Shower Niche vs Shelf: Which Shower Storage Is Better?
Shower storage is a small detail that you notice every single day — where the shampoo actually goes. It's easy to leave until the end of a renovation, but it's genuinely worth thinking about early, because a recessed niche has to be planned into the wall before tiling, while a shelf can often be added later.
A recessed niche is a built-in cubby set into the wall, tiled to match, with nothing sticking out. A shelf — corner, floating, or a fitted caddy — sits proud of the wall and can be added more flexibly. Neither is the "right" answer. They're different balances of looks, cost, cleaning, and when in the process you decide.
Here's the honest comparison, so you end up with somewhere to put the soap that you're actually happy with.
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.
Where are you in the renovation?
This is the practical deciding factor. If the walls are still open and being tiled, a niche is the moment to plan it. If the bathroom is already finished, a good shelf or caddy is the sensible route — and there's nothing second-rate about it.
How much do you want the built-in, integrated look?
A recessed niche reads as part of the wall, which many people love for its clean, considered feel. If that look matters to you and you're tiling anyway, it's a lovely detail. If you're relaxed about a neat shelf, you can save the cost and effort.
How much do you actually need to store?
Be honest about how many bottles live in your shower. A single small niche can feel cramped fast; a generous one or a couple of shelves may serve a busy household better. Plan the size around your real life, not a minimalist photo.
The honest bottom line
If you're tiling the walls anyway and you love the clean, built-in look, a recessed niche planned with proper waterproofing is a lovely, lasting detail. If the bathroom's already done, your budget is tight, or you want flexibility, a well-chosen shelf or caddy does the same job with far less fuss — and that's a perfectly good choice. The best shower storage is simply the one that holds your things and that you were able to plan at the right moment.
Want a second opinion on your actual room?
Tuis is a design partner that learns your taste and helps you think through choices like this one for your specific space — never pushing trends or pricier options. Your first project is free.
Start your projectCommon questions
Is a shower niche worth it?
If you're renovating and tiling the walls anyway, a recessed niche is often worth it: it gives a clean, built-in place for your bottles with nothing protruding, and it's a detail many people enjoy. The catch is that it must be planned before tiling and needs careful waterproofing and a slightly sloped base to drain. If the bathroom is already finished, or budget is tight, a good shelf or caddy does the same job with far less cost and disruption, so the "worth it" question really depends on your timing and how much you want the integrated look.
Do shower niches leak?
They can if the waterproofing isn't done properly, which is exactly why a niche needs careful attention during the build. The recess should be fully tanked (waterproofed) and have a slight slope on its base so water drains out rather than pooling. Done correctly by someone who knows what they're doing, a niche is reliable and long-lasting. The risk comes from cutting corners on the waterproofing detail, so it's a feature to plan and install carefully rather than improvise.
Can I add a shower niche after the bathroom is finished?
Not easily — a recessed niche is built into the wall and waterproofed before tiling, so retrofitting one usually means removing tiles and opening up the wall, which is a significant job. If your bathroom is already finished and you want more storage, a shelf, corner shelf, or hanging caddy is the practical answer, and there are plenty of attractive, water-resistant options. So if you think you'll want a niche, it's best decided while the walls are still open; otherwise a shelf is the sensible route.
How big should a shower niche be?
Size it around what you actually keep in the shower rather than a minimalist ideal. Count your real bottles — shampoo, conditioner, body wash, anything else — and allow room for them to stand comfortably, ideally with a little spare. A single small niche can feel cramped quickly in a busy household, so a more generous niche, or two, may serve better. It also helps to set the niche at a comfortable reaching height and, if tiling allows, to line the position up neatly with your tile layout.