What are the latest trends in smart bathroom tech?

Looking to upgrade your bathroom with the latest technology? We ask industry experts whether smart solutions are really worth it; and if so, where you should invest your money and which gizmos to avoid…

Let’s be honest, up until recently, the majority of homeowners would probably baulk at the idea of ‘smart’ bathroom products – it often smacks of ‘all the gear and no idea’. But can the latest innovations truly make a difference and, most importantly, make our bathing routines easier rather than more fiddly? KBB journo Charlotte Luxford investigates.

A neutral spa-like scheme with a smart shower, with a clear glass panel, and white shower tray.
Smart showers, such as Ideal Standard’s Solos shower range, are becoming increasingly popular, with integrated colour-changing LEDs that can be customised for colour and brightness to suit users’ moods. These advanced showers also offer multiple spray variations. The Solos shower starts from £2006.

The recent explosion in the wellness industry has had an impact on the market, with a focus on products that can enhance our wellbeing and provide a spa-like experience at home.

The Global Wellness Institute states that the UK is now the fifth biggest wellness economy globally, and according to Grohe’s recent survey, 64% of people associate showers with relaxation and 41% with wellness.

A motion activated basin mixer in a chrome finish.
This basin mixer from Grohe is motion activated – you just need to wave your hand in front of the lit icon on the spout. Plus, it has an LED temperature display so you know the exact water temperature as it flows. It also offers a water-saving spray function so you don’t waste water. The Grohe Plus single-lever mixer costs £995.63.

Sunshowers

One of the hottest new entries to the wellness space is the Sunshower – a sleek, integrated shower unit that combines infrared therapy with UV light to support vitamin D production; essentially, it’s like a SAD lamp for your bathroom. It’s also designed to support muscle recovery, better circulation, stress reduction, and skin rejuvenation. “Sunshower hits the sweet spot between science, self-care, and smart living,” says John Naughten, managing director of Bathroom Design Studio.

A sunshower with wellness benefits with a black frame and warming infrared.
The Sunshower provides warming infrared and low-dose UV light, designed to replicate the relaxing and energising effects of the sun, while showering indoors. Priced from £1550, depending on the size and colourway chosen, it’s available and on display at Bathroom Design Studio London.

Apparently, it’s also a doddle to install, as it can be recessed, surface-mounted, or corner- fitted. It is energy efficient and cost effective, too, costing about £10 per year to run.

Chromotherapy

According to Natalie Bird, Laufen’s brand marketing manager, colour-change lighting (aka chromotherapy) is another big feature of spa-style bathrooms, where different hues can set the mood – whether that’s a cool blue or violet to promote relaxation, or a sunny yellow to start the day. The brand’s new VAL Luminex bathtub, by Konstantin Grcic, is made of a new groundbreaking, translucent material that allows light and colour to be projected into the water, with no garish coloured spotlights in sight.

A smart bathroom with a freestanding tub made from a translucent material, offering chromotherapy, and a shower with ambient light and sound.
Laufen’s MySpa shower system offers up to eight shower outlets with customisable settings to blend different sprays with ambient light and sound. You can also set morning and evening rituals to suit the required mood from the MySpa digital touch display. Price on application.

The design is stylish and subtle, for a soothing experience; we’re not having a disco in the bath, after all. Laufen’s MySpa shower system is also a noteworthy release that combines ambient light and sound with different sprays for a multisensory experience customisable via a touch display.

Shower toilets

While all these wellness products sound heavenly, it’s perhaps unsurprising that when it comes to smart tech, the typical UK homeowner is looking for something a bit more ‘practical’. According to UK Bathroom Store, its most-asked-for ‘tech’ product is actually a self-cleaning shower toilet – a finding that seems to resonate with most independent retailers.

A calm scheme with a wall=mounted shower toilet.
Duravit’s SensoWash Starck is a multifunctional loo whizz that does it all – its state-of-the-art technology allows for a fully customisable cleaning experience, with adjustable settings for water temperature and position, a warm air dryer, and a heated seat, all controlled via a remote or app. Priced £4700.

Louise Ashdown, head of design at West One Bathrooms, has revealed that 1 in 10 of their WC sales is now a washlet. “There’s been a huge rise in the popularity of shower toilets, which have truly revolutionised the bathroom industry, offering a level of hygiene and comfort that is second-to-none,” adds Emma Scott, director of client design at C.P. Hart. “The Toto Washlet, for instance, has redefined bathroom standards with its self-cleaning, auto-flushing, and deodorising capabilities, all the while using less water – Toto has become one of the most revolutionary toilet brands in the world.”

