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 matter of comfort. This guide covers every option available, with detailed advice on radiators and towel rails, the two most practical solutions for most UK bathrooms.
What is a walk-in shower?
A walk-in shower is a shower enclosure without a door. Instead of a hinged, pivoting, or sliding door, a walk-in shower uses one or more fixed glass panels to contain the splash while leaving the entry open. The result is a seamless transition from the bathroom floor to the shower space, with no threshold to step over and no door to open.
Walk-in showers can be installed against one wall, into a corner using two existing walls, or within an alcove formed by three walls. The number of glass panels required depends on the layout. A corner installation typically needs one panel; a single-wall installation against an open bathroom floor may need two or three.
Walk-in shower enclosure types
Frameless shower enclosures: the cleanest, most minimalist option. Thick toughened glass in minimal fixings, with no frame around the edges. Maximum visual openness and maximum tile visibility.
Hinged shower enclosures: A hinged panel at the entry point provides the flexibility to close the shower when needed without committing to a sliding door. The hinge is concealed or minimal in a quality product.
Sliding shower doors: Where a door is preferred but swing clearance is limited, a sliding door operates parallel to the glass rather than swinging outward. Suitable for narrower spaces.
Related: Shower Enclosure Buying Guide
Walk-in shower ideas for small bathrooms
Small bathrooms benefit from walk-in showers more than most people anticipate. Removing the door swing alone can recover 400–600mm of practical floor space. The visual openness of a glass screen rather than a solid enclosure makes the room feel larger because the eye can read the full floor area rather than a series of compartments.
Use a single fixed panel and no door
The most space-efficient walk-in configuration for a small bathroom is a single fixed glass panel on one side of the shower, with the entry left completely open. A 700–900mm panel is usually sufficient to contain splash when the shower head is positioned toward the back wall. No door means no door swing, no hinges to clean, and no frame to interrupt the tile surface.
Browse our large showers and walk-in showers for panel and screen options suited to this configuration.
Choose a low-profile shower tray
In a small bathroom, the step into a shower tray is a visual and practical interruption. A low-profile or slim-line shower tray – typically 25–40mm from the floor to the top of the tray rim – reduces the step and creates a more seamless transition between the bathroom floor and the shower zone. Paired with the same large-format tile on both the shower floor and bathroom floor, the two surfaces read as one continuous plane.
Related: 5 Best Shower Cubicles For Small Bathrooms
Install the shower in the corner
Fitting the shower into a corner uses two existing walls as the shower enclosure, requiring only one or two glass panels rather than three or four. This is the most material-efficient walk-in layout for a small bathroom, leaving the central floor area of the room entirely clear. A quadrant enclosure, or an offset quadrant, uses the corner space particularly efficiently, with a curved or angled front panel and a sliding door when a doorless configuration does not suit the space.
Run the same tile throughout
Using the same tile on the bathroom and shower floors, and on the shower and bathroom walls, removes the visual boundaries between the two zones. A small bathroom that is tiled consistently throughout reads as a single, larger space. This also halves the number of tile decisions to make.
Related: Small Bathroom Ideas
Walk-in shower ideas for large bathrooms
In a larger bathroom, the walk-in shower becomes the visual centrepiece of the room rather than a space-saving measure. The specification decisions, such as the glass, the valve, the head, and the tiles, have more visual prominence and more room to breathe.
Go frameless
A frameless shower enclosure uses thick, toughened glass (typically 10mm) with minimal or invisible fixings, with no surrounding frame. The glass reads as barely present. What you notice is the tile, the fitting, and the space itself. In a large bathroom, frameless glass is the choice that most clearly expresses the walk-in shower as an architectural element.
Pair a ceiling-mounted rainfall head with a concealed valve.
A ceiling-mounted rainfall shower head in a large walk-in fills the open space from above. It creates an immersive, open showering experience that a wall-mounted head cannot replicate in a wide, doorless enclosure. Pair it with a concealed thermostatic valve recessed into the wall, leaving only the slim valve plate visible against the tile. The result is a shower wall that is almost entirely tile, with the valve and head as the only visible hardware.
