Skip to content
Free Delivery on Orders over £50
0% Finance Available
Shop by Colour

Pink Bathrooms

Pink in a bathroom is the choice that surprises everyone — including the person who chose it. It's not the pink of the 1950s and it's not the pink of a child's bedroom. It's soft blush, dusky rose and muted powder tones that bring a warmth to the room that no other colour quite manages. Pink softens hard surfaces, flatters skin tones in the mirror, and creates a bathroom that feels genuinely different from every other room in the house. It pairs beautifully with brushed brass for warmth, matt black for edge, and white for freshness.
Shop all
OUR END-TO-END DESIGN SERVICE
Your dream bathroom, designed around you
Creating a beautiful bathroom should feel exciting, not overwhelming. Our end-to-end design service combines expert guidance, considered planning and curated products to bring your vision to life seamlessly.
Learn More

Pink bathrooms

Pink is the colour people are most nervous about choosing — and most glad they did. The hesitation is understandable. Pink carries associations that don't feel like they belong in a bathroom. But the pinks used in modern bathroom design are a long way from the pinks people picture. Soft blush, dusky rose, muted powder — these are warm, sophisticated tones that sit closer to a nude neutral than to anything childish or kitsch. In a room full of white ceramic and hard surfaces, pink adds a softness and warmth that grey, black and white simply don't reach.

Choosing your shade of pink

The shade makes all the difference. Soft blush pink is the lightest and most versatile — barely there, almost neutral, it adds warmth without announcing itself. It works in any room size and won't overwhelm a small space. Powder pink is a step richer — more visibly pink with a slightly dusty quality that feels contemporary and considered. Dusky rose is the deepest — a muted, warm tone with a hint of mauve that creates a more intimate, cocooning atmosphere. Each shade shifts the mood, but all three share the same quality — a warmth that makes the bathroom feel softer and more inviting than any cool neutral can.

Pink and brushed brass

If pink has a soulmate in brassware, it's brushed brass. The warm gold tone of brass lifts against the warm pink, creating a combination that feels luxurious, feminine and sophisticated without being precious. Blush pink furniture with brushed brass taps and accessories creates a soft, elegant room. Dusky rose with brushed brass feels richer and more intimate. The pairing works because both colours sit in the same warm tonal family — they complement rather than contrast.

Pink and matt black

For a sharper, more contemporary look, pink furniture with matt black brassware creates a combination that's unexpected and confident. The black sharpens the softness of the pink and adds an edge that stops the room feeling too gentle. Blush pink with matt black feels modern and graphic. Powder pink with matt black feels fashion-forward and intentional. It's the pairing that gives pink its backbone — proof that soft doesn't mean safe.

Pink and chrome

Chrome on pink creates the brightest, freshest combination. The cool shine of chrome plays against the warmth of pink, keeping the room feeling light and contemporary rather than warm and cosy. It's the most versatile pairing — chrome doesn't add warmth the way brass does or weight the way black does, so the pink stays the clear protagonist. If you want the room to feel clean and modern with pink as a colour accent rather than a mood setter, chrome is the finish to choose.

Pink and white

Pink furniture against white tiles and white sanitaryware is the simplest and most effective way to introduce the colour. The white brightens the pink and keeps the room feeling fresh rather than enclosed. White marble-effect tiles with blush pink furniture feels spa-like and premium. White metro tiles with powder pink feels contemporary and playful. The white provides the breathing room that lets the pink be pink without the room feeling saturated.

Pink furniture

Our pink furniture range includes wall hung vanity units, WC units, tall boy storage and in some collections fitted furniture runs. The finishes are matt — smooth, soft and non-reflective, which showcases the subtlety of the pink tone better than a gloss surface would. Matt pink absorbs light gently, giving the colour a depth and warmth that gloss would flatten with reflection. Wall hung pink furniture is particularly effective — floating against a light wall, the colour becomes a soft, defined focal point.

