout Worn O-ring on the spout Spout O-ring From beneath the tap body Loose tap or worn body seal Tighten or replace body seal Identifying the source before you start prevents taking the tap apart unnecessarily and makes it easier to buy the right replacement part. What you need to fix a dripping tap Tools: Adjustable spanner or adjustable wrench Flat-head screwdriver Cross-head (Phillips) screwdriver Small Allen key or hex key set Box spanner (for under-sink nut on spout O-ring repairs) Materials: Replacement rubber washers (assorted pack from a hardware store) Replacement ceramic cartridge (match to your tap make and model) Replacement O-rings (assorted pack) PTFE tape Plumber's grease (silicone grease) Before you buy, be sure to take the old part to the hardware store or photograph it with a ruler alongside it. Washer and cartridge sizes vary, and an incorrect replacement will not seal properly. What to do before fixing a leaky tap  Turn off the water supply. You cannot fix a dripping tap without first isolating the water supply to that tap. Never attempt to disassemble a tap with the water running. Locate the isolation valve. Under most bathroom basins and kitchen sinks, you will find a small inline isolation valve on the supply pipe. Turn it 90 degrees with a flat-head screwdriver, so the slot is perpendicular to the pipe. This isolates that tap without affecting the rest of the property's water supply.  If there is no isolation valve, turn off the main stopcock. This is usually under the kitchen sink, in a utility cupboard, or near the front door. Turn it clockwise until it stops. Open the tap fully and leave it open until the water stops. This drains the remaining water from the pipe above the isolation point and releases any residual pressure. Put the plug in the basin or sink. Small screws, washers, and O-rings disappear down drains with remarkable speed. Plug the drain before you remove any parts. Can you fix a dripping tap without turning the water off? No. This is not safe and should not be attempted. Removing a tap valve or cartridge with the water supply live will cause water to spray under pressure from the open valve body. Always isolate the supply first. If you cannot find an isolation valve under the sink or basin, turn off the main stopcock before starting. If the main stopcock itself is seized or does not fully close, that is a separate problem that needs attention from a qualified plumber before any tap work is done. How to fix a compression valve tap (rubber washer replacement) This is the most common repair and the most straightforward: Step 1: Remove the handle cap Look for a small decorative cap on top of the handle, usually marked H (hot) or C (cold) in red or blue. Prise it off gently with a flat-head screwdriver. Underneath you will find a screw, usually cross-head. [IMAGE] Step 2: Remove the handle  Unscrew the handle screw and lift the handle straight off the valve body. It should come off cleanly. If it is stiff, do not lever hard; instead, tap gently around the base to loosen it. [IMAGE] Step 3: Remove the metal shroud  Some taps have a decorative metal shroud (also called a cover or skirt) around the valve body beneath the handle. Unscrew this by hand or with a spanner and set it aside. [IMAGE] Step 4: Unscrew the valve  You will now see a hexagonal brass nut, the packing nut or valve retaining nut. Hold the spout to stop the tap body from turning, and use an adjustable spanner to unscrew the nut anticlockwise. Lift the valve body straight up and out. [IMAGE] Step 5: Replace the washer  At the bottom of the valve, you will see a rubber washer held in place by a small brass screw. Remove the screw, take off the old washer, and fit the new one of the same size. If the washer is cracked, hardened, or has a visible flat spot, this is your culprit. Replace the brass screw and do not overtighten. Over-tightening compresses the washer excessively and causes it to fail faster than the original, worn one. Firm is enough. [IMAGE] Step 6: Reassemble  Lower the valve back into the tap body, replace the packing nut and tighten firmly but not excessively. Refit the shroud, handle, and handle screw. Replace the decorative cap. [IMAGE] Step 7: Test  Turn the isolation valve back on (or reopen the stopcock), allow the pipe to refill, and test the tap. Close it fully and check for dripping. If the tap still drips, the valve seat may be damaged, if this is the case see the valve seat section below. How to fix a ceramic disc tap (cartridge replacement) Ceramic disc taps do not use rubber washers. The internal ceramic cartridge is the component that fails, and it is replaced as a complete unit rather than repaired. Step 1: Remove the handle  Most ceramic disc taps have a grub screw underneath or behind the hot/cold indicator. Use an Allen key to loosen it, then lift the handle off. On some designs, the indicator cap pops off with a flat-head screwdriver, revealing a cross-head screw beneath. [IMAGE] Step 2: Remove the cartridge retaining nut  Use an adjustable spanner to unscrew the retaining nut that holds the cartridge in the tap body. Turn anticlockwise. [IMAGE] Step 3: Remove the old cartridge Pull the cartridge straight out. Note its orientation as the cartridge is directional and must be refitted the same way. Photograph it before removing, if in doubt. [IMAGE] Step 4: Check and match the replacement  Take the old cartridge to a plumber or hardware store and match it by size, the number of positions, and the flow direction indicator on top. Fitting the wrong cartridge is the most common mistake in this repair. [IMAGE] Step 5: Fit the new cartridge  Apply a small amount of plumber's grease to the seals on the new cartridge. Insert it into the tap body in the same orientation as the original. Refit the retaining nut and tighten firmly. [IMAGE] Step 6: Reassemble and test  Refit the handle and indicator cap. Turn the water back on and test. A correctly fitted ceramic cartridge should stop the drip completely. How to replace a valve O-ring (leak around the handle) If water is leaking from around the base of the tap handle rather than from the spout, the O-ring on the valve stem is the likely cause. Follow steps 1–4 of the compression valve repair above to remove the valve. Look for the rubber O-ring, a small circular rubber ring seated in a groove on the valve stem. Carefully remove the old O-ring with a flat-head screwdriver. Do not score or scratch the valve body. Roll the new O-ring into position in the groove. Apply a small amount of plumber's grease to help it seat correctly. Reassemble and test. How to replace a spout O-ring (leak around the base of the spout) This applies mainly to monobloc mixer taps where water is leaking from around the base of the spout rather than from the tap outlet. Working from beneath the sink, use a box spanner to loosen the nut that secures the tap body to the basin. You do not need to remove the tap completely, just loosen enough to allow the spout to rotate. Twist the spout so it faces you. Find and remove the small grub screw on the underside using an Allen key. Lift the spout straight up off the tap body. At the base, you will see one or more rubber O-rings seated in grooves. Remove the old O-ring with a screwdriver. Roll the replacement into the groove and apply plumber's grease. Slide the spout back onto the tap body, aligning the marker on the spout with the groove in the body. Refit the grub screw and retighten the nut underneath the sink. Turn the water back on and test. What is a corroded valve seat and how do you fix it? If you have replaced the rubber washer and the tap is still dripping, the valve seat may be the problem. The valve seat is the fixed brass surface inside the tap body that the rubber washer presses against to form the seal. If the seat has become pitted or corroded, a new washer will not seal properly against it. A corroded valve seat can sometimes be reground smooth using a valve seat grinder, a tool available from plumbers' merchants. Insert it into the tap body and turn it to resurface the seat. If the corrosion is severe, the tap body may need to be replaced. At this point, the cost of a new tap versus the repair time and parts cost is worth considering. See our full range of basin taps and bath taps if replacement makes more sense. Related: How to Replace a Bathroom Tap When to call a plumber Most dripping taps are a straightforward DIY repair. Call a plumber if: The tap continues to drip after washer and cartridge replacement (valve seat damage likely) There is no isolation valve, and the stopcock does not fully close The tap body or pipework shows signs of corrosion, cracks, or damage The drip has become a continuous flow rather than a drip There is water damage beneath the sink that needs assessment You are not confident working with the plumbing in your property How much does a plumber charge to fix a dripping tap?  In the UK, a plumber typically charges between £80 and £150 for a tap repair, depending on the type of tap, call-out charge, and region. The parts themselves cost very little, usually under £10. Doing it yourself saves the labour cost entirely. Preventing taps from dripping in future Taps drip because internal components wear out. Some wear is inevitable, but a few habits slow the process: Do not overtighten. Turning a tap off with force compresses the washer unnecessarily hard every time. Turn it until the water stops, no further. Descale regularly. Limescale build-up inside tap bodies accelerates wear on ceramic cartridges and causes ceramic discs to stick and chip. In hard-water areas, descale taps every few months with a white vinegar solution to keep the internals cleaner for longer. Replace washers and O-rings proactively. If a tap is leaking, address it promptly. A small drip that is ignored can develop into a more significant leak and cause water damage beneath the basin or sink. Related: How to Clean a Bathroom Fixing a dripping tap FAQs Can I fix a dripping tap myself?  Yes, in most cases. Replacing a rubber washer or ceramic cartridge is a straightforward DIY repair that requires basic tools and parts costing a few pounds. The key steps are turning off the water supply, identifying the tap type, and replacing the correct component. If the repair does not fix the drip, or if there is corrosion or damage to the tap body, a plumber is the right call. What is the most common cause of a dripping tap?  A worn rubber washer is the most common cause in traditional compression valve taps. In modern ceramic disc and mixer taps, a failed ceramic cartridge is the more likely cause. Both are inexpensive to replace. Why is my tap still dripping when I turn it off?  If a tap drips when fully closed, the washer or cartridge is no longer forming a proper seal. In compression taps, the rubber washer has worn flat or hardened. In ceramic disc taps, the cartridge is damaged or contaminated. If replacing the washer or cartridge does not fix it, the valve seat may be corroded and unable to accept a seal regardless of washer condition. How do I stop my water tap from dripping?  Turn off the water supply, disassemble the handle, and replace the worn part: a rubber washer in traditional taps, a ceramic cartridge in modern mixer and lever taps, or an O-ring if the leak is around the handle or spout base rather than from the tap outlet.  Need any help with your leaky tap? A dripping tap is rarely a complex problem. Identify your tap type, locate the source of the drip, buy the correct replacement part, and follow the relevant steps above. The repair takes under an hour in most cases and costs a fraction of a plumber's call-out. If your taps are older and repairs are becoming more frequent, it may be worth considering a replacement. Browse our full range of taps, including modern and traditional basin and bath taps. Need any advice? Visit our Birmingham showroom in Tyseley, call us on 0121 753 0700 or book a consultation to talk to our expert team for expert help. 
