Shop by Room
Every bathroom starts with the room. The size, the shape, who uses it and what it needs to do — these are the things that determine which products actually work and which ones just look good in a photo. We've organised our collections by room type so you can start with the space you've got and find products that are designed for it. Whether you're fitting out a compact en suite, making the most of a cloakroom under the stairs, building a shower room in a loft conversion, or planning a family bathroom that handles the morning rush — browse by room below and see what fits.
Your dream bathroom, designed around you
Shop by room
Choosing bathroom products is easier when you start with the room rather than the product. A toilet that works perfectly in a family bathroom might be too deep for a cloakroom. A shower enclosure that looks stunning in a wet room might not fit in an en suite. Starting with the room type narrows your options to products that will actually fit, function and look right in the space you're working with.
En suite bathrooms
An en suite is your private bathroom — connected to the bedroom, used by one or two people, and usually more compact than the main bathroom. The products that work best here are wall hung furniture, short projection toilets, compact shower enclosures and space-saving storage. En suite suites bring everything together in one coordinated package so the room feels intentional rather than assembled from leftovers.
Small bathrooms
A small bathroom can be anywhere in the house — a downstairs bathroom, a converted cupboard, a compact family bathroom. The challenge is the same wherever it is: making a tight space work without it feeling cramped. Wall hung vanity units from 400mm wide, corner shower enclosures, combination units and slimline storage are the products that earn their place in a room where every centimetre counts.
Cloakrooms
The cloakroom is usually the smallest room in the house and the one that gets the most visitors. It needs a toilet, a basin, and not much else — but getting those two pieces right in a room that might be under a metre wide takes more thought than it sounds. Cloakroom-specific products are designed for exactly this: slim vanity units, short projection toilets, corner basins and compact furniture that fits the tightest layouts.
Shower rooms
A shower room is a bathroom built entirely around showering — no bath, no compromise. Without a bath taking up the longest wall, you get more room for a generous enclosure, better furniture and proper storage. Shower rooms suit loft conversions, spare bedroom conversions, and any household that would rather have a great shower than a bath they never use.
Family bathrooms
The family bathroom is the most used room in the house. It needs to handle morning showers, bedtime baths, four people's worth of toiletries and the general daily traffic of a busy home. Products for family bathrooms are built for volume — wider vanity units, more storage, durable finishes, shower baths that give you both functions in one, and quality fittings that hold up to years of heavy use.
Wet rooms
A wet room is the most open form of shower space — a level-access floor, a walk-in glass panel, and no tray or enclosure to step over or close around you. The result is a bathroom that feels larger, looks cleaner and is more accessible than any traditional shower setup. Wet rooms suit luxury builds, accessibility-focused designs, and anyone who wants the simplest, most minimal showering experience possible.
Not sure which room type you need?
If your bathroom doesn't fit neatly into one category — maybe it's a small family bathroom, or a large en suite that could work as a wet room — start with the room size and who uses it. A compact room used by one person is an en suite. A compact room used by guests is a cloakroom. A larger room used by the whole household is a family bathroom. A room with no bath is a shower room. A room with a level-access shower is a wet room. If you're still not sure, call us on 0121 753 0700 or visit our Birmingham showroom and we'll help you work out the best starting point.
An en suite is specifically connected to a bedroom and typically used by one or two people. A small bathroom can be anywhere in the house — downstairs, between bedrooms, converted from a cupboard — and may be used by anyone in the household. The product selection overlaps, but en suite products tend to lean more towards compact, personal-use items.
Yes. Straight baths from 1200mm and shower baths in L-shape or P-shape are designed for shorter walls. A shower bath gives you both bathing and showering in one footprint, making it one of the best options for a small bathroom that needs to do everything.
A shower room uses a standard shower enclosure with a raised tray — the water is contained within the tray and glass. A wet room has a level-access floor with a walk-in panel and either a flush-fit tray or a fully tanked floor. The water drains through the floor rather than being contained in a tray.
A shower room or wet room usually works best in a loft conversion. Baths are heavy and may need structural support, and getting a bath up narrow loft stairs can be impractical. A shower room with a compact enclosure or a wet room with a walk-in panel makes the most of the available space and avoids the weight issue.
A wet room is the most accessible option — level-access entry with no tray to step over, no door to navigate, and a wide open showering area. Walk-in panels with generous openings and thermostatic shower valves that maintain a safe temperature make wet rooms the safest and most practical choice for anyone with mobility considerations.
Measure the length and width of the room, the position of the door and window, and the location of existing plumbing. These measurements determine what fits on each wall. Our product pages include dimensions for every item. If you're not sure, bring your measurements to our Birmingham showroom or call us on 0121 753 0700 and we'll help you work it out.
Yes. The room categories are a starting point to help you find products suited to your space, but there's nothing stopping you using a compact en suite vanity in a cloakroom, or a wet room panel in a family bathroom. The categories are about finding the right fit, not limiting your choices.