A calm bathroom usually has one thing in common: very little on display. Clear surfaces are easier to clean, kinder on the eye and make even a modest room feel more generous. The challenge in most UK homes is that bathrooms tend to be on the small side, and the things we use daily, from toothbrushes to skincare bottles, quickly multiply. Storage that works does not mean stuffing items behind closed doors. It means giving every object a logical home so the room can breathe.
We have pulled together seven ideas drawn from real UK bathrooms. Each one is designed to help you reclaim worktops, windowsills and the edge of the bath, while still keeping daily essentials within easy reach. If you are looking for inspiration as you plan, our bathroom storage units offer plenty of considered options.
The vanity is the single most useful storage piece in the room. A unit with deep drawers will swallow far more than open shelving and keeps everything dust free. Look for inner trays and dividers, which stop hair tools, cotton pads and small bottles from rolling around. Browse our bathroom vanities for compact and full size pieces alike.
Floor space is precious, so going upwards makes sense. A slim tall cabinet can hold towels, cleaning supplies and back ups of everyday items in the space of a single tile width. Place it in a corner or beside the door, where it tucks away rather than dominating the room.
Mirrored cabinets are an old idea, but the latest designs feel sleek rather than clinical. Behind the glass you can keep medicines, toothbrushes, razors and small bottles, all hidden yet within reach. From the front, the mirror simply does its job of bouncing light around the room.
Open shelves can be a strength or a weakness. Pile them with bottles and they become visual clutter. Style them lightly, with one or two folded towels, a small plant and a ceramic pot for cotton buds, and they look like a deliberate design feature. Keep similar items grouped together and aim for negative space between objects.
The back of a bathroom door is one of the most underused surfaces in the home. A row of hooks or a slim over the door rack holds dressing gowns, used towels and hairdryers in a way that keeps the floor and worktops clear. It is a quick addition that costs very little and pays back daily.
If you have a freestanding bath, the floor underneath is often dead space. Low profile baskets or trays on castors can hold cleaning supplies and spare loo rolls, then slide neatly out of sight. For panelled baths, consider a removable access panel that opens onto a shallow storage area, which keeps overflow items completely hidden.
The edge of a basin is the first place clutter lands, so give it a different job. A small ceramic tray or wooden plate becomes the home for soap, hand cream and a small candle. Everything else, from spare toothbrushes to skincare jars, lives in a drawer or cabinet. Our bathroom cabinets offer plenty of choices for keeping the basin area composed.
Storage furniture only works if the routine supports it. Once a week, run through the bathroom and return anything stray to its home. Quarterly, take ten minutes to clear out empty bottles and replace tired towels. This small discipline keeps surfaces clear and stops the room slipping back into clutter.
For more ideas on dressing the bathroom around your storage, take a look at the broader bathroom furniture range at Furniture in Fashion. You will find vanities, cabinets, mirrors and accessories that quietly do their job and leave the bath, basin and surfaces clear.
What is the best storage for a tiny bathroom?
A combined mirrored cabinet above the basin and a slim tall unit elsewhere tend to give the highest return. Together they remove most items from view without taking floor space.
Is open shelving practical in a steamy bathroom?
Yes, provided the items on display can handle humidity. Towels, ceramics and sealed glass jars are fine. Keep paper based items and electricals behind closed doors.
How do I stop the vanity from becoming a dumping ground?
Use drawer dividers and assign a category to each section. When everything has a place, it is much harder for the unit to become chaotic.
Do I need matching storage pieces?
Not at all. A mix of materials and finishes can feel more relaxed and considered, as long as they share a common tone or palette.
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