Read Time 12 mins
How to Reseal a Bath
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How to Reseal a Bath

The sealant around a bath is one of the hardest-working parts of the room. It sits at the junction between the bath and the wall, flexing every time the bath is filled and emptied, and constantly exposed to water, soap, and steam. Over time it cracks, discolours, or develops mould that no amount of cleaning will shift. Resealing is a straightforward job that costs very little and makes a significant difference to both the appearance and the waterproofing of the room.  Why does bath sealant need replacing? Bath sealant fails for predictable reasons. Understanding them helps you apply the new sealant correctly and extend its lifespan: Movement. A full bath holds a significant volume of water. The weight causes the bath to flex slightly, which, over time, works on the sealant joint. Rigid sealant or incorrectly applied sealant cracks under this repeated movement. This is why the type of sealant matters and why filling the bath before applying is not optional. Mould. Bathrooms are humid environments, and the sealant joint is one of the most persistently damp spots in the room. Once mould takes hold beneath or within the sealant, it cannot be cleaned out; the sealant must be removed and replaced. Age and UV exposure. Silicone sealant yellows and becomes brittle with age. Even well-maintained sealant in a frequently used bathroom typically needs to be replaced every 2-5 years. Poor original application. Sealant applied to a damp surface, without first filling the bath, or in thin or uneven beads, will fail faster than correctly applied sealant. Related: How to Remove Bathroom Mould How often should you reseal a bath? Every 1-2 years for a heavily used family bathroom. Every 2-5 years for a less frequently used bath in good condition. The practical trigger is not the calendar but the condition of the sealant itself. Signs it is time to reseal your bath Visible cracks or gaps in the sealant bead Black or dark grey mould growth that does not clean off Sealant that has pulled away from the wall or the bath edge Yellowing or hardening of the silicone Water pooling in areas it should not reach If any of these are present, reseal promptly. Water that gets behind failed sealant travels into the wall structure and beneath the bath, causing damage to plasterboard, joists, and flooring that is expensive to repair. If the sealant on your bath has failed due to the bath itself ageing or being damaged, it may be time to consider a replacement. Browse our full range of baths, including freestanding baths and shower baths across all sizes. Related: Different Types of Baths What you need to reseal a bath Materials: Sanitary silicone sealant that is waterproof and mould resistant. Use a product specifically labelled for bathrooms. Do not use decorators' caulk or general-purpose silicone, which are not formulated for constant water exposure. Masking tape (low-tack) White spirit or isopropyl alcohol Washing-up liquid Tools: Sealant gun (caulking gun) Sealant removal tool or utility knife Flat-head screwdriver or plastic scraper Silicone smoothing tool (or a teaspoon will do) Cleaning cloths and kitchen roll Protective gloves On sealant choice: sanitary silicone is flexible, waterproof, and contains a fungicide to slow mould growth. It is the correct product for this job. It comes in white, clear, and grey to match different tile and bath combinations. White is the standard choice for most baths. If your tiles or bath surround are grey or dark, clear silicone is worth considering for a less visible finish. Related: What Accessories Do I Need to Buy Along With a Bath? How to seal a bath Once you’ve got all the materials, here’s a step-by-step guide to sealing a new bath or resealing your bathtub: Step 1: Remove all the old sealant This is the most time-consuming part of the job and the one most people rush. If any old sealant remains, the new sealant will not bond correctly and will fail faster. Do it properly. Score along the edges. Use a utility knife or sealant removal tool to score along both edges of the sealant bead on the bath surface and on the tile or wall surface. Hold the blade as flat as possible to avoid scratching the bath. Remove the bulk. Work the blade or a flat-head screwdriver underneath the sealant bead and peel or lift it away. Old sealant usually comes away in strips once you get underneath it. Remove the residue. Fine strands and thin layers of silicone will remain on both surfaces after the main bead is removed. Rub these away with your fingers or use a dedicated silicone remover product. White spirit on a cloth removes stubborn residue on the bath surface. Use a plastic scraper rather than a metal one on acrylic baths, metal will scratch. Do not leave any residue. Run your finger along both surfaces. If you can feel any silicone at all, it needs to come off before the next step. Step 2: Clean and dry the surfaces thoroughly New silicone will not bond to a dirty, greasy, or damp surface. This step directly determines how long the new sealant lasts. Wipe both surfaces down with a cloth dampened with white spirit or isopropyl alcohol. This removes soap scum, limescale, body oils, and any silicone remover residue. Wipe again with a clean dry cloth. Leave both surfaces to air dry for at least 30 minutes. Do not rush this step. The surfaces must be completely dry before you apply sealant. Run your finger along both edges one final time. They should feel clean and slightly tacky from the cleaning agent. No moisture, no residue. Related: How to Clean a Bath Step 3: Fill the bath with water This is the step most commonly skipped and the one that causes the most sealant failures. Do not skip it. Fill the bath with water to two-thirds to three-quarters full. The weight of the water causes the bath to flex downward slightly and pushes it gently away from the wall at the joint. If you apply sealant with an empty bath and then fill it, the movement can break or stretch the new sealant. Applying the sealant with a weighted bath means it cures in the correct position for the way the bath will be used. Leave the bath full throughout the entire process and only empty after the sealant has fully cured, following the next steps.   Step 4: Apply masking tape Masking tape is not strictly necessary, but it significantly improves the neatness of the finished joint. It takes a few minutes to apply, but it saves considerably more time on cleanup. Apply a strip of low-tack masking tape along the wall or tiles, parallel to the joint and approximately 3–5mm from the edge of the gap. Apply a second strip along the bath surface, again approximately 3–5mm from the edge of the gap. The gap between the two pieces of tape is where the sealant bead will sit. Work from the back corner (furthest from the door) forwards. Press the tape down firmly along its length so that the sealant cannot bleed under it. Step 5: Apply the sealant Load the sealant cartridge into the sealant gun. Cut the nozzle tip at a 45-degree angle. Start with a small opening, as you can always cut it larger, but a nozzle cut too wide produces a bead that is difficult to control. The opening should be slightly narrower than the gap you are filling. Starting in the back corner, apply a continuous, steady bead of sealant along the full length of the joint in one smooth movement. Keep the gun at a 45-degree angle to the joint and maintain steady, even pressure on the trigger throughout. Work from back to front so you are always moving toward you rather than leaning over fresh sealant. For a bath surrounded by three walls, start at the back wall and work in a C-motion around to the front. If the bead is uneven in places, do not attempt to add more sealant on top as you will create ridges that are harder to smooth. The smoothing step corrects minor unevenness. Step 6: Smooth the sealant You have a limited working time before silicone begins to skin, typically 10–15 minutes, depending on the product and temperature. Do not leave the smoothing until all the sealant is applied. Work in sections if the bath has multiple sides. Prepare the smoothing tool. Dip a silicone smoothing tool or a teaspoon into a small bowl of water with a drop of washing-up liquid. The soapy water prevents the tool from sticking to the silicone, allowing it to glide smoothly. Smooth in one pass. Draw the smoothing tool along the bead in a single continuous stroke from one end to the other, maintaining a consistent angle and pressure. The tool should press the silicone into the joint and leave a neat concave profile that slopes back toward the bath, encouraging water to run back into the bath rather than sitting on the joint. Wipe excess silicone from the tool as you go. Remove the masking tape immediately. While the sealant is still wet, peel the masking tape away at a 45-degree angle. Pull it back on itself, not upward. If you leave the tape until the sealant has begun to skin, it will tear the edge of the sealant bead when you remove it. Step 7: Allow to cure Leave the bath full of water and the sealant undisturbed for at least 24 hours. Some sanitary silicones require 48 hours for full cure, so check the product instructions. Do not touch the sealant, run water near it, or use the bath during the curing period. Moisture interferes with the curing process and can prevent the sealant from bonding fully. Once fully cured, empty the bath. Run your finger along the joint. It should feel firm and slightly flexible. Press gently; there should be no give or separation from either surface. How to deal with a large gap between the bath and wall If the gap between the bath edge and the wall is wider than around 5mm, standard sealant will not bridge it effectively and may sag or fall away. Option 1: Re-seat the bath. The cleanest solution is to move the bath slightly closer to the wall. This is a job for a plumber or bathroom fitter rather than a DIY repair, as the bath will need to be disconnected and repositioned. Option 2: Fill the gap first. Fill the larger gap with a backing rod (a foam rope available from builders' merchants), pressing it into the gap before applying sealant over the top. The backing rod provides the silicone with something to bridge against, reducing the depth of the joint. Option 3: Caulking strips. Self-adhesive flexible caulking strips can bridge larger gaps without a sealant gun. Cut to length, peel the backing, and press firmly into place. Less durable than silicone, but a practical solution for difficult gaps. How to reseal a shower tray The process for resealing a shower tray is identical to the bath, with one additional consideration: shower trays often flex more than baths when stood on, particularly acrylic or resin trays. Use a flexible sanitary silicone, specifically formulated for flexible joints. Standard silicone will crack when trays are moved repeatedly. Check the shower tray for movement before resealing. Press down on the tray with your foot. If it flexes noticeably, also check that the tray is correctly supported underneath. An unsupported tray in the centre will flex excessively and quickly break the new sealant, regardless of how carefully it is applied. Common resealing mistakes to avoid Not filling the bath first. The single most common cause of new sealant cracking is within weeks of application. Always fill the bath before applying. Applying sealant to a damp surface. Silicone will not bond to moisture. The surface must be completely dry before any sealant is applied, even if it looks dry to the eye. Leaving old sealant residue. Any silicone residue left on either surface prevents the new sealant from bonding. Remove every trace before starting. Using the wrong product. Decorators' caulk, general-purpose silicone, and frame sealants are not suitable for bath joints. Only use sanitary silicone specifically formulated for bathroom applications. Removing the masking tape after the sealant has skinned. Tape left until the sealant is partially cured, or the edge of the bead tears. Remove it while the silicone is still wet. Rushing the cure time. Using the bath before the sealant has fully cured breaks the bond before it has set. 24 hours is the minimum. 48 hours is better. Resealing or sealing a bath FAQs How long does bath sealant take to dry?  Most sanitary silicone sealants skin within 10–15 minutes and are touch-dry within a few hours. Full cure, the point at which the sealant reaches its full strength and waterproofing properties, takes 24 to 48 hours. Do not use the bath until fully cured. Can I apply new sealant over old sealant?  No. Applying new silicone over old silicone is one of the most common mistakes in bathroom maintenance. The new sealant bonds to the old rather than to the bath and wall surfaces, and will fail quickly. Remove all old sealant completely before resealing. What is the best sealant for a bath?  Sanitary silicone sealant, specifically formulated for bathrooms. It should be waterproof, mold-resistant, and flexible. Do not use decorators' caulk, acrylic sealant, or general-purpose silicone for bath joints, as these are not suitable for the constant water exposure and joint movement involved. Why does my bath sealant keep going mouldy? Mould in bathroom sealant is caused by persistent moisture in the joint. The contributing factors are inadequate ventilation, sealant applied to a damp surface, or a sealant that does not contain a fungicide. Improving bathroom ventilation (an upgraded extractor fan helps significantly), using a mould-resistant sanitary silicone, and wiping the joint dry after each bath or shower all help extend the mould-free lifespan of the sealant. Related: How to Clean a Bathroom Do I need to fill the bath before resealing? Yes. Fill the bath two-thirds to three-quarters full before applying sealant and keep it full until the sealant has fully cured. The weight of the water flexes the bath into the position it will be in when used. If you seal an empty bath, the movement when it is filled will crack or stretch the new sealant. Need any help on sealing a bath?  Resealing a bath is one of the most straightforward bathroom maintenance jobs you can do yourself. The materials cost very little, the process takes a couple of hours of active work plus 24 hours of curing time, and the result protects the room's structure from water damage that would be far more expensive to address. Done correctly, a well-applied bead of sanitary silicone will last 2-5 years before needing attention again. Need any advice? Visit our Birmingham showroom in Tyseley, call us on 0121 753 0700 or book a consultation to speak with our expert team. 