Add a built-in bench
A tiled bench running along one wall of a walk-in shower adds both comfort and visual weight. Built at the first-fix stage and tiled with the same material as the shower walls, it reads as part of the room's structure rather than an addition. It is also practical – a place to sit, to store products, or to support accessible showering for anyone who benefits from it.
Create a double walk-in shower
In a main bathroom with enough floor area, a double walk-in shower, a single enclosure wide enough for two people showering simultaneously, with heads mounted on opposite walls or from the ceiling, is one of the most practical and distinctive bathroom design decisions available.
Related: 7 Amazing Shower Enclosure Designs To Inspire Your Remodel
Doorless walk-in shower ideas
A doorless walk-in shower is the most open and visually minimal shower configuration available. No door, no hinges, no frame. Just glass, tile, and fittings.
The most common concern with a doorless shower is splash containment. It is a legitimate consideration, but one that is solvable. The key factors are the showerhead position, spray orientation, and the depth of the shower area.
Shower head position: mount the shower head on the back wall, directing the spray away from the open entry rather than across it. A ceiling-mounted rainfall shower head falls vertically, causing the least splash beyond the shower zone.
Shower depth: the deeper the shower tray, the further the spray travels before reaching the open entry. A tray with a depth of 900mm or more significantly reduces the risk of water escaping during normal showering.
A hinged return panel: many walk-in configurations include a small hinged return panel, a short piece of glass on a pivot at the end of the main fixed screen. When needed, it swings out to partially close the entry. When not in use, it folds flat against the screen. This gives the flexibility of a doorless layout with the option to contain splash more effectively on days when a more powerful shower setting is used.
A curved entry screen: a curved glass screen positioned at the entry of the shower directs water away from the opening without a door. This suits larger walk-in formats, where the glass's curve is both functional and visually strong.
Related: Shower Room Ideas
H2 - Walk-in shower ideas for the elderly and accessible bathrooms
A walk-in shower is one of the best accessible bathroom choices available. The low-level entry removes the most significant slip-and-trip risk in a standard bathroom, usually the shower tray threshold or bath edge. Combined with the right fittings, the result can be fully accessible without looking clinical.
Level-access or wet room format
A wet room shower with a fully level floor and a linear drain eliminates any step. The shower zone is simply the area of the room directly under the shower head, differentiated by tile choice or a glass screen rather than by a raised tray. This is the most accessible format available and the easiest to navigate for a wheelchair user or anyone with limited mobility.
Related: Wet Room Ideas
Plan for grab rails at first fix
Grab rails must be fixed to a structural backing within the wall. Installing timber noggins between the wall studs at first fix, before tiling, allows grab rails to be fitted at any point without having to find the stud after the tiles are down. Whether the rails are needed immediately or not, planning for them at this stage costs almost nothing. Adding them afterwards involves cutting through finished tiles.
Related: 11 Easy Bathroom Safety Tips For Seniors
A fold-down shower seat
A wall-mounted fold-down seat provides a stable seated showering option and folds flat against the wall when not in use. Position it at approximately 480mm from the floor, which is the standard transfer height from a wheelchair, with adequate clear floor space beside it for assisted transfers if required.
Related: Bath To Walk-In Shower Conversion
Thermostatic control with a temperature limit
A thermostatic shower valve with a factory-set or adjustable temperature limit prevents scalding regardless of pressure fluctuations elsewhere in the system. This is important for anyone with reduced sensation or slower reaction time. A large-format, easy-to-operate valve rather than small rotary controls makes the shower more practical for anyone with limited grip or dexterity.
Slip-resistant shower tray
Any shower tray in an accessible bathroom should carry a minimum R10 slip resistance rating. Choose a tray with a textured surface that provides grip without being uncomfortable underfoot. Low-profile trays reduce the step height; acrylic and stone resin trays tend to be warmer and softer underfoot than ceramic.
