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Minimalist Bathrooms

Minimalist bathrooms stripped back to their core function. Integrated basins. Hidden cisterns. Monochrome palettes. Single-material surfaces that run uninterrupted. Explore minimalist bathroom ideas. 

 

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What makes a bathroom minimalist

Minimalism focuses on stripping everything back. In a bathroom, the discipline shows up everywhere you'd usually see hardware. Handles vanish. Cisterns sit inside the walls. Basins get carved straight into the vanity top, so the join disappears. The roots are in mid-century art and architecture, though it took decades for the look to reach domestic bathrooms. 

The key elements of a minimalist bathroom

A minimalist bathroom hides almost everything. Basins get carved into the vanity top, joins included. Toilets and vanity units hang from the wall, cisterns sealed inside. Cupboards push open without handles. Drainage runs through linear slots cut into the floor. The room reads as a single architectural piece.

The shower in a minimalist bathroom

A minimalist shower is part of the room's architecture. Walk-in with no tray, the floor tiled continuously into the shower zone, the drainage running through a linear slot at the back. Glass either frameless or absent entirely where the layout allows a walk-in wet room. Showerhead recessed into the ceiling where the plumbing supports it.

Colour palettes for a minimalist bathroom

Minimalist palettes work in monochrome. The whole room often runs in a single material family. Off-white walls, off-white stone, off-white grout. Or all greige. Or all charcoal. Depth comes from texture and light. When contrast appears, it's architectural and deliberate: a black tap against a stone wall, a single black handle on a pale vanity.

Surfaces, fittings and finishes

Tile choice in a minimalist bathroom is about reducing joints. Large-format slabs on the floor and walls, ideally the same material running across both. Matching grout. Single-material vanity tops. For taps, matt black, brushed steel or PVD finishes hold the architectural line. 

Explore more bathroom styles

Minimalist isn't the only direction worth considering. Modern for the loose interpretation of the same principles. Japandi for natural materials and warmth. Industrial for stripped-back architectural schemes. Explore each style on its own page.

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