Read Time 11 mins
Complete Guide to Buying a Bathroom
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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
Bathroom Heating Guide: How to Heat Your Bathroom Properly
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Bathroom Heating Guide: How to Heat Your Bathroom Properly

A cold bathroom is more than just uncomfortable. Without adequate heating, moisture from baths and showers sits in the air, settles on surfaces, and creates the conditions for damp and mould. Getting the heating right is a practical necessity, not just a comfort preference. This guide covers every option available, with detailed advice on radiators and towel rails, the two most practical solutions for most UK bathrooms. Why bathroom heating matters The bathroom generates more moisture than any other room in the house. Steam from a hot shower or bath raises humidity rapidly, and without heat to drive that moisture out, it condenses on cold walls, ceilings, and grout lines. Over time this leads to mould, deteriorating sealant, and damage to decorating. A correctly specified heating solution does three things: it keeps the room comfortable to use, it maintains a background temperature that reduces condensation, and in the case of a towel rail, it keeps towels dry between uses so they don't add further moisture to the air. The right solution depends on your bathroom size, your existing heating system, your budget, and how you use the room day to day. There is no single answer that works for every bathroom. What are the bathroom heating options? There are three main categories of bathroom heating. Most bathrooms use one of the first two, with underfloor heating typically added during a full renovation. Heated towel rails and towel radiators. The most common choice for UK bathrooms, particularly en-suites and family bathrooms. A heated towel rail serves two purposes: it heats the room and keeps towels warm and dry. Modern towel rails have sufficient BTU output to act as the primary heat source in a small to medium bathroom. Bathroom radiators. Panel radiators and designer radiators provide higher heat output than most towel rails and suit larger bathrooms where a towel rail alone cannot adequately heat the space. Available in a wide range of styles, from traditional column designs to contemporary vertical formats. Underfloor heating. Provides even, floor-level warmth across the whole room. Most effective when installed during a renovation, as it requires the floor to be lifted. Typically used alongside a towel rail rather than as a standalone solution, as it does not dry towels or address heat loss from walls. Heated towel rails and towel radiator types Heated towel rails are the standard choice for most UK bathrooms. They are practical, space-efficient, and available at a wide range of price points. Understanding the differences between types helps you choose the right one for your bathroom and heating system. Central heating towel rails (plumbed) Connected directly to your home's central heating system via supply and return pipes, these work in the same way as any other radiator. They heat when the central heating is running and cool when it is off. For most households, this is the most cost-effective option as they use the existing system rather than adding to electricity consumption. Plumbed towel rails are the right choice if your central heating is on regularly and you want the bathroom to heat as part of the whole-house system. [image] Electric towel rails Electric towel rails run independently of the central heating and can be switched on and off as required, regardless of what the rest of the heating system is doing. They are ideal for bathrooms added to a property where plumbing a new radiator would be complex or expensive, and for households who want warm towels in summer without firing up the boiler. All electric towel rails in a bathroom must be installed by a Part P qualified electrician. They cannot be installed as a DIY job due to bathroom electrical safety regulations. [image] Dual fuel towel rails Dual fuel rails combine both options. They connect to the central heating system but also contain an electric element, allowing them to run on electricity when the central heating is off. This is the most flexible solution for year-round use. In winter, they run on central heating as part of the whole-house system. In summer, a single electric element keeps towels warm without heating the whole house. See our full range of heated towel rails. [image] Heated towel rail styles Ladder towel rails  The most common format. Two vertical uprights connected by a series of horizontal bars in a ladder configuration. Available as: Straight ladder rails: the bars run parallel to the wall. A clean, minimal look that suits modern and contemporary bathrooms. The standard choice for most people. Curved ladder rails: the bars bow slightly outward from the wall, creating a small gap between the rail and the wall surface. This makes it slightly easier to drape towels over, particularly thick bath sheets. The curve also adds a subtle visual interest without being ornate. Flat panel towel rails A single flat heated panel rather than individual bars. More contemporary in appearance and easier to wipe clean. Lower towel capacity than a ladder rail of the same dimensions. Best suited to bathrooms where the towel rail is used for warmth as much as drying. Traditional towel rails Traditional towel rails are designed for period and classically styled bathrooms. They feature ornate column profiles, decorative finials, and intricate detailing that modern ladder-style rails don't have. Most are available in chrome, gold, antique brass, or nickel finishes, all of which complement Victorian, Edwardian, and country-house bathroom aesthetics. Despite their classic appearance, many traditional towel rails are available in both plumbed and dual fuel versions, so they work with modern heating systems without compromise. Heat output is generally comparable to a standard ladder rail of the same dimensions. A traditional towel rail is the right choice if your bathroom has period fixtures – a roll-top bath, classic basin taps, or antique-finish accessories – and you want the heating to sit within that aesthetic rather than contrast against it. Fitting a chrome ladder rail in an otherwise traditional bathroom is one of the most common small decisions people later regret. Modern towel rails Modern towel rails cover flat-bar, geometric, and minimal ladder designs in contemporary finishes. The broadest category in terms of style, covering most of the current market in terms of design direction. Anthracite, matte black, and brushed brass finishes dominate this category and work well in modern, transitional, and industrial-style bathrooms. Where to put a towel rail  A towel rail should be within comfortable reach of the bath or shower – not on the opposite wall. Stepping out of the shower and having to cross a cold bathroom to reach a towel defeats the purpose. Position it close enough to the shower or bath enclosure exit that a towel is within arm's reach. Bathroom radiator types For larger bathrooms where a towel rail alone cannot provide sufficient heat output, a dedicated bathroom radiator is the better choice. Modern bathroom radiators are available in styles that suit every bathroom aesthetic, and their higher BTU outputs make them effective primary heat sources in rooms where square footage demands more than a standard towel rail can deliver. Vertical radiators Vertical radiators are well-suited to bathrooms where wall space is limited horizontally, but height is available. A tall, narrow vertical radiator takes up a fraction of the wall width of a standard horizontal panel while delivering comparable heat output. They work particularly well in narrow en-suites and bathrooms with limited wall runs. [image] Horizontal radiators Horizontal radiators are the classic panel format and the most effective placement is beneath a window, where they counteract cold air entering the room. The warm air rising from the radiator meets the cool air descending from the glass, improving heat distribution across the whole room. Designer radiators Designer radiators treat the radiator as a feature element rather than a purely functional one. Available in a wide range of formats, finishes, and configurations – from sculptural flat panels to geometric column designs – they suit bathrooms where the heating should contribute to the aesthetic. Note that some designer formats prioritise appearance over heat output, so always check the BTU rating against your room's requirements before purchasing on looks alone. Read more: Everything You Need to Know About Designer Radiators  How to calculate the right BTU for your bathroom BTU (British Thermal Units) measures the amount of heat a radiator produces. Getting the BTU right for your room ensures the radiator can heat the space adequately without oversizing and wasting energy, or undersizing and leaving the room cold. To calculate the BTU your bathroom needs: Measure the room: length x width x height in metres. Multiply the result by 153 for a standard insulated bathroom. This gives a baseline BTU figure. Add 10% if the room has a large window or is on an external corner. Add 20% if the room is poorly insulated or has a north-facing external wall. Most heated towel rails produce between 800 and 2,500 BTU depending on size. Standard panel radiators produce between 2,000 and 6,000 BTU. For small bathrooms and en-suites, a well-specified towel rail is usually sufficient. For larger family bathrooms, a dedicated radiator or a combination of both may be needed. What radiator material is best for a bathroom? The material affects heat output, heat retention, longevity, and rust resistance – all of which matter in a damp environment. Stainless steel is the best choice for most bathrooms. It resists corrosion, heats quickly, and retains heat well. Many stainless steel radiators come with long manufacturer guarantees, often 20 years or more. It is the preferred material for towel rails, in particular given their constant exposure to moisture. Aluminium heats up faster than any other material and is highly energy-efficient as a result. It cools down just as quickly, which makes it less effective if you want background warmth to linger. Best suited to electric radiators that use precise on-off controls. Mild steel is the most affordable option and the most common material in entry-level radiators. It is effective but more susceptible to corrosion in damp environments. If you choose mild steel, use a corrosion inhibitor in the central heating system and inspect for rust annually. Cast iron retains heat exceptionally well and continues radiating warmth long after the heating has switched off. It is heavy, requires robust wall fixing, and heats up slowly – characteristics that suit traditional column radiators in larger rooms rather than small bathrooms. Choosing a finish for your bathroom radiator The finish should be consistent with the other metal fixtures in the room. Mixing tap finishes with radiator finishes creates visual clutter that is disproportionate to the cost of the individual items. Chrome radiators: the most widely used finish, suits most bathroom styles, and reflects light well in smaller rooms. Anthracite and matt black: contemporary finishes that work well in modern and industrial-style bathrooms. Show limescale and dust more readily than chrome. Brushed brass and gold: premium finishes for warm, high-end aesthetics. Require a cleaner specifically formulated for the finish. White: neutral, suits traditional and transitional designs, easy to maintain. Brushed nickel and stainless: modern, subtle, and durable. A strong choice for bathrooms with understated hardware finishes. Bathroom radiator placement Where the radiator goes has a direct effect on how well it heats the room. Position on the coldest wall. The coldest wall is typically an external wall or one beneath a window. Placing the radiator here means the heat rises to counteract cold air entering the room, improving overall distribution rather than just warming a localised area. Keep clear of splash zones. Plumbed-in radiators and towel rails must be positioned outside the direct splash zones around the bath, shower, and basin. Zone 1 is the area directly above and around the shower or bath. Zone 2 extends to within 600mm. Plumbed radiators can be installed in Zone 2 but not Zone 1. Electric radiators and towel rails must comply with the IP rating required for their zone. Floor clearance. Mount radiators and towel rails at least 150mm above the floor to allow proper airflow beneath the units. This also makes floor cleaning easier. Do not position behind a door. A radiator behind a door is partially blocked every time the door opens, reducing both its effectiveness and the circulation of warm air. Radiator valves: manual versus thermostatic controls Manual valves work like a tap. You turn them to increase or decrease the heat output. They require you to manage the temperature yourself and offer no automatic adjustment. They are the simpler, cheaper option and work well in bathrooms that are used at regular, predictable times. Thermostatic Radiator Valves (TRVs) have a built-in sensor that monitors the room temperature and adjusts the heat output accordingly. When the room reaches the set temperature, the valve reduces the flow to maintain it without overheating. TRVs save energy and are the better choice for a bathroom used throughout the day or where temperature consistency matters. For electric and dual fuel radiators, a thermostatic element or smart element offers the same benefit with additional control; some smart elements can be programmed via a smartphone app, allowing the towel rail to warm up before you need it without running continuously. Browse our range of radiator valves.  How to heat a bathroom without central heating If your bathroom is not connected to a central heating system, you have a few practical options. Electric towel rail. This is the most straightforward solution. An electric towel rail requires only a connection to the mains electrical supply and is installed by a qualified electrician. No pipework, no boiler connection, no disruption to existing plumbing. It provides both room heating and towel warming and can be controlled independently. Dual fuel towel rail with electric element only. If you want the flexibility to connect to central heating in future, a dual fuel towel rail can be installed in electric-only mode now and connected to the heating system later when it becomes available. Underfloor heating is the third option for a bathroom without central heating, but it works best as a supplementary heat source rather than a standalone solution in a cold bathroom. It does not dry towels and provides no convective heat to warm the upper part of the room. Radiator maintenance A well-maintained radiator works more efficiently and lasts longer. Key maintenance tasks: Bleed the radiator annually. If the top of a radiator is cooler than the bottom, trapped air is reducing its efficiency. Turn off the heating, use a radiator key to open the bleed valve at the top corner, and allow air to escape until water appears. Close the valve, restore system pressure if required, and check for leaks. Use a corrosion inhibitor. For central heating systems, a corrosion inhibitor added to the system water prevents rust and sludge from building up inside radiators and pipework. A power flush every 5–10 years removes accumulated sludge from older systems. Check for cold spots. A radiator that is hot at the top but cold at the bottom has a sludge build-up in the lower section. This requires a power flush or isolation, followed by a manual flush to clear. Inspect valves annually. Dripping or stiff valves should be addressed promptly. A leaking valve in a bathroom causes water damage that compounds quickly in an enclosed, tiled space. Bathroom Heating FAQs What type of radiator is best for a bathroom?  For most UK bathrooms, a heated stainless steel towel rail is the best all-round choice. It heats the room, keeps towels warm and dry, takes up minimal wall space, and is available across all fuel types. For larger bathrooms where a towel rail alone cannot provide sufficient heat output, a panel or designer radiator alongside the towel rail is the better approach. Do you need special radiators for a bathroom?  Not necessarily. Standard central heating radiators are suitable in bathrooms when correctly positioned outside splash zones. Electric and dual fuel models must carry an appropriate IP rating for the zone they are installed in, and all electrical installations must be carried out by a Part P certified electrician. What radiators will not rust in bathrooms?  Stainless steel is the most rust-resistant material available for bathroom radiators and is the recommended choice for humid environments. Aluminium is also naturally corrosion-resistant. Mild steel radiators are suitable but require a corrosion inhibitor in the central heating system and regular inspection. What is the most efficient way to heat a bathroom?  A dual fuel towel rail with a thermostatic element gives the most flexible and efficient heating. It connects to the central heating system for winter use and switches to an independent electric element in summer for towel warming without heating the whole house. Pairing this with a TRV allows automatic temperature regulation. Do you leave heated towel rails on all the time?  Most people leave plumbed towel rails on as part of the central heating schedule rather than switching them independently. Electric towel rails are more efficiently run on a timer or thermostat, switching on before the bathroom is used and off when it is not needed. Running an electric element continuously is not necessary and increases running costs. Shop bathroom heating at Bathroom City Browse our full range of heated towel rails and bathroom radiators to see our complete range of bathroom heating solutions. If you'd prefer to see products in person before buying, book a consultation with our expert team or call into our Birmingham showroom where our team can advise on the right heat output, finish, and fuel type for your specific bathroom. Call us on 0121 753 0700.
