Frameless vs Framed Shower Screen: How to Choose
A shower screen is one of the most visible things in a bathroom, so it's easy to be drawn straight to the look of a frameless one — that clean, almost-invisible sheet of glass. But the choice between frameless and framed is also about cleaning, cost, and how the screen behaves over years of daily use. All of those deserve a seat at the table.
A framed screen has metal trim around the edges of the glass, which supports it and channels water. A frameless screen is thicker glass held by minimal hardware, with no surrounding frame. A semi-frameless option sits in between. None is the "correct" choice — they're different balances of looks, upkeep, and budget.
Here's the honest comparison, so you can decide for your bathroom and not just for the showroom photo.
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.
How much does the open, seamless look matter to you?
A frameless screen is the closest thing to no screen at all, which many people love for the calm, open feel. If that look is what keeps drawing you in, it's a real reason to choose it. If you're just as happy with a neat framed screen, you can put the budget difference elsewhere.
Are your walls straight and your budget comfortable?
Frameless glass is less forgiving of out-of-true walls and costs more. In an older home with wavy walls, or on a tighter budget, a framed or semi-frameless screen can actually be the more practical and reliable choice — and that's not settling.
Which cleaning trade-off suits you?
Frameless has fewer crevices but a big pane to squeegee; framed has a frame to wipe but channels water neatly. Neither is maintenance-free. Picture your real cleaning habits and choose the one you'll actually keep up with.
The honest bottom line
If the open, almost-invisible look of frameless glass is what you keep coming back to, and your walls and budget allow for it, it's a beautiful choice. If you'd rather a neat, reliable screen that's gentler on the budget and more forgiving of an older bathroom, a framed or semi-frameless screen is a sensible, good-looking pick — not a compromise. Choose the one that fits your room and the way you'll live with it.
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Start your projectCommon questions
Are frameless shower screens harder to keep clean?
Generally they're a little easier in one sense and not in another. Frameless screens have fewer edges and channels where soap, water, and limescale collect, so there are fewer fiddly spots to scrub. But the trade-off is a larger expanse of glass that shows water spots, so a quick squeegee after showering keeps it looking its best. Framed screens have less glass to wipe but a frame and its channels that can gather grime. Neither is truly maintenance-free — they just ask for slightly different habits.
Why are frameless shower screens more expensive?
Frameless screens use thicker, toughened glass that can support itself without a surrounding frame, and they rely on precise, good-quality hardware and careful installation to stay secure and watertight. All of that costs more than a framed screen, where the metal trim does some of the structural and water-channelling work. The extra cost buys the minimal, open look — so whether it's worth it comes down to how much that look matters to you versus other places you could spend the budget.
Do frameless shower screens leak?
A well-designed and properly installed frameless screen manages water well, but because there's no frame channelling water back in, the design and seals have to be right — which makes a skilled installer and a level opening more important than with a framed screen. Framed screens are often a little more forgiving against drips because the frame guides water back into the tray. If your walls are uneven or you want maximum reassurance against leaks, that's worth weighing in the decision.
What is a semi-frameless shower screen?
A semi-frameless screen is a middle option: it has some framing — often around part of the screen or the fixed panel — but leaves other edges, like the door, frame-free. This gives you much of the clean, open look of frameless glass at a lower cost, with a bit more rigidity and water management than a fully frameless design. For many bathrooms it's a genuinely good balance of looks, practicality, and budget, and worth considering if you're torn between the two extremes.