Most “very small” shower rooms land somewhere under 35 sq ft (around 3.25 m²). Think 5’×6′ boxes or long narrow 3’×8′ strips where the shower eats half the footprint. Shower trays in these rooms usually run 30″×30″ up to 32″×36″ (760×760 to 800×900mm). Anything smaller and you’re shaving soap off your elbow.
Here’s what each level of work actually costs, based on what I’ve spent and quoted:
– Cosmetic refresh (paint, hardware, lighting, accessories, maybe a new screen): $250–$800 / £200–£600, one or two weekends of DIY.
– Mid-range redo (new tray, screen, partial retile, decent thermostatic shower): $2,000–$6,000 / £1,500–£4,500, expect 2–5 days with trades.
– Full gut and rebuild (custom glass, full retile, built-ins): $7,000–$15,000+ / £5,000–£12,000+, especially in cities.
Specific price points worth knowing:
– Moisture-resistant paint: $40–$70 / £30–£50 per gallon (one gallon does a tiny room easily)
– Thermostatic shower set worth owning: $250–$700 / £200–£500
– Slimline LED vanity light: $60–$200 / £50–£150
Paint, accessories, hooks, and curtain swaps are beginner territory. Moving plumbing, cutting niches, or tiling a wet wall — hire it out unless you’ve done it before. I tiled my first niche myself and the bottom slope was wrong by about 3mm. Water pooled for a year.
The Look That Actually Works in a Tiny Footprint
Three directions hold up in small shower rooms. Pick one and commit.
Modern minimalist is the workhorse. Frameless glass, linear drain, large-format porcelain, wall-hung everything. It photographs well and reads bigger than it is because there’s almost nothing visually chopping up the space.
Scandi if you want warmer. Light oak shelf, white walls with a stone-look floor, simple matte black tap. The wood is what stops it feeling like a hospital.
Japandi / urban spa for warmth without going full cottage. Microcement-effect tiles, warm taupe walls, brushed brass or nickel fittings. This is what I went with the second time around and I’d do it again.
Colors that don’t make the room feel smaller
Forget bright white walls. They look stark and they show every water mark.
– Warm whites — Pointing, Swiss Coffee, anything with a soft yellow or pink undertone
– Greige and warm taupe — Agreeable Gray is the obvious one and it deserves the hype in low-light rooms
– Soft sage or muted green on a single wall or the vanity
– Black or charcoal in small doses only — frame, tap, hooks, hinges. Not walls.
The mistake I see constantly: dark moody tile on all four walls in a 30 sq ft room. It looks great on Pinterest at 1200px wide. In person it feels like a coffin.
Materials worth paying for
– Large-format porcelain (24″×24″ / 600×600mm) — fewer grout lines means the eye reads the wall as one surface
– Stone-effect or microcement porcelain for the spa look without sealing real stone every six months
– One textured accent tile — vertical fluted or ribbed, used only in the shower
– Clear frameless glass or a single fixed panel with slim black framing
– Wall-hung vanity and toilet — seeing floor continue underneath is the single biggest spatial trick
The Pieces That Make or Break It
Hero items
A walk-in or wet-room layout with a single fixed glass panel beats a hinged door every time in a tiny space. No swing arc to plan around. I went from a bifold to a single panel and gained what felt like a square foot of usable floor.
A wall-hung vanity at 18″–24″ wide and 12″–16″ deep is the sweet spot. Anything bigger and you’re hitting it with your hip getting out of the shower. Mine is 50cm wide and I have not once wished it were bigger.
A back-to-wall or wall-hung toilet with short projection (18″–22″ / 460–560mm out from the wall) is non-negotiable. Standard toilets project 28″+ and steal a foot of usable room.
Storage that doesn’t shrink the floor
– Recessed shower niche, 12″×24″ at around 40″–48″ high — fits two bottles per person easily
– Floating shelf above the toilet — that vertical foot of wall is wasted in most bathrooms
– A multi-hook rail behind the door — six hooks where a single bar used to live
– Slim corner shelves fixed to the wall, not freestanding caddies on the tray
– Mirrored cabinet over the sink — storage and a light-bouncer in one
Everything goes up the walls. Nothing lives on the floor except your feet and a small mat.
The accessories I’d actually buy
– Towels in two colors only. I do white plus olive. Bath, hand, face — all the same two shades.
– A low-profile cotton mat or a slatted teak board for wet rooms (the teak ones run about $30–$50 and last years)
– One small framed print rated for humidity — a line drawing or a single black-and-white photo
– A pothos or a small fern if your room has any natural light, or a decent faux one if it doesn’t. Mine sits on the shelf above the toilet, visible from the door.