Read Time 13 mins
How Much Does a New Bathroom Cost?
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How Much Does a New Bathroom Cost?

The cost of a new bathroom in the UK typically ranges from £3,000 to £15,000 or more, depending on the size of the room, the quality of fixtures and fittings, and how much of the work is done professionally. At the lower end, a basic bathroom renovation covers standard fixtures and straightforward installation. At the higher end, you're looking at premium materials, custom furniture, and full installation. Understanding where each pound goes is the best way to budget accurately before you start. How much does a bath cost? Bath prices start at around £200 for a standard acrylic straight bath and rise to £2,000 or more for freestanding or whirlpool models. Steel and cast-iron bathtubs sit at the premium end. Shower baths offer a practical middle ground, combining a bath and shower space in one footprint, with prices typically between £300 and £800. The material, size, and style all affect the final price. Our bath buying guide explains each type in more detail to help you make the right decision. How much does a shower cost? A basic shower enclosure starts from around £150, with mid-range options between £300 and £700. Frameless and walk-in designs command higher prices, from around £500 to £1,500. Shower trays are a separate cost, typically priced at £80 to £400. Add-ons such as thermostatic shower valves, overhead rain heads, and body jets will push the total up. For more help choosing the right one for your space, read our ultimate guide to shower enclosures. How much does a toilet cost? Standard close-coupled toilets start from around £100, while wall-hung toilets typically range from £200 to £600 and require additional frame and cistern costs on top. Rimless toilets are a popular choice at a similar price point, while back-to-wall toilet units that conceal the cistern behind furniture add £150 to £500 for the unit itself. Design, flush mechanism, and brand all influence the overall bathroom cost. Read our toilet buying guide to learn more about the different options. How much does a sink cost? A basic pedestal basin starts from around £60, while wall-hung and countertop basins range from £80 to £400 depending on material and style. Sink costs rise when you opt for stone or ceramic. A vanity unit with a built-in basin is worth factoring separately, as this will influence cost but covers more of your essential bathroom setup. Bathroom furniture costs Make sure to consider bathroom furniture as well as your basic fixtures when pricing up your bathroom. Bathroom furniture ranges from around £100 for a basic storage cabinet to over £1,500 for a large fitted unit. Wall-hung vanity units typically cost £150 to £600, while freestanding vanity units start at a similar price point. Tall storage cabinets and mirrored cabinets add £80 to £400 to your total. Bathroom accessories costs Small items add up quickly. Bathroom taps range from £30 to £400, depending on style and finish. Bathroom mirrors cost from £40 to £300 for illuminated options. Wastes, traps, towel rings, toilet roll holders, and other accessories typically add £100 to £300 to your overall bathroom cost when buying a full set. Bathroom heating costs A standard heated towel rail starts from around £60 and rises to £500 for designer models. Electric towel rails are easier to install in rooms without existing pipework and are priced similarly. Designer bathroom radiators typically cost £150 to £800. How much does underfloor heating cost? Electric underfloor heating mats for a standard bathroom cost around £200 to £600 for materials, with installation on top. For more help deciding on the best option, read our guide to bathroom heating. Bathroom wall and flooring costs Tiling is one of the more significant material costs in any bathroom renovation. Wall or floor tiles typically cost £10 to £60 per square metre for the tiles themselves. However, the cost to tile a bathroom fully, including installation, runs from around £500 for a small room to well over £1,500 for a medium or large one. Bathroom vinyl flooring is a more affordable option, starting from around £5 to £20 per square metre, and is quicker to install, while bathroom wall panels offer a tile-effect finish without grouting, making them a practical and increasingly popular choice that can reduce both material and labour costs. Installation costs Bathroom installation cost is one of the biggest variables in any project. Here's a realistic breakdown by trade: Plumber: Expect to pay £250 to £500 per day. For a standard bathroom, first and second fix plumbing combined typically costs £500 to £2,000, depending on complexity and bathroom size. Electrician: Electrical work in a bathroom, including lighting, extractor fan, and electric shower installation, usually costs £150 to £500 for a standard fit-out. Tiler: A tiler typically charges £200 to £350 per day. Total tiling labour for a small bathroom starts from around £300 to £600. Bathroom fitter: A dedicated bathroom fitter charges £150 to £250 per day. Most standard bathroom installations take four to six days with two fitters, so factor £1,200 to £3,000 for fitting alone. Plasterer: If walls need replastering, budget £390 to £700 depending on the size of the room. Bathroom fitting costs for the full installation on a standard mid-range bathroom sit between £2,000 and £5,000 in labour alone. If you're competent at building work, you can save significantly on fitting costs. However, plumbing and electrical work in a bathroom must comply with UK building regulations, and for most homeowners, these elements are best left to qualified tradespeople. Removal costs Before any new fixtures go in, the old ones have to come out. Most bathroom fitters include removal as part of their quote, but it's worth confirming this upfront. If not, stripping out an existing bathroom typically adds £200 to £500 to the total project cost, covering labour, disposal of old fixtures, and skip hire if required. Rusted fittings or difficult-to-access pipework can take longer and may push this higher. Always ask for removal to be itemised separately, so you know what you're paying for. How much does a bathroom renovation cost? Use this table as a reference for the full range of bathroom renovation costs across all components. Component Cost range Bath £200 – £2,000+ Shower £230 – £1,900 Toilet £100 – £600 Basin/sink £60 – £400 Bathroom furniture £100 – £1,500 Bathroom accessories £100 – £300 Bathroom heating £60 – £800 Walls and flooring £5 – £60 per m² Installation and plumbing £2,000 – £7,200 Removal £200 – £500 In summary, a basic new bathroom in the UK with standard fixtures and straightforward installation can cost anywhere between £3,000 and £6,000. Mid-range bathrooms with better quality fixtures and full professional installation push the price range up to £6,000 to £10,000, while a premium renovation with high-end materials, custom furniture, and feature additions can be up to £10,000 to £20,000 or more. How to save money when installing a new bathroom Reducing your cost to install a new bathroom doesn't mean cutting corners. It means planning smartly. Here are some of the best ways to save money: Keep your layout the same: Moving the toilet, basin, or bath means rerouting plumbing. That's expensive. If you can work with the existing pipe positions, you'll save hundreds, sometimes more. Get at least three quotes for labour: Prices for plumbers, tilers, and bathroom fitters vary considerably. Itemised quotes make it easier to compare like-for-like. Buy your own fixtures and materials: Tradespeople often add a margin to materials they supply. Sourcing them yourself, particularly from a specialist bathroom retailer like Bathroom City, gives you more control over quality and price. Consider a bathroom suite: Bathroom suites bundle the main fixtures together at a lower combined price than buying each piece separately. Shower suites and bath suites are worth comparing before you buy individual pieces. Swap tiled floors for vinyl or wall panels: Bathroom vinyl flooring and wall panels both reduce tiling labour costs and can look just as good in the finished room. Choose a shower bath over separate fixtures: If space or budget is tight, a shower bath covers both functions from a single footprint. Check the sales: Many retailers, including Bathroom City, run promotions on furniture, suites, and accessories. Buying during a sale can bring the total product cost well below standard prices. Explore our current bathroom offers to see where you could save. DIY what you can: Demolition, painting, and fitting accessories are all areas most competent homeowners can handle. Leave the plumbing, tiling, and electrical work to the professionals. The cost of a new bathroom will always depend on your space, your style preferences, and how much work is involved, but with the right planning, it’s possible to achieve a result that fits both your vision and your budget. If you’d like tailored advice or a more accurate estimate, get in touch with our customer services team to talk through your project, or visit our Birmingham showroom to explore our ranges in person.
Read Time 7 mins
Bathroom Suites Buying Guide
guides

Bathroom Suites Buying Guide

A bathroom suite is a coordinated package of fixtures that share the same aesthetic, giving your bathroom a considered, uniform look. At its core, a suite includes a washbasin, toilet pan, and cistern. More complete suites add a bath, shower, vanity unit, or fitted furniture. In this guide, we explain how to choose the right combination, style, colour and material for your bathroom so you can create a look that feels both stylish and intentional. Types of bathroom suites Depending on the specific fixtures you intend to include in your bathroom, there are mainly five different types of bathroom suites. 1. Bath suites A bath suite centres on a standalone bath, paired with a basin and toilet. Mid-range options add a vanity unit or fitted furniture, while premium bath suites can include a whirlpool system, bath panels, and a mirror with lights. Because a standalone bath takes up a lot of space, bath suites work best in larger bathrooms. Optional extras like bath taps, bath waste, and a bath shower screen are available depending on the model you choose. 2. Shower bath suites A shower bath suite combines a bath and a shower in one unit, typically with a bath screen, basin, and a toilet. It is the practical choice for smaller bathrooms where you want both bathing and showering without giving up floor space. Mid-range suites add a vanity unit or fitted furniture, while extended options can include a shower riser kit, left-hand or right-hand configurations, a mirrored cabinet, and a tallboy. 3. Shower suites Shower suites replace the bath entirely with a shower enclosure, making them well-suited to modern bathrooms where clean lines and minimal clutter are the priority. Entry-level suites include a basin and a toilet. Mid-range options add a vanity unit and an upgraded shower kit. At the top end, you can spec a double vanity unit with two basins, gold or chrome basin taps, and a choice of shower riser kits and mirrors. 4. Basin and toilet suites Starting with just the essentials, a basin and toilet suite pairs a basin (half or full pedestal) with a toilet. These suites are designed to be built upon. Add a bath or shower enclosure of your choice, and the result is a fully specified bathroom put together on your own terms. Optional features include a basin tap and bottle trap. 5. Cloakroom suites Built for compact spaces, a cloakroom suite pairs a basin with a toilet. Both take up far less wall and floor space than standard-sized fixtures. Basic models can be extended with a basin tap and bottle trap. You can also add a vanity unit or mirror cabinet for storage. For tighter spaces, all-in-one toilet and sink combination units house the basin, toilet, and storage in a single footprint. How to measure for a bathroom suite Before choosing a suite, measure your bathroom carefully. Note the length, width, and ceiling height, and mark the positions of existing soil pipes, waste outlets, and water feeds. These dictate where your toilet and basin can realistically go, and moving them adds cost. Suites come in a wide range of sizes to suit all room types, from compact cloakroom models at under 900mm wide to full bathroom suites spanning 1700mm or more. Always check the exact dimensions of each fixture in the suite, not just the suite as a whole, and leave adequate clearance around each piece for comfortable use and access. Bathroom suite styles There are several bathroom suite styles to choose from, covering everything from period-inspired interiors to stripped-back contemporary rooms. Traditional bathroom suites draw on classic design cues, such as high-level cisterns, flowing pedestals, and roll-top baths, making them the natural choice for period properties or anyone wanting a timeless look. Modern bathroom suites focus on clean lines, wall-hung fixtures, and minimal detailing. They work in most room sizes and layouts, and the right finish choices prevent them from feeling cold. Bathroom suite colours Most bathroom suites are available in white as standard, which reflects light well and pairs with almost any tile or flooring choice. Beyond white, you will find suites and coordinating furniture in grey, black, and gold-finished options. Grey in particular has become one of the most popular choices for vanity units and fitted furniture. For brassware, you can typically choose between chrome, brushed brass, and matt black finishes to tie the overall look together. Bathroom suite materials and finishes Sanitaryware, meaning basins and toilets, is almost universally made from vitreous china. It is hard-wearing, easy to clean, and holds its gloss finish well over time. Baths are typically made from acrylic, which retains heat effectively and is lighter than steel alternatives. Steel and cast-iron baths are heavier and more expensive but extremely durable. Carronite baths sit between the two, offering a reinforced acrylic construction that feels more solid underfoot.  Bathroom furniture fronts are typically made from moisture-resistant MDF, which is designed to withstand humidity and resist warping in damp environments. Our in-house furniture is made in our Birmingham factory and is available in gloss or matt finishes, depending on the range. How much are bathroom suites? Price depends on the type of suite, the number of fixtures included, the materials used, and whether the suite comes with furniture and accessories. Entry-level cloakroom suites start at just over £100 for a basin and toilet. At the other end of the scale, a full bathroom suite with a bath, separate shower enclosure, vanity unit, and toilet can exceed £2,000. Most mid-range suites covering the main fixtures sit somewhere between £300 and £800 before you add furniture or extras. For a broader picture of what a full bathroom project might cost, our new bathroom cost guide breaks down the numbers in detail. What to consider when choosing a bathroom suite There is a fair amount to weigh up before committing to a suite. Here are some of the main things to consider when choosing: What fixtures you actually need: A bath, a separate shower, or both? If the bathroom is used daily by multiple people, that answer matters. Available space: Measure the room before you look at any products. The position of your soil pipe is particularly important as moving it significantly increases installation costs. Your existing décor: If you are keeping your tiles or flooring, make sure the suite style and colour will work with what is already there. Who will be using the bathroom: Young children, elderly users, or anyone with mobility requirements may need specific fixtures such as comfort-height toilets or walk-in shower access rather than a bath-over option. Your plumbing setup: The type of water system in your home (combi boiler, gravity-fed, or pressurised) affects which showers and taps will perform correctly. Check with your installer before specifying. Your budget: The suite itself is only part of the cost. Factor in installation, tiling, and any pipework changes when planning your spend. Choosing the right bathroom suite comes down to balancing layout, functionality and style. Get the essentials right, and the finished space will feel both practical and well put together. Browse our full range of bathroom suites online, or visit our Birmingham showroom to see them in person. If you need any more help choosing, our team is always on hand to offer expert advice.