Pink in different room sizes

Blush pink works in any room size — it's light enough to keep a compact en suite or cloakroom feeling open. Powder pink works best in medium to larger rooms where the slightly richer tone has space to breathe without dominating. Dusky rose suits larger bathrooms with good natural light, where the depth of colour creates atmosphere without the room feeling closed in. In a small room, keep the pink to the furniture and let the walls, floor and tiles stay light. In a larger room, you can extend the pink to more surfaces.

Pink in different bathroom styles

Pink adapts to more styles than people expect. In a modern bathroom, blush pink with matt black brassware and large format white tiles feels sharp and contemporary. In a Scandi space, soft pink with warm wood accents and brushed brass feels light and organic. In an art deco-inspired room, dusky rose with gold hardware and geometric tiles feels glamorous and rich. In a minimalist bathroom, a single blush pink vanity with handleless drawers and chrome taps feels like a deliberate, confident accent.

Will pink date?

Pink's presence in interior design runs in cycles, but the current wave of muted, sophisticated pinks is proving more durable than previous trends because the shades are closer to neutrals than to fashion colours. A soft blush or dusky rose doesn't scream a specific year the way a hot pink or candy pink would. Paired with timeless brassware and neutral tiles, a muted pink bathroom ages gracefully. The key is choosing a shade that feels like a warm neutral rather than a statement colour — something you'd be happy to see first thing on a Monday morning, not just on a Pinterest board.

Need help choosing?

Pink is a colour that looks different on every screen and changes noticeably under different lighting. A blush that looks barely there on your phone might look distinctly pink under warm bathroom lighting — or almost grey under cool light. Visit our Birmingham showroom to see pink furniture in person alongside different brassware and tile options, or call us on 0121 753 0700 and we'll help you find the right shade for your room.

What shades of pink bathroom furniture do you offer?

We offer soft blush pink, powder pink and dusky rose across different collections. Each shade has a different warmth and intensity. Visit our showroom to see them in person — pink is one of the colours that shifts most between screens and real life.

What brassware finish pairs best with pink bathrooms?

Brushed brass is the most flattering pairing — warm gold against warm pink feels luxurious and natural. Matt black adds sharpness and a contemporary edge. Chrome keeps things light and fresh. All three work well — the choice depends on whether you want the room to feel warm, edgy or bright.

Does pink work in a small bathroom?

Yes, if you choose the right shade. Soft blush pink is light enough for compact en suites and cloakrooms without the room feeling closed in. Keep walls and tiles light to let the pink breathe. Deeper shades like dusky rose work better in larger rooms with more natural light.

Is pink bathroom furniture available in gloss?

Most of our pink furniture is matt finish — smooth and non-reflective, which best showcases the subtlety and depth of muted pink tones. Gloss pink is not widely available in our current range.

What tiles work best with pink bathroom furniture?

White tiles in any format are the cleanest, freshest pairing. White marble-effect tiles add a spa-like quality. Warm beige and cream tiles create a soft, tonal palette. Light grey tiles add contemporary contrast. Avoid very cool grey or blue-toned tiles which can clash with the warmth of pink.

Will a pink bathroom look childish?

Not with muted tones. Blush, powder and dusky rose pinks are sophisticated, warm neutrals that sit closer to nude than to candy pink. Paired with quality brassware, neutral tiles and minimal accessories, a pink bathroom looks refined and considered — the opposite of childish.

Can I build a complete pink bathroom?

Yes. We offer pink vanity units, WC units, tall boy storage, and in some collections complete pink bathroom suites with coordinated brassware and accessories. Browse by collection to find complete pink bathroom packages.

Trustpilot Rated Excellent!
Don’t take our word for it, read our customer reviews
Free Delivery
on orders over £50 to most of the UK
0% Interest-Free Credit
for 6 months on orders over £300
Showroom Open 7 Days a Week
We’d love to see you to discuss your dream bathroom