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- Home /
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- Non-Slip Shower Trays
Non-Slip Shower Trays
Safety is built in, not added as an afterthought. Our non-slip shower trays feature a textured surface that delivers underfoot grip, even when conditions are wet. A practical choice for family bathrooms, accessible bathrooms, and anyone who wants a safer morning shower.
It comes down to what's underfoot. Non-slip shower trays have a raised or embossed texture built directly into the floor of the tray, creating friction between wet feet and the surface below. Smooth trays get slippery; textured ones don't, and unlike a bath mat, there's nothing to buy, move, or wring out afterwards. Some trays use a patterned moulded base, others a specifically engineered finish. Think of them as different routes to the same destination: a shower floor that holds its grip, whether you're in there for two minutes or twenty.
The non-slip surface doesn’t change anything about how a tray fits or seals, so compatibility isn’t the issue; size and shape are. Rectangle shower trays pair with rectangle enclosures, quadrant shower trays with quadrant or offset quadrant enclosures. If you’re buying both together, it’s always best to take a couple of minutes to check the dimensions before you order.
Mostly acrylic or stone resin, although they're quite different in practice. Acrylic is lightweight, warm underfoot, and easy to install; it suits most projects and most budgets without any real compromise. Stone resin is a different proposition entirely. Heavier, more solid underfoot, and with a surface that holds its finish over years of daily use, it's the kind of tray you stop noticing because it just gets on with the job. They’ll both keep you firmly on your feet, so the choice really comes down to budget, how the tray is being installed, and which one feels right when you actually stand on it.
Everyone, really. They suit family bathrooms with young children, accessible bathrooms, and wet room setups particularly well, but we’ll all benefit from slip-free showers.
Practically the same as any other tray, with one thing worth knowing before you reach for the cleaning cupboard. The textured surface that gives you grip also gives limescale and soap residue somewhere to settle, so a quick wipe-down after use is worth the habit. For a deeper clean, a non-abrasive cleaner and a soft brush do the job well. Where it gets important: avoid abrasive pads. They wear the texture down over time, and a smooth, non-slip tray is just a tray.
The same process as any standard tray. It sits on a mortar bed or adjustable feet, gets levelled, and is sealed to the wall with silicone. Comfortable territory for an experienced fitter and manageable for a confident DIYer. Our guide on how to fit a shower tray covers everything in detail.
It depends on the setup. Most wet rooms use a fully tiled floor with a recessed drain, where a non-slip tile finish is the better fit. If you're working with a low-profile tray in a wet room-style space, a non-slip surface makes good sense, especially where the surrounding floor gets wet too. If you're weighing up the options, our team can help point you in the right direction.