Read Time 6 mins
Bathroom Furniture Buying Guide
guides

Bathroom Furniture Buying Guide

Choosing bathroom furniture involves more than picking something that looks good. You need to think about how it's mounted, how much storage it provides, what it's made from, and whether it'll hold up in a humid environment long term. This guide covers everything you need to know, including types, sizes, materials, finishes, styles and what to consider before you buy, so you can make the right decision for your bathroom. Types of bathroom furniture Wall-hung bathroom furniture Wall-hung units are fixed directly to the wall with no floor contact. They free up floor space, making a room feel larger and easier to clean around. They work best on solid or reinforced walls, as plasterboard alone won't take the load. Wall-hung bathroom furniture is a popular choice for modern and contemporary bathrooms. Freestanding bathroom furniture Freestanding units sit directly on the floor and don't require wall fixings. They're straightforward to install and can be repositioned. Freestanding bathroom furniture is a practical option for rented properties, secondary bathrooms, or anywhere you'd rather not fix into the wall. Fitted bathroom furniture Fitted bathroom furniture is made to measure or sized to fill a specific space, giving a clean, built-in finish. It typically includes matching units, a worktop and concealed plumbing. Fitted furniture is a good fit for main bathrooms where you want everything to feel considered. Read our fitted bathroom furniture buying guide for more information, or visit us at our Birmingham showroom, where our fitted bathroom furniture is made. Vanity units A vanity unit pairs a basin with a cabinet underneath, replacing the standard basin-and-pedestal setup and gaining you storage in the process. Types include wall-hung, freestanding, corner, double basin, and countertop vanity units, letting you choose one that fits your space perfectly. For more details on the different types, read our vanity units guide. Washstands A washstand is an open-frame unit, typically with a countertop basin on top and no enclosed cabinet beneath. They suit traditional and period-style bathrooms particularly well and give a lighter, less bulky look. Storage is open rather than concealed, which is worth factoring in if you need to hide clutter. Toilet units Back-to-wall toilet units conceal the cistern inside a furniture cabinet, giving a cleaner look and creating a useful shelf above the pan. They work well in smaller or en-suite bathrooms. The cistern sits inside the unit rather than embedded in the wall, so installation is more straightforward than a full wall-hung WC. Bathroom cabinets and storage Bathroom storage comes in a variety of forms, each designed to suit different spaces and needs. Wall-hung cabinets are a popular choice for keeping essentials off the floor while maintaining a clean, uncluttered look. Tallboys (tall, narrow units available in floor-standing or wall-mounted styles) are ideal for storing towels, toilet rolls and toiletries, with some designs even incorporating built-in laundry baskets. Mirrored cabinets offer a practical two-in-one solution, combining storage with a mirror while helping to free up wall space and keep everyday items within easy reach. For more inspiration, take a look at our small bathroom storage ideas. What furniture should be in a bathroom? There's no fixed rule for what furniture should go in a bathroom. A functional bathroom typically needs a vanity unit or basin, a toilet, and some form of storage. Beyond that, it depends on space. Larger family bathrooms benefit from additional storage, like a tallboy or wall cabinet alongside it. Smaller bathrooms and en-suites often work best with a compact vanity unit and a mirrored cabinet to keep things practical without adding bulk. Read our small bathroom ideas guide for inspiration on what will work for your space. Bathroom furniture sizes Getting the size of your bathroom furniture right before you buy saves a lot of trouble. Widths range from around 100mm for slim accessories up to 2300mm for wider fitted runs. Vanity units and cabinets most commonly come in widths between 400mm and 1200mm. Height ranges considerably depending on furniture type. Wall-hung units can be positioned at a height that suits you, which is a practical advantage and especially helpful for households with young children or those with limited accessibility. Floor-standing vanity units typically sit between 820mm and 870mm tall, while tallboy storage units can reach up to 2000mm, offering considerable capacity in a compact footprint. Our guide to bathroom vanity height explains everything you need to know in more detail. Depth varies, too. Slimline units typically project by around 255mm from the wall, making them useful in narrow bathrooms or cloakrooms. However, standard bathroom furniture sits at a depth of around 450–500mm. Always measure your bathroom accurately before ordering, including ceiling height, door swing clearance, and the position of soil pipes and water supplies. What should bathroom furniture be made of? Most bathroom furniture is made from a wood-based board material, either with a surface coating or finish applied. The three most common options are: Melamine-faced chipboard (MFC): A chipboard core with a melamine resin surface bonded to it. Affordable and easy to clean, but susceptible to water damage if the edges or surface are not properly sealed. MFC is a reasonable choice for secondary bathrooms or rental properties. Medium-density fibreboard (MDF): Denser and more stable than MFC, made from compressed wood fibres and resin. MDF is resistant to temperature and humidity changes and doesn't warp easily. It takes paint and veneers well, and is the most widely used material in quality bathroom furniture. Solid wood: A more premium option that adds character and a substantial feel. Oak and walnut are common choices, often finished with stains or paint that show the grain. It needs more care than board materials, as high humidity and fluctuating temperatures can affect it over time. When buying, look for the FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) logo, which confirms the timber comes from responsibly managed sources. Bathroom furniture finishes The finish is what you see and touch. It affects both the look of a unit and how well it holds up day to day. Here are the main options: Foil wrapped: A thin plastic foil is heat-bonded onto the base material. It gives a clean, contoured appearance and is a cost-effective option. Modern foil-wrapped furniture handles humidity better than earlier versions, though it can still be a weak point over time. Painted: Applied directly to the board or wood, painted finishes are available in a wide range of colours and are more resilient to moisture than foil. Acrylic: A high-gloss acrylic sheet is bonded to the core material on all faces. It reflects light, which can work well in smaller bathrooms. Acrylic is tougher than painted or foil finishes against everyday knocks and scratches, but tends to cost more. Bathroom furniture styles and colours Bathroom furniture comes in a wide range of shapes and styles, letting you personalise your space or match any existing décor. Traditional bathroom furniture draws on classic cabinetry details, such as shaker-style doors, curved legs and wood-effect finishes. It works well in period properties and bathrooms with freestanding baths or exposed pipework. Modern furniture favours clean lines, handle-free doors and matt or gloss finishes. A better fit for contemporary, newly built, or recently renovated spaces. Colour-wise, white remains the most practical choice for smaller rooms because it reflects light. Grey works well in most settings and pairs naturally with chrome or brushed brass. Black furniture makes a strong statement in larger or darker rooms, while gold-toned furniture suits traditional and maximalist schemes. Alternatively, colourful bathroom furniture, such as blues, greens and pinks, acts as the décor itself. How to install bathroom furniture Freestanding furniture is straightforward. Position it, level it, connect the plumbing. Most units arrive pre-assembled, which reduces fitting time considerably. Wall-hung units require a solid wall with adequate fixings, and the water supply and waste pipe positions need to be planned in advance. For any wall-hung unit or fitted run, we'd recommend using a qualified bathroom fitter. For more help installing your bathroom furniture yourself, read our step-by-step guide on how to install a vanity unit. How to protect bathroom furniture Good ventilation is the single most effective thing you can do. A bathroom that dries out quickly between uses puts far less strain on furniture. Keep an extractor fan running during and after showers, avoid leaving standing water on unit tops and wipe down surfaces that regularly get wet, particularly around sinks and the back of taps. With MFC furniture, especially, water sitting on poorly sealed edges will eventually cause swelling. Check silicone seals around basins annually and replace them when they start to look tired. How to choose furniture for a bathroom Start with the practical constraints, then narrow by style and budget. Here are the key things to consider: Available space and layout: Measure the length, width and height of the room and note where the soil pipe, water supply and windows are positioned. Account for the door swing and the clearance you'll need to use each unit comfortably. Slimline or small vanity units are worth considering if the room is tight. Storage needs: Think honestly about what you need to store. A vanity unit with drawers handles daily essentials, or if you need more room, a tallboy or wall-hung cabinet alongside it will add capacity without taking up much floor space. Bathroom style and colour scheme: Pick furniture that works with the rest of the room. Existing tiles, floor colour and the style of your sanitaryware all need to be considered. Matching your furniture finish to your taps and hardware is an easy way to give everything a coherent feel. Mounting type: Wall-hung furniture requires a suitable wall and some forward planning with your plumber. Whereas freestanding options are more flexible. Fitted furniture needs the most planning upfront, but gives the cleanest result. Special features: Soft-close hinges and drawers reduce noise and wear. Push-to-open mechanisms remove the need for handles, which works well in smaller rooms where you want to keep surfaces clean. And integrated lighting in mirrored cabinets is worth considering if you use the bathroom as a dressing space. Budget: MFC suits tight budgets in lower-traffic bathrooms, while solid wood is worth the investment if you want furniture that lasts decades. MDF with a painted or acrylic finish is the sweet spot for most main bathrooms. For a full breakdown on pricing, read our bathroom vanity units cost guide. Choosing the right bathroom furniture comes down to finding the right balance between practicality, durability and style. Focus on what works for your space, your storage needs and how the room is used day to day. Browse our full range of bathroom furniture online, or visit our Birmingham showroom to see the different styles and finishes in person. If you need more help choosing, our customer services team is always on hand to guide you.