Walk-in shower tile ideas
Large format tiles
Large format tiles such as 600x600mm or 600x1200mm have fewer grout lines than smaller tiles. Fewer grout lines mean less visual grid, a cleaner surface, and a room that reads as more open. In a walk-in shower, large tiles on both walls and floor create a seamless, hotel-quality finish.
Related: Bathroom Tile Ideas
Floor-to-ceiling tiling
Tiling from floor to ceiling in the shower zone draws the eye upward, making the space feel taller. Running the same tile from the shower wall to the ceiling on the adjacent bathroom wall connects the shower to the rest of the room rather than treating it as a separate zone.
A contrasting feature wall
In a walk-in shower with no enclosure to define the space, a feature wall steps in. A different tile, a deeper colour, a textured or fluted surface, or a bathroom wall panel on the shower back wall anchors the shower visually and gives the eye somewhere to land.
Bathroom wall panels as a tile alternative
Bathroom wall panels eliminate grout lines. A large-format panel in a marble, stone, or concrete effect creates a seamless wet area that is both easier to clean than tiled grout lines and visually very strong. In a walk-in shower where the walls are the most prominent surface, this approach works particularly well.
Related: How To Tile A Bathroom
Styling a walk-in shower
Minimal and contemporary walk-in shower ideas
A minimal walk-in shower is defined by what is absent rather than what is present. No frame, no visible pipework, no hardware beyond a slim valve plate and a ceiling-mounted head. The glass is frameless and, as thick as the budget allows, 10mm toughened glass with minimal point fixings barely registers against the tile behind it.
Large white or grey tiles with a matching or near-matching grout run from floor to ceiling, and the eye has nothing to rest on except the quality of the surface itself. Chrome or brushed nickel fittings keep the metal presence quiet and consistent.
Related: Minimalist Bathroom Ideas
Modern walk-in shower ideas
A modern walk-in shower has clean lines and a considered finish, but allows more personality than a strictly minimal scheme. The tile choice is where that personality tends to come through: a fluted tile on the shower back wall, a large-format porcelain in a warm stone or concrete effect, or a bold colour used confidently on a single surface. Brushed brass, brushed nickel, or matt black fittings are the most common choice in a modern shower. A concealed thermostatic valve keeps the wall surface clean, paired with a wall-mounted or ceiling-mounted rainfall shower head and a handset on a riser rail for practicality. Frameless or black-framed glass both sit well in a modern scheme, depending on whether the overall direction is lighter or darker.
Related: Modern Bathroom Ideas
Spa-inspired walk-in shower ideas
The goal of a spa-inspired walk-in shower is to make the daily routine feel less functional and more restorative. Natural stone-effect tiles or wall panels in a warm marble, travertine, or sandstone tone provide the textural richness that creates this feeling more effectively than any flat colour. Brushed brass or brushed gold fittings, with a handset on a riser for flexibility, add warmth to the surfaces around them rather than competing with them. A built-in tiled bench along one wall completes the picture: somewhere to sit, to rest products, to slow down. This creates the kind of shower that makes a bathroom feel like a destination rather than a routine.
Related: Spa Bathroom Ideas
Industrial walk-in shower ideas
An industrial walk-in shower leans into the aesthetic of exposed structure, dark materials, and functional hardware, all deliberate design choices. Dark concrete or slate-effect tiles on both walls and floor set the tone. An exposed thermostatic valve with visible pipework in matt black or gunmetal becomes part of the visual rather than something to conceal. Black shower doors or a black-framed grid screen add a graphic, architectural line to the shower wall. The whole scheme benefits from the contrast between heavy, dark surfaces and clean white sanitaryware, which prevents the room from feeling oppressive and keeps the industrial quality intentional rather than gloomy.