– Refillable amber or ceramic dispensers for shampoo and body wash. The biggest visual upgrade I’ve ever made for under £20 was binning the colorful plastic bottles.
How I’d Actually Put It Together
Start by clearing everything out. I mean everything — bottles, baskets, the rug, the old curtain rod, the half-empty bleach bottle behind the toilet. You cannot plan a small room with stuff in it.
Measure the shower footprint and the door swing. Mark the door arc in tape on the floor. If it clips the vanity or the toilet, that’s your first problem to solve. Often the answer is rehanging the door to swing outward or switching to a pocket door.
Find your longest sightline from the doorway. That’s what you want the eye to land on — usually the back wall of the shower through clear glass. Not the side of a chunky storage tower.
Then in order:
1. Walls and floor first. If you can, run the same floor tile straight into the shower with a linear drain. The unbroken floor is what makes a tiny room read bigger. Use a tile rated for wet-area slip resistance.
2. Fit the tray or wet floor, then the screen. Aim for at least a 22″ / 560mm entry gap or it’s a squeeze.
3. Mount vanity and toilet, aligning the top of the vanity with the top of the cistern if you can. That horizontal line matters more than you’d think.
4. Layer the lighting. One IP-rated ceiling spot is not enough. Add a backlit mirror or a light above the mirror, and ideally a small spot or LED strip in the niche. Three light sources, small room, no shadows on your face.
5. Storage goes in last — niche, floating shelf, hook rail, mirror cabinet.
6. Then style it. Two towel colors, one mat, one plant, one piece of art, matching dispensers. Done.
Test the door swing one more time before you call it finished. And check the extractor fan actually pulls — a tiny shower room without proper ventilation grows mold in a season.
The Mistakes I See Constantly
Trying to fit full-size everything. A 60cm vanity, a standard toilet, a hamper, and a 90×90 shower into 32 sq ft. It will technically fit. You will hate using it.
Three tile patterns, two metal finishes, four accent colors. Pick one main tile, optionally one accent tile, one metal, two or three colors total. That’s the whole palette.
Frosted glass or a heavy curtain dividing the room. It chops the visible space in half. Clear glass, every time, unless you genuinely share the bathroom with someone who needs privacy from the sink.
One sad ceiling bulb. Layered light is the difference between “cramped box” and “small but considered.”
Floor storage. Hampers, baskets, the freestanding shelf unit from the value store. Get it off the floor or get rid of it.
Keeping It Looking Intentional Long-Term
The trick to a small room staying calm is the rule of three repeats: every finish should appear at least three times. Black shows up on the tap, the screen frame, and the hooks. Oak appears on the shelf, the stool, and the mirror frame. If something only appears once, it looks like an accident.
Same for grout — slightly darker on the floor than the walls reads as grounded; matching everything reads as flat; high-contrast everywhere reads as a checkerboard.
Visible product in the shower should be one or two bottles per person, maximum. Everything else lives behind the mirrored cabinet door or in a lidded basket on the shelf.
Cheap ways to refresh it later
– New towel and mat color twice a year. Terracotta and rust in autumn, sage in spring, deep navy or charcoal in winter.
– Swap the showerhead and tap handles to a current finish (brushed brass is having a long moment for a reason) without touching the tiles.
– Peel-and-stick panels or removable wallpaper above the tile line if you’re renting — keep it out of the splash zone.
– A different small print in the frame. Costs the price of paper.
### Two cross-style versions if minimalist isn’t you
Boho-coastal tiny shower room: white square tile, rattan-framed round mirror, striped Turkish towel, a small jute basket under the vanity, one piece of blue-and-white abstract art. Reads relaxed without going theme-park.
Industrial-Scandi: concrete-look large-format tile, black-framed glass, light oak floating shelf, soft grey waffle towels, a single black metal hook rail. This is the version I’d do in a loft.
The room I’m in now is 1.5×1.8m with a 32″×32″ tray, a 50cm wall-hung vanity, a short-projection toilet, microcement-look porcelain on three walls and the floor, one fluted accent tile in the shower, brushed brass everywhere. It cost me about £3,400 including labor, took four days, and it’s the only room in the flat I haven’t wanted to change since.
Small rooms reward restraint. Buy less, hang it higher, pick fewer colors, and let the floor breathe.
Conclusion
The very small shower room ideas that worked for me came from a space under thirty-five square feet with a corner shower, a wall-mounted sink, and a window that opened onto an air shaft. I painted the walls a pale gray, added a rainfall showerhead, and hung a single hook for a robe. The room was not luxurious. It was functional. And that was enough.