Read Time 8 mins
How to get rid of mould in a bathroom (and keep it from coming back)
how to

How to get rid of mould in a bathroom (and keep it from coming back)

Black patches along the silicone around the bath. Spots creeping across the grout. A musty smell that hangs around after every shower. Bathroom mould is one of the most common household problems in the UK, and one of the most frustrating to deal with because it keeps returning if you only treat the surface. This guide covers what actually causes it, how to remove it from the surfaces it grows on, and what to change to prevent it from coming back. How to get rid of bathroom mould Before you start, open the window, get some air moving, and put on rubber gloves, a proper mask (FFP3 or better) and eye protection. Mould spores become airborne the moment you disturb the growth, and you don't want to breathe them in or catch them in your eyes. What you'll need •       Rubber gloves, a mask, and eye protection. •       A stiff brush. An old toothbrush works well on grout lines. •       Microfibre cloths and a bin bag for contaminated cloths. •       A spray bottle. •       One of the cleaning solutions below. Method one: white vinegar Good for light to moderate surface mould on tiles, glass, grout and sealant. Vinegar is acidic enough to kill around 82% of mould species, and it doesn't leave the toxic residue that bleach does. 1.     Pour undiluted white vinegar into a spray bottle. 2.     Spray directly onto the mould. Don't dilute it. Full strength works best. 3.     Leave for an hour. 4.     Scrub with a brush, focusing on grout lines and corners. 5.     Wipe clean with a damp cloth. 6.     Dry the surface thoroughly. Method two: baking soda paste Best for grout lines and textured surfaces, where vinegar runs off before it can work. 1.     Mix two tablespoons of baking soda with enough water to form a paste. 2.     Apply directly to the affected grout. 3.     Leave for 10 minutes. 4.     Scrub with an old toothbrush. 5.     Rinse and dry. A follow-up vinegar spray catches anything the baking soda missed. Don't mix them into a single solution, as they neutralise each other and lose most of their cleaning power. Method three: dedicated mould remover For stubborn black mould or larger affected areas, a commercial mould and mildew spray does the job faster. UK supermarkets and DIY shops stock HG, Cillit Bang, Dettol and Astonish mould sprays, among others. Follow the product instructions: some need rinsing after a set time; others are designed to dry onto the surface. When to use bleach (and when to avoid it) Bleach works well on non-porous surfaces such as ceramic tiles, shower trays, baths, and glass. It's less effective on grout, silicone, and painted plaster because it kills the surface growth without penetrating deeply enough to reach the roots. Use a solution of one part bleach to four parts water. One safety point that matters: Mixing bleach with vinegar releases chlorine gas; mixing it with ammonia releases chloramine gas. Both can cause serious respiratory injury. Cleaning mould off specific surfaces Different surfaces call for different approaches. The methods above are the basis. Below is how to adapt them to what you're actually cleaning. Tiles and grout Start with vinegar. If that doesn't shift it, move to a baking soda paste worked in with an old toothbrush. For grout that's stained beyond cleaning, a grout pen covers marks that won't come out. If the grout is crumbling or pulling away from the tile, the better option is to rake it out and apply new grout with a mould-resistant additive. Silicone sealant Mould that's gone deep into old silicone is the hardest to remove. Once it's embedded in the silicone itself, surface cleaning won't bring it back. The only permanent answer is to strip the old sealant out and reapply fresh. A silicone removal tool, a caulk gun, and a tube of mould-resistant bathroom sealant will cost under £20 combined, and the job takes an afternoon. If you'd rather not scrape the sealant out yourself, a toilet paper trick works surprisingly well on mild cases. Roll a few sheets into a sausage, soak it in bleach, lay it along the affected sealant, and leave it for 12 hours. Remove, rinse, and repeat if the mould is deep. Painted walls and ceilings Wash down with a vinegar spray or a dilute bleach solution. Once fully dry, apply a coat of anti-mould paint. Most UK DIY shops stock specialist bathroom paints that contain a fungicide. Anti-mould paint doesn't replace proper ventilation, though it does buy you time between deep cleans. If the paint is bubbling, flaking or peeling away from the plaster, there's water damage underneath. A coat of paint over that won't fix the problem for more than a few weeks. The damaged plaster needs cutting out, drying and replacing first. Shower screens and glass Vinegar spray, wipe with a microfibre cloth, dry. For prevention going forward, a squeegee after every shower takes fifteen seconds and stops limescale, soap scum and mould from building up in the first place. If the screen is past its best, a replacement is a worthwhile upgrade. Browse our range of shower enclosures. Shower curtains, bathmats and fabric Most modern shower curtains can be machine-washed at 60°C with standard detergent. A handful of white vinegar in the drum helps. Heavily mouldy curtains often aren't worth rescuing. New ones cost a few pounds and start clean. Bathmats follow the same rule. Wash hot, dry fully before putting them back, and hang them up after use rather than leaving them on the floor. Wet fabric on a cold tile is a reliable way to foster mould growth. Behind radiators, towel rails and fixtures Mould loves the gap behind a heated towel rail where air doesn't circulate. If you can reach the area with an extended duster or a long brush, clean it the same way you'd clean a wall. If the mould is heavy and you can't reach it properly, the rail or radiator may need to come off the wall to be dealt with. How to stop bathroom mould coming back This is the part most people skip, and it's why mould keeps returning. Cleaning the surface does nothing if the conditions that created it are still in place. Sort the ventilation first An extractor fan that actually works is the single most useful thing in a bathroom. If you've got one, check it's pulling air properly. Hold a sheet of toilet paper near the vent with the fan on. If it doesn't stick, the fan needs servicing or replacing. A stronger model with a humidistat is the upgrade worth paying for. A humidistat fan turns itself on when humidity rises above a set level, so it runs whether you remember to switch it on or not. If a fan isn't practical in your bathroom, open the window during and after every shower for at least ten minutes. Wipe down after every use A squeegee for the shower screen. A microfibre cloth for the tiles around the bath and the window. Drying out the wet zones after every use prevents the moisture from mould growing. Sounds like a faff; takes under a minute once it's a habit. Use a dehumidifier in hard cases Worth considering in flats, loft conversions and internal bathrooms with limited ventilation. A small compressor dehumidifier pulls moisture directly out of the air. Some models are designed for bathrooms specifically and sit happily in the corner. Anti-mould paint when redecorating Standard emulsion absorbs water vapour, which feeds mould. Anti-mould paint doesn't. If you're repainting the bathroom anyway, the upgrade costs a few pounds per tin and lasts for years. Plants that actually reduce humidity A short list of houseplants genuinely helps by absorbing moisture from the air and pulling mould spores out of the air passing by their leaves: •       Peace lily: Low light, tolerates neglect, good for bathrooms with small or no windows. Worth noting that peace lilies are toxic to cats and dogs if chewed. •       English ivy: Absorbs airborne mould spores. Works well in a hanging planter where it has room to trail. •       Snake plant: Nearly impossible to kill. Handles humidity without complaint. •       Boston fern. Needs more light, but excellent at pulling moisture from the air. •       Tillandsia (air plants): Absorb moisture directly through their leaves. Brilliant if you have a bright bathroom window. Clean regularly A proper bathroom clean once a week keeps mould from getting a foothold. Pay particular attention to corners, the sealant around the bath, and the grout between tiles. Most mould problems start small and spread because they go unnoticed for weeks. What causes mould in a bathroom? Mould spores are in the air of every home, outdoors and in. They only become visible growth when three things line up: moisture, a warm surface they can settle on, and enough time in those conditions to colonise. Bathrooms provide all three, which is why they're the most common mould hotspot in UK homes. The main culprit is condensation. Hot water from a shower creates steam. When that warm, wet air meets a colder surface (a tile, an external wall, a window), the moisture condenses into water and settles there. If the room doesn't have enough ventilation to clear it, the moisture sits long enough for spores to take hold. UK Government guidance identifies condensation as the leading cause of damp and mould in British homes. Other common causes: •       Leaking taps, pipes or toilet cisterns: Slow, hidden leaks keep surfaces wet for weeks without being noticed. •       Damaged silicone or grout: Once the seal around the bath or shower cracks, water gets behind it and mould grows where you can't easily reach. •       Poor or missing ventilation: No extractor fan, a fan that's stopped working, or a window that's never opened. •       Drying laundry indoors: A typical load releases around two litres of water into the air as it dries. If you've just moved into the house or the mould has appeared suddenly, check for a new leak before anything else. Removing the surface growth is pointless if water is still getting in behind the scenes. Is bathroom mould actually dangerous? Yes, and it's worth taking seriously. The NHS states that mould and damp can cause allergies, asthma attacks and respiratory infections. People most at risk include babies and young children, older adults, anyone with asthma or a skin condition, and people with weakened immune systems. Asthma + Lung UK reports that 43% of people with asthma say mould triggers their symptoms. If the mould covers more than around half a square metre, or if it's growing through the wall rather than sitting on the surface, that's the point to call in a professional rather than tackle it yourself. It's estimated that between 120,000 and 160,000 social homes in England have “notable” damp and mould problems, so if you're renting, you're not alone in dealing with it. Common questions about bathroom mould What kills mould in a bathroom permanently? Nothing kills mould permanently because spores are always present in the air. What you can do is remove the visible growth, fix the underlying moisture problem, and keep humidity low enough that spores can't colonise. Ventilation, surface drying and regular cleaning do more long-term work than any single cleaning product. Does vinegar actually kill mould? Yes, against the most common household mould species. White vinegar at full strength kills around 82% of mould types, including many found in UK bathrooms. It's less effective against some toxigenic moulds, which is the point at which a dedicated commercial product or a bleach solution becomes the better choice. Does bleach kill mould? On non-porous surfaces (tiles, shower trays, glass), yes. On porous surfaces (grout, silicone, painted plaster), it kills surface growth while allowing roots to regrow. Vinegar or a dedicated mould spray is a better choice for porous materials. What is the difference between mould and mildew? Mildew is the earlier, surface-level stage. Powdery or patchy, white, grey or yellowish. Easy to wipe off. Mould is a later, denser stage. Usually black, green or brown, and it has penetrated the material it's growing on. Mildew becomes mould if left alone for long enough. Why does mould keep coming back in my bathroom? Almost always because the underlying cause hasn't been addressed, check for a hidden leak, poor ventilation, cold spots on the walls (common on external walls and above old bay windows) or damaged sealant. Surface cleaning alone won't solve a moisture problem. How long does it take for mould to grow in a bathroom? Given the right conditions, it can take as little as 24 to 48 hours. That's why drying the bathroom out after use matters. Leave a wet bathroom overnight a few times, and a new colony can establish itself behind the sealant before you notice anything. Can I paint over black mould? Not directly. Paint over live mould flakes off within weeks because the fungal growth underneath continues. Kill and clean the mould first, let the surface dry fully, then apply an anti-mould paint. What's the best way to prevent mould on a bathroom ceiling? Ventilation during and after every shower, an extractor fan sited near the shower rather than over by the door, and a coat of anti-mould paint on the ceiling. If condensation collects heavily on the ceiling, insulation in the loft space above helps by keeping the ceiling surface warmer and reducing the temperature gap that causes condensation in the first place. When to call a professional Tackle the cleaning yourself if there's surface mould on tiles, grout, silicone, or paint, and it covers less than around half a square metre. Call in a damp specialist if: The mould keeps returning within weeks of cleaning. It's growing through the wall rather than sitting on the surface. You can see water damage (bulging plaster, flaking paint, wet patches) behind the mould. You've got a persistent leak you can't find. You're renting. Your landlord or letting agent has a legal obligation to address damp and mould under the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018. Shelter has practical guidance on how to raise it with your landlord. Mould that has penetrated plasterboard or structural timber is beyond a DIY fix. It needs to be removed at the source, and the damaged material replaced. When the bathroom needs more than a clean Most mould problems trace back to three things: ventilation, moisture and ageing fixtures. A weekly wipe handles the moisture. A working extractor fan handles the ventilation. The third, ageing fixtures, is where a bathroom eventually stops responding to cleaning. If that sounds familiar, our team at the Birmingham showroom can help you plan a replacement that holds up better to damp. Mould-resistant materials, properly fitted ventilation, and furniture built to last. Have a look at our bathroom suites, shower enclosures and bathroom furniture ranges, or book a showroom visit to talk through a refit with someone who's been fitting bathrooms for forty years.
