Wet Room vs Standard Bathroom: How to Decide
A wet room is one of those ideas that looks effortlessly stylish and turns out to be a fairly big technical decision underneath. The appeal is real: an open, fully tiled space with no shower tray or screen to box things off, often making a small or awkward room feel more open and surprisingly accessible. But the waterproofing it requires is serious, and it's worth understanding before you fall for the look.
A wet room is a fully waterproofed (tanked) space where the shower area is open to the rest of the room and the whole floor drains. A standard bathroom contains the water to a tray or enclosure. Neither is better in the abstract — a wet room buys openness and accessibility at the cost of more involved waterproofing, while a standard bathroom is simpler and contains splashes more tidily.
Here's the honest picture, so you can decide based on your home, your budget, and how you'll use the room.
Side by side
Neither column is the “winner” — they’re different trade-offs. The right one is the one that fits your home.
Questions worth asking yourself
There’s no single correct answer here. These are the things actually worth weighing for your room and the way you live.
Is accessibility a priority now or later?
A level-access wet room is one of the kindest layouts for staying in your home as you age, or for anyone with limited mobility. If you're planning to stay long-term, that future-proofing can quietly outweigh the extra cost and the damp-everything trade-off.
Are you committed to doing the waterproofing properly?
A wet room lives or dies on its tanking and floor falls. This isn't a place to cut corners or DIY without real knowledge — water finds every weakness. If you have a trusted installer and the budget to do it right, great. If not, a standard bathroom is the safer path.
How will you keep the rest of the room comfortable?
In a wet room, the whole space can get damp. Plan where towels, paper, and storage go, consider a partial screen to tame the spray, and think about good ventilation. With a little planning this is easily managed — it just wants thinking about up front.
The honest bottom line
If you want an open, accessible space — especially in a small or awkward room, or for the long term — and you can have the waterproofing done properly, a wet room is a genuinely lovely choice. If you'd rather keep things simple, contained, and easier on the budget, a standard bathroom is a sensible, confident pick rather than a less ambitious one. Let your home, your plans, and your installer guide the call.
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Start your projectCommon questions
Is a wet room a good idea for a small bathroom?
Often yes. Because a wet room has no shower tray or enclosure boxing off part of the room, the space reads as open and continuous, which can make a small or awkward bathroom feel larger and easier to use. It also gives level, step-free access. The main conditions are doing the waterproofing properly and planning where towels and storage go so they don't get damp. For many small bathrooms a wet room is a smart use of limited space, provided the tanking is done well.
Do wet rooms cause damp problems?
Only if the waterproofing isn't done properly. A wet room relies on the whole space being correctly tanked (fully waterproofed) with the floor falling toward the drain, and when that's done well it's reliable and long-lasting. Problems arise when corners are cut on the tanking or the falls are wrong, letting water reach places it shouldn't. Good ventilation also matters to clear moisture. This is exactly why a wet room is a job to get a knowledgeable installer for rather than to improvise.
Are wet rooms more expensive than standard bathrooms?
Usually, yes, when done properly. The cost driver is the full waterproofing of the whole room and the careful floor falls toward the drain, which is more involved than waterproofing just a shower enclosure in a standard bathroom. You may save on a tray, screen, or bath, but the tanking generally makes a wet room the pricier route. Whether it's worth it depends on how much you value the open look and step-free access, especially for the long term.
Do you still need a screen in a wet room?
You don't strictly need one, but many people add a single glass panel anyway, and it's often worth it. A partial screen tames the spray so the toilet roll, towels, and the rest of the room stay drier, while still keeping the open, step-free feel of a wet room. It's a small addition that makes the space much more comfortable to live with day to day, so it's worth considering even if the whole-room waterproofing means you could go without.