Traditional walk-in shower ideas
A traditional walk-in shower achieves its character through period-appropriate fittings and classic tile choices rather than through decorative excess. An exposed thermostatic bar valve in chrome or gold is the centrepiece of the shower wall. A heritage-style fixed head in a matching finish completes the fitting arrangement. Metro tiles or bevelled wall tiles, laid in a classic brick bond, provide the right backdrop. Gold shower enclosures with brushed brass or antique gold profiles coordinate naturally with period fittings and warm the visual of the shower wall in a way that chrome does not.
Related: Traditional Bathroom Ideas
Walk-in shower fitting ideas
Concealed thermostatic valve: A concealed thermostatic valve recessed into the wall leaves only a slim plate and controls visible. It maintains a consistent water temperature regardless of pressure fluctuations elsewhere in the system and is the most specified valve type in mid to premium walk-in shower installations.
Exposed thermostatic valve: An exposed thermostatic valve mounts on the wall surface with visible pipework. In an industrial or traditional aesthetic, the exposed valve and pipework are part of the visual rather than an element to conceal.
Rainfall shower heads: A ceiling-mounted or large fixed rainfall head provides wide, even coverage across the shower zone. The most popular choice for walk-in and wet room configurations. Check water pressure compatibility with your plumber before specifying a large-format head.
Shower handsets: A wall-mounted shower handset on a riser rail alongside a fixed overhead head provides flexibility – particularly useful for rinsing, washing hair while avoiding the main head, and cleaning the shower tray. A single concealed thermostatic valve with a diverter can feed both the overhead and the handset from one wall plate.
Built-in shower niches: A recessed niche built into the shower wall at first fix provides flush, tiled storage for products without adding depth to the space. It must be planned and framed before tiling – it cannot be added after the walls are finished. A single 300x300mm or 300x600mm niche holds everything most people need in a daily shower.
Related: How To Install A Shower Enclosure
Walk-in shower ideas FAQs
What are the disadvantages of a walk-in shower?
The main disadvantage is splashing containment. Without a door, water can reach the bathroom floor if the shower head is positioned incorrectly or the shower area is too shallow. This is manageable with the right head position, adequate tray depth, and a hinged return panel if needed. Walk-in showers also tend to cost more than standard framed enclosures because of the thicker glass and more robust fixings required.
How do you keep water in a doorless shower?
Position the shower head on the back wall or ceiling, directing the spray toward the drain rather than the open entry. Use a tray with a depth of at least 900mm. Consider a hinged return panel on the end of the fixed screen to close the entry when needed. A correctly positioned ceiling-mounted rainfall head produces the least splash beyond the shower zone of any shower configuration.
What are the latest walk-in shower trends?
Ceiling-mounted rainfall heads remain the most premium upgrade. Brushed brass and matt black fixtures are the dominant finish choices, replacing chrome as the standard. Fluted glass screens, with their textured ribbed surface, are growing strongly. Frameless 10mm glass continues to grow at the expense of framed formats. Built-in niches are now expected rather than exceptional in a quality installation.
How much would it cost to fit a walk-in shower?
A basic walk-in shower installation starts from around £800–£1,500 for products alone. A mid-range specification with a frameless screen, concealed valve, and rainfall head costs £2,000–£4,000. Add labour costs of £500–£1,500 depending on complexity, plus tiling. A full premium installation in a larger bathroom can run to £6,000–£10,000 or more, including all trades and materials.
Read more: How Much Does A New Bathroom Cost
Design and build a walk-in shower with Bathroom City
A well-specified walk-in shower is one of the most satisfying bathroom upgrades available. The daily experience of stepping directly into an open, well-lit, properly heated shower without wrestling with a door is noticeably better than a standard framed enclosure, and the visual impact on the bathroom is immediate.
Browse our full range of walk-in showers, or if you need to see our products in person, book a consultation with our expert team or call into our Birmingham showroom. Need help or advice? Visit us in person or call us on 0121 753 0700.