Read Time 11 mins
Toilet Buying Guide
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Toilet Buying Guide

Buying a toilet might not be the most exciting part of a bathroom renovation, but choose the wrong one, and you'll notice it every single day. From the type of toilet and flush system to toilet seat sizes and outlet position, there's more to consider than most people realise. This guide covers everything you need to know to pick the right toilet for your space, household, and plumbing. The different parts of a toilet explained Before you start comparing models, it helps to know what you're looking at. Here's a quick breakdown of the key components. Toilet pan: Ever wondered What is a toilet pan?’ The toilet pan (also called the bowl) collects waste and connects to the soil pipe below or behind it. Cistern: The cistern is the tank that stores water used to flush the pan. It sits above or behind the pan, depending on the toilet type. Toilet seat: The toilet seat is the hinged cover fitted to the top of the pan. It comes in various shapes, materials, and finishes, and is usually sold separately. Toilet lid: The lid is the solid cover that sits on top of the toilet seat. Soft-close lids prevent slamming and are a popular upgrade. Flush valve: The flush valve is the internal mechanism inside the cistern that releases water into the pan when you flush. It controls the volume and speed of the flush. Fill valve: The fill valve (or ballcock) refills the cistern with water after each flush. A faulty fill valve is usually the cause of a constantly running toilet. Toilet trap: The trap is the curved section inside the pan that holds a small amount of water. This water seal prevents sewer gases from entering the bathroom. Toilet outlet: The outlet is the pipe connection at the base or rear of the pan that links to your soil pipe. The position of your outlet affects which toilet types will work in your bathroom. We’ll cover more on this in the 'How to choose a toilet' section. Flush plate or button: The flush plate is the panel, button, or lever used to activate the flush. On back-to-wall and wall-hung toilets, this is usually a push-plate mounted on the wall. Types of toilets There are several different types of toilets available in the UK, each suited to different bathroom layouts and design preferences. Here are the main ones and how they work. Close-coupled toilets: This is the most popular type of toilet in UK homes. The cistern sits directly on top of and connects straight to the pan. They’re straightforward to install and available in a wide range of styles. Back-to-wall toilets: The pan sits flush against the wall with the cistern concealed inside a wall cavity or a piece of back-wall furniture. They’re clean-lined and ideal for modern bathrooms. Wall-hung toilets: The pan is mounted directly onto the wall with no floor contact, and the cistern is hidden within the wall. This frees up floor space and makes cleaning much easier. Short projection toilets: A compact version of standard toilets designed to project less from the wall. These are a good choice for tight spaces or smaller cloakrooms where toilet width and depth matter. Comfort height toilets: Taller than a standard toilet, sitting closer to chair height. They’re designed for users with reduced mobility, joint pain, or those who are taller, making them well-suited to family or accessible bathrooms. Corner toilets: The cistern is angled to fit neatly into a corner, maximising floor space in awkward or small bathroom layouts. Rimless toilets: The rim has been removed from the bowl entirely, leaving a smooth inner surface. This means water is distributed evenly around the bowl for a more effective flush. They’re easier to clean and more hygienic than rimmed toilets. WC units: A toilet combined with a storage unit or furniture piece, typically a floor-standing cabinet that houses the cistern. This keeps pipework hidden and adds storage to the space. Toilet shapes and bowls Toilet bowl types vary more than most people realise, and the toilet shape you choose affects both comfort and fit. Not all pans are interchangeable, so it's worth understanding the options before you buy. Round bowls: Compact and traditional in shape. Their shorter projection from the wall makes them a practical option for smaller bathrooms and cloakrooms. Elongated (oval) bowls: Have a longer front-to-back than a round bowl, providing more seating surface. They’re generally considered more comfortable for adults and better suited to larger bathrooms. D-shaped bowls: A flat edge at the back with a curved front. Widely used with back-to-wall and wall-hung toilets for a contemporary, geometric look. P-trap vs S-trap pans:  This refers to the shape of the outlet, not the bowl itself. A P-trap exits horizontally through the wall; an S-trap exits vertically through the floor. The position of your existing soil pipe determines which one you need. This is covered in more detail in the 'How to choose a toilet' section. Toilet styles and colours Most toilets are white, and for good reason. White is timeless, works with every colour scheme, and is easy to replace or match if needed. At Bathroom City, the majority of our range is available in white ceramic. Toilet seats, however, offer more room for personalisation. You can choose from white gloss, soft grey, and wood-effect finishes, including oak and walnut tones. Soft-close seats are available across most styles, adding a quiet, premium feel to any toilet. For a bold look, some of our ranges pair beautifully with black bathroom or gold bathroom fixtures. Matching your toilet seat finish to your taps and accessories is an easy way to pull a bathroom scheme together. How to choose a toilet seat The toilet seat is one of the most replaced items in any bathroom. Choosing the right one means matching it correctly to your existing pan, as not all seats are compatible with all toilets. Are all toilet seats the same size? No. Toilet seat sizes vary based on the shape and dimensions of the pan. This is one of the most common mistakes people make when buying a replacement seat. How do I know what toilet seat to buy? Start by identifying your pan shape (round, oval, D-shaped, or square). Then measure the pan: take the length from the front edge to the centre of the fixing holes at the back, and measure the widest point across the front. Use this as your toilet seat sizes guide when shopping. Most product pages list compatible pan dimensions. If in doubt, check the brand and model of your toilet, as many manufacturers sell matching seats directly. For more advice, read our guide to fitting a toilet seat. Types of toilet systems The flush system determines how water is delivered from the cistern to the pan. Understanding the different types of toilet systems helps you choose one that matches your water pressure and usage needs. Gravity-fed systems: These are the most common system in UK homes. Water drops from the cistern into the pan using gravity. They’re reliable and low maintenance, but dependent on adequate water pressure for a strong flush. Pressure-assisted systems: Use compressed air inside the cistern to force water into the bowl more powerfully. They’re better suited to homes with lower water pressure or high-traffic bathrooms where a strong flush is needed consistently. Dual-flush systems: Offer two flush options: a smaller half-flush for liquid waste and a full flush for solid waste. Dual flush is now standard on most modern toilets sold in the UK as a practical way to reduce water usage. Macerator systems: An external pump unit that breaks down waste and pumps it through smaller-bore pipework. This makes it possible to install a toilet almost anywhere in a property, including a basement or a room without direct access to a soil stack. They’re more expensive to install and maintain, but highly flexible. Toilet flush types Once you've settled on a system, you'll also choose how the flush is activated. Your choice here is largely dictated by the toilet type and style you've already selected. Button flush is the most common modern option. This usually comprises a dual-flush button on top of the cistern, or a flush plate on the wall for concealed cistern toilets. They’re easy to use and clean. A lever flush is typically found on traditional or classic-style toilets, with a side-mounted handle that activates the flush for a more period-appropriate look. A chain flush is the traditional pull-chain found on high-level cisterns, often seen in Victorian-style bathrooms, adding character while remaining practical. How to choose a toilet Now that you’re familiar with the different toilet types and options, here's what to think through before you buy: 1. Who will be using it?  Consider your household. If you have elderly family members or anyone with mobility needs, comfort height toilets sit around 400–450mm from the floor to the seat and are significantly easier to use than standard-height models. Standard toilets sit at roughly 350–380mm, which is comfortable for most adults and more accessible for children. 2. Your existing décor A traditional high-cistern toilet looks out of place in a sleek modern bathroom. Match the style of your toilet to your wider scheme. Take a look at our bathroom suites to keep everything cohesive. 3. Your existing plumbing and outlet type This is the most technical part of choosing a toilet, and the one most likely to cause problems if you get it wrong. You need to identify: Outlet position: Is your soil pipe in the floor (requiring an S-trap or bottom outlet pan) or in the wall (requiring a P-trap or back-outlet pan)? If you already have a close-coupled toilet, the existing pan’s outlet position will indicate which replacement toilet you need. Outlet distance from the wall: Measure the distance from the finished wall to the centre of your soil pipe (known as the rough-in measurement). Standard UK toilets typically assume a rough-in of around 200–250mm, but this varies. Back-to-wall toilets require the soil pipe to be within the wall or furniture unit. Pipe diameter: Most UK homes use a 100mm or 110mm soil pipe. Check this before specifying a new toilet. If you're unsure about your plumbing setup, it's worth consulting a plumber before purchasing. 4. Space available  Measure carefully before you buy. You need to know three things: Toilet width: Measure the widest point of the bathroom space where the toilet will sit. Standard toilet widths range from around 360mm to 400mm. Projection (depth): Measure from the wall to the furthest point the toilet will extend. Standard projections are roughly 600–700mm. Short-projection toilets can be as shallow as 490mm, making a real difference in tight cloakrooms. Height: Check the total height, including the cistern. Wall-hung toilets can be set at any height during installation, which is worth considering. Building regulations require a minimum of 600mm from the front of the toilet to any opposing wall, and 200mm from the side of the toilet to any wall or obstruction. Always confirm your measurements before ordering. 5. Your water pressure If you’re on a low-pressure gravity-fed system, a pressure-assisted flush or a modern siphon cistern will perform better than a standard gravity model. Check your water pressure before committing to a high-end flush system. Choosing a toilet doesn't need to be complicated once you understand the options. Take your measurements, confirm your outlet type, and consider who'll be using the bathroom every day. For more advice, explore our toilet guides, or browse our available toilets in person at our Birmingham showroom, or discover the full range online. If you need more help choosing, get in touch with our team by calling us on 0121 753 0700.