A green scheme with a back-to-wall shower toilet and minimalist accessories.
Shower toilets, with heated seats, deodorisers, UV-cleaning cycles and auto-flush, can enhance everyday comfort and wellness while keeping maintenance low. Toto washlet, back-to-wall model, £5172, West One Bathrooms.

Smart and intuitive

As we’re becoming more eco-conscious as a nation, water-saving products are also high on the agenda. Increasingly, companies are looking at ways in which they can capture, treat, and reuse water. Orbital, for example, offers a circular shower system that saves up to 90% of the water while you shower, filtering out the dirty waste water while also using significantly less energy.

There’s also the Orbital Tap, which saves up to 100% of the water used in the sink and purifies it before it’s reused to flush the toilet. The upshot is that the products that are really in demand are those that are practical, sustainable, and life enhancing. And for smart bathroom tech to truly work, it needs to be intuitive, rather than gimmicky. Still, many designers agree that a lot of ‘smart’ products out there are overcomplicated.

A minimalist, nature-inspired scheme with an eco-conscious shower system, a basin with a smart tap and wood vanity, drenched in concrete-effect wall and floor coverings.
Orbital is an innovative circular shower system that saves up to 90% of the water while you shower, filtering out the dirty waste water. The Orbital Core shower system costs approx. £2980 (€3390); the head and hand shower start from approx. £347 (€395); the Orbital tap ‘full experience’ costs approx. £1450 (€1650), all available from The Box.

“Beyond shower toilets, most smart bathroom products are solving problems that don’t exist… App-controlled shower systems when manual ones work perfectly (and more reliably), or voice-controlled lighting that’s more complicated than switches,” says Issak Baron, operations director at Indesign Bathrooms & Kitchens. According to Issak, the real opportunity isn’t adding more connectivity, it’s taking proven technology and making it work more instinctively.

“Instead of app-controlled everything, why not have motion sensors that actually learn your patterns? Ventilation that kicks in automatically when humidity rises but doesn’t sound like a jet engine, or mirror lighting that adjusts to time of day or to the amount of natural light without manual programming?” he says. “But these sorts of tech [features] either don’t exist or come as part of overcomplicated systems.”

Ultimately, should you invest in smart bathroom tech?

While it seems that smart bathroom tech still has some way to go, on the lower end of the ‘smart’ scale, there are some products that are relatively simple yet effective at solving common issues or enhancing your bathroom routine. Such as the Ecoso Linus electric heated towel rail with an integrated fan that heats up your bathroom space and dries your towels more efficiently, or halo-lit mirrors with built-in demisters, and water-saving sensor taps that are motion-activated with a simple wave of the hand.

A modern bathroom radiator which heats up the room and keeps towels warm.
This two-in-one radiator not only heats up your towels quickly, but it’ll keep your bathroom toasty, too. Ecoso Linus smart electric heated towel rail with fan, from £184.95, Best Heating.

“The real luxury in smart bathroom products lies in not having to think – everything just works for the better,” says Rikki Fothergill, bathroom style expert at Big Bathroom Shop. “Before long, what we now call ‘smart’ will simply be the new standard of modern living. However, I do think it will be a long time before we see this great shift.”

A modern bathroom design with a terrazzo-drenched shower with matt black shower system, and an adjoining vanity area with a green wall-mounted unit and a smart mirror.
This organic-shaped mirror has an integrated colour-changing technology allowing you to adjust your space based on your mood, plus there’s a built-in heated demister so you can use it no matter how steamy the bathroom gets. Mada LED mirror, from £375, Crosswater.

Save or splurge?

Justine Bullock, director at The Tap End, says it’s best to invest in the real deal, and avoid any cheap copies or gimmicky products. “However, if it’s an investment in wellness or something you believe will genuinely enhance your life, then it is definitely worth splashing out,” she says. “For example, the Sunshower is a product that’s worth the hype all day long!”

A modern spa-like space with a massage bath, marble surfaces, and matt black fittings.
The clients of this bathroom wanted to create a soothing spa-like experience so they tasked Ripples with creating a calm and contemporary space. The luxurious Divina HydroAir massage bath has a headrest and in-built lights, plus a rain shower with body jets and a steam generator.

For now, it seems it’s worth investing in practical tech that helps solve everyday problems, and certainly those products that have water-saving features. But a shower that requires extensive programming via an app before I even step foot inside? I’ll probably stick to my simple thermostatic shower mixer for the time being.

Enjoyed this post? Click here for the most popular bathroom design must-haves right now

About Post Author

You Might Also Like

 

Want to get involved?

[email protected]