Read Time 9 mins
Bathroom Basin Buying Guide
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Bathroom Basin Buying Guide

Basins are a key component of any bathroom. They’re not just about style; your basin affects how your space functions day to day. With so many shapes, sizes, and installation types available, it’s worth understanding your options before you buy. This guide covers everything you need to know, from the different types of bathroom sinks to sizes, materials, waste types, and how to choose the best option for your home. What is a basin?  A basin is simply another word for a bathroom sink. It's the unit you use to wash your hands and face, brush your teeth, and carry out your daily routine. Basins come in a wide range of styles, shapes, and types, making them one of the most varied products in any bathroom. Types of basins  There are more types of bathroom sinks available than most people realise. The style you choose will largely depend on your space, your plumbing setup, and how you want the bathroom to look and function. ·       Pedestal basins: A basin supported by a full-length pedestal that runs from the floor to the rim, concealing all pipework neatly beneath. ·       Semi-pedestal basins: The basin is wall-fixed with a shorter pedestal that covers only the waste pipe, giving a cleaner, more contemporary look than a full pedestal. ·        Semi-recessed basins: The basin sits partially within a vanity unit and partially overhangs it, saving space while still offering useful worktop and storage space beneath. ·       Wall-hung basins: Fixed directly to the wall with no pedestal, leaving the floor space beneath completely clear. They’re ideal for smaller bathrooms and easy to keep clean. ·       Countertop basins: Designed to sit on top of a surface or vanity unit rather than being set into it, creating a bold, design-led focal point in the bathroom. ·       Vanity unit basins: A basin integrated into or paired with a vanity unit, combining the sink with storage below. These are a practical and popular choice for most bathrooms. ·       Corner basins: Designed to fit neatly into a corner, making them the most space-efficient option for cloakrooms and compact bathrooms. See our corner vanity units for paired options. ·        Inset basins (fully recessed): Set flush into a worktop or vanity unit surface for a sleek, streamlined finish with minimal spillage onto surrounding surfaces. ·       Washstands: A freestanding frame or unit that supports the basin, giving an open, furniture-style look. Bathroom basin sizes Basin size matters more than people often think. Choose one that's too large, and it can overwhelm the room or make it difficult to move around. Too small, and it becomes impractical for daily use. The width of a basin is the most important measurement to check against your available wall space, but you also need to factor in projection (how far it sticks out from the wall) and depth, particularly if you're planning to fit a vanity unit beneath it. What is the standard bathroom sink size? Standard bathroom sink sizes typically range from 450mm to 600mm in width. A 500mm or 600mm basin is the most commonly fitted size in a family bathroom, offering a practical surface area without taking up too much room. If space is tight, sink sizes as narrow as 350mm to 400mm are available and work well in cloakrooms. Explore our small vanity units for compact spaces. How high should a bathroom sink be?  Bathroom basin height is worth measuring carefully before you buy. The standard bathroom sink height from floor to rim is around 800mm to 850mm, which suits most adults comfortably. As a general rule, the basin should sit at roughly waist height so you're not having to hunch over or stretch up. If children or elderly family members will be using the bathroom regularly, a slightly lower position or an adjustable washstand is worth considering. Sink depths Sink dimensions aren't just about width and height. The depth of the bowl (measured from the rim down to the base) affects how much you can fill the basin and how it can be used. Most standard basins have a bowl depth of between 150mm and 200mm. A shallower basin can cause more splashing, while a deeper bowl tends to be more practical, especially if you're filling it to wash your face or rinse items. Bathroom sink shapes and styles Basins come in a wide range of shapes, and the one you choose will have a noticeable effect on the overall look and feel of your bathroom. Round and oval basinshave a softer, more approachable look. They work well in traditional bathrooms and tend to suit classic pedestal or semi-pedestal styles. A round or oval basin works well if you're going for a period or vintage feel. Square and rectangular basinshave clean, straight lines that suit modern and contemporary bathrooms. They pair particularly well with wall-hung vanity units, countertop styles, and frameless mirrors. If you're after a minimalist or urban look, a square or rectangular basin is likely the better choice. Corner basinsare their own category in terms of shape but are worth mentioning, as their angular design is purely functional, making the most of a corner space in a cloakroom or compact bathroom. Bathroom basin materials The material your basin is made of affects its durability, appearance, and how easy it is to maintain. Here's a breakdown of the most common options. ·        Ceramic: The most popular choice by far. It’s durable, easy to clean, resistant to scratches and stains, and available in a wide range of shapes and sizes. ·        Porcelain: A denser, higher-fired version of ceramic that produces a glossier finish. It’s slightly harder-wearing, but more expensive than standard ceramic. ·        Vitreous china: A ceramic material coated with a glassy enamel during firing. This produces a very smooth, non-porous surface that's highly resistant to staining and easy to wipe down. ·        Glass: Toughened glass basins offer a sleek, contemporary look and are particularly effective as countertop bowls. However, they require more regular cleaning to prevent water spots. ·        Natural stone: Marble, granite, and travertine basins bring a genuine sense of luxury to a bathroom. They’re heavy and premium in price, but each one is unique. Make sure your surface or vanity unit can support the weight before installing. ·        Stainless steel: More common in commercial settings, but used in minimalist bathroom designs. They’re lightweight and long-lasting, though prone to visible water marks and light scratching over time. Basin waste types Before you buy a basin, check what type of waste it requires. This is easy to overlook, but fitting the wrong waste type can cause real problems. Basin wastes are not always included with the basin itself, so you’ll likely need to buy the correct one at the same time. ·       Slotted basin waste:‘What is a slotted basin waste?’ is one of the most commonly asked questions. A slotted waste has small slots or holes cut into the plug fitting. These slots allow water to drain through the basin's overflow hole, preventing flooding if the tap is left running. A slotted waste must be used with any basin that has an overflow. ·       Unslotted waste: Used on basins without an overflow. Because there's no overflow to drain through, the waste has no slots. Fitting a slotted waste on a basin without an overflow, or vice versa, will cause drainage issues. ·       Pop-up waste: A lever or push mechanism raises and lowers the plug automatically. Often included with mixer taps, these give a neat, integrated finish with no loose plug to misplace. ·       Click-clack (push-button) waste: The plug is pushed down to close and pushed again to open. They’re simple and effective, with no external controls required. ·       Plug and chain: The traditional option. A rubber or metal plug on a chain sits over the waste hole. They’re straightforward and easy to replace when needed. How to choose a basin With so many options available, it helps to work through a few key considerations before you make a decision. 1.     Consider your space:Measure the wall space available, the projection into the room, and the floor space below. If space is limited, a wall-hung basin or a corner basin will give you more room to move. For more inspiration, read our blog on small bathroom ideas. 2.     Think about your plumbing:The mounting type you choose will determine how your pipework needs to be configured. Wall-hung and pedestal basins expose pipework differently. Some options, such as countertop basins on a vanity unit, are easier to install in certain layouts than others. 3.      Choose your mounting type:Wall-hung basins require fixings into the wall and must be anchored securely, as they carry weight without a floor-mounted support. Pedestal and vanity-mounted basins are generally more straightforward to install. 4.      Decide how many tap holes you need:Most modern basins come with a single tap hole, designed for a mono mixer tap. If you prefer separate hot and cold taps, you'll need a basin with two tap holes. Three tap holes are used for a three-piece tap set. Check this before purchasing your taps. 5.      Think about who will be using it:Standard bathroom basin height suits most adults, but if the basin is for a child's bathroom or for someone who struggles with standard heights, it's worth considering an adjustable washstand or planning a lower installation position. 6.     Don't forget the accessories:You'll need to purchase a basin waste separately in most cases, and you may also need a bottle trap or pipe cover to keep the plumbing tidy beneath a wall-hung basin. You may also want to consider the material and colour of your taps. If you need help deciding which basin is right for your bathroom, our team is on hand to advise. Browse our full basin rangeonline to explore all styles and sizes, or visit our Birmingham showroom to see the products in person.
Read Time 7 mins
Bathroom Taps Buying Guide
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Bathroom Taps Buying Guide

Taps are one of the few things in a bathroom you use multiple times a day, so getting the choice right matters. This guide covers the different types of taps available, how they're sized and threaded, what they're made from, and what to think about before you buy. Whether you're fitting a new basin from scratch or replacing an existing tap, you'll find everything you need here to make a confident decision. Types of taps  There's a lot more to choose from than you might expect. Bathroom tap types are broadly split by location (basin or bath), by how hot and cold water is controlled, and by how they're mounted. Here's a quick breakdown of each. ·       Basin taps: Individual hot and cold taps designed for basins. Traditional in style, they require two tap holes in the basin or worktop and are a common choice for classic and period-inspired bathrooms. ·       Basin mixer taps: One of the most popular tap types for contemporary bathrooms. Hot and cold water mix inside the body of the tap, delivering blended water through a single spout. They only require one tap hole. ·       Wall-mounted taps: Fixed directly into the wall rather than the basin or deck. They give a clean, uncluttered look around the basin and work well in contemporary settings. Pipework is concealed within the wall, so professional installation is recommended. ·       Bath taps: Taps designed specifically for filling the bath. Available in a wide range of styles from modern pillar taps to more ornate traditional designs. They usually have separate hot and cold fittings. ·        Bath mixer taps: Blend hot and cold water before it exits the spout, giving precise temperature control. They’re a practical and popular choice for family bathrooms where scalding is a concern. ·       Bath-shower mixer taps: Combine a bath filler with a hand shower attachment, typically with a diverter to switch between the two. They’re a good space-saving option if you want shower functionality without a separate installation. ·       Tall basin taps: Taller than standard basin taps, designed specifically for use with countertop basins. The additional height means the spout clears the rim of a vessel or countertop basin cleanly. ·       Freestanding bathroom taps: Floor-mounted and positioned beside a freestanding bath rather than on it. They make a strong visual statement and work best alongside freestanding baths where the bath deck is clear. ·       Waterfall taps: Water flows in a wide, flat sheet rather than a pressurised stream. They are available for both basins and baths, and are often chosen as a design feature in contemporary bathrooms. Tap handle types  The handle controls the flow and temperature, and affects both usability and appearance. Lever handles are the most common choice today and are easy to operate with one hand. Cross-head handles (four-pointed) suit traditional tap styles, while knurled or round handles offer a more minimal, architectural feel. Thermostatic cartridge taps have a single lever that controls both flow and temperature simultaneously. If anyone in the household has limited grip strength, lever handles are the most practical option. Bath tap sizes Most bath tap dimensions follow standard sizing, with tap bodies typically ranging from around 150mm to 200mm in height and spout reaches of 100mm to 200mm. The key measurement is the distance between tap holes: 180mm centres is the most common spacing for bath taps. Basins vary more, so always check the tap hole diameter (usually 22mm to 35mm) and the distance between holes before buying. How to measure bath tap size If you're replacing an existing tap, measure the diameter of the existing tap hole (the hole in the basin or bath), then measure the distance between the centres of the two holes if applicable. This is your tap hole centres measurement. For deck-mounted taps, also check the thickness of the surface the tap will be mounted through, as some tap tails require adequate length to pass through and connect below. These measurements determine which taps will physically fit. Bath tap thread sizes Thread size refers to the size of the threaded connection on the tap tails (the pipes coming down from the tap body) that attach to your supply pipes. Getting this wrong means your tap won't connect to your existing plumbing without additional adaptors. The most common bathroom tap thread size in the UK is 1/2 inch BSP (British Standard Pipe). This fits the vast majority of basin and bath taps. Some larger bath taps use 3/4 inch BSP tails, particularly those with a higher flow rate. To measure a thread size, count the number of thread peaks across a 1 inch length of the tap tail, or use a thread gauge if you have one. Alternatively, a plumber can identify the size quickly during a pre-installation check. If you're replacing like-for-like, your existing tap tails will tell you everything you need to know. If in doubt, check the product specification or speak to our team for more help. Bathroom tap materials and finishes The body of most bathroom taps is solid brass. It's durable, resistant to corrosion and holds its shape under constant use. Lower-quality taps may use zinc alloy, which is lighter but less long-lasting. The finish is applied over the brass and determines the colour and surface texture. Chromeis the most widely available finish, as it’s easy to clean and suits most bathroom styles. Blackand gold/brasstap finishes are increasingly popular, particularly in contemporary and traditional schemes. Brushed nickel sits between the two, with a softer, matte appearance that tends to show fewer watermarks. Consider your existing bathroom décor and other fittings when choosing. How to fit a bath tap Tap fitting is a straightforward job for a qualified plumber, and we always recommend using one. Turn off the water supply at the mains or isolation valves before starting. Remove the old tap if replacing, clean the mounting surface, feed the new tap tails through the tap hole, and secure with the back nut and washer provided. Connect the hot and cold supply pipes to the correct tails (hot on the left, cold on the right as standard), and check for leaks before restoring the water supply. All fixings required for installation are included with your tap. What to consider when choosing bathroom taps A few practical questions will narrow down your choice considerably. Here are some of the main things to think about. 1.      Water pressure:Some tap types, particularly those with flow restrictors or certain thermostatic cartridges, require a minimum water pressure to function correctly. Check the tap's minimum pressure requirements against your home's water pressure before purchasing. If you're unsure, a plumber can test your system. 2.      Where the tap is going:Basin taps and bath taps are designed for different flow rates and spout heights. Different types of taps are not always interchangeable across applications, so confirm the tap's rating before ordering. 3.      Colour and finish:Match your tap finish to your other fittings, such as towel rails, shower fittings and accessories. Mixing finishes can work, but keeping hardware consistent across the room gives a more considered result. 4.      Installation and plumbing:Wall-mounted taps require pipework to be routed into the wall before tiling. Freestanding taps need supply pipes routed through the floor. Factor in the complexity and cost of the installation when choosing a tap type, not just the purchase price. 5.      How many tap holes your basin or bath has:This is non-negotiable. A mixer tap needs one hole; twin taps need two. Some basins come pre-drilled with one, two or three holes. Check the spec on your basin before choosing your tap, or browse basins with your preferred tap hole count in mind. Choosing the right tap comes down to a handful of practical checks: how many holes your basin or bath has, what finish matches your fittings, and whether your water pressure suits the tap you want. Get those right, and the rest is personal preference. Browse our full bathroom taps rangeonline, or if you need more guidance, visit our Birmingham showroom where our team can help you find the right fit.
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