TAILS’ BASIN STARTING POINT
Find the right basin for your bathroom layout
Explore bathroom basins for cloakrooms, en suites and family bathrooms, including pedestal, wall-hung, countertop and furniture-compatible designs. This main collection makes it easier to compare sizes, shapes and installation styles before narrowing your choice to the basin format that best suits your space, storage plans and preferred taps.
Where Should You Start When Choosing a Bathroom Basin?
Compare installation style, available space and how the basin will work with your taps and storage
You are comparing different basin formats
This parent category brings together basins with different mounting and support arrangements, allowing you to compare pedestal, wall-mounted, countertop and furniture-led options before committing to one installation style.
You need a basin for a particular room size
Bathroom basins range from compact cloakroom models to broader washbasins for main bathrooms. Browsing the wider collection helps you judge the right balance between usable bowl space, overall width and the clearance needed around nearby fittings.
You want the wash area planned as one scheme
The basin affects tap choice, storage, mirror proportions and visible plumbing. Comparing the main basin types first can help you build a more coordinated wash area rather than selecting sanitaryware in isolation and adapting everything else afterwards.
Your installation style is already fixed
The main category includes several basin formats that may not suit your planned plumbing or furniture. Shopping directly by pedestal, wall-hung, countertop or vanity-unit basin can remove unrelated options and make product comparison faster.
You must fit a precise furniture unit
A basin with the correct nominal width may still be incompatible with a vanity cabinet or fitted-furniture carcass. A dedicated furniture-basin category is more useful when the support points, depth and cabinet profile have already been determined.
You are replacing one existing basin
A broad collection can make a direct replacement harder to identify. Filtering by width, projection, tap-hole layout and installation type reduces the risk of choosing a basin that requires unnecessary changes to pipework, wall finishes or supporting furniture.
Bathroom Basin FAQs
Basin types, tap holes, sizing and storage choices explained
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What types of bathroom basins are available?
The main options include full-pedestal, semi-pedestal, wall-hung, countertop and furniture-compatible basins. Each creates a different appearance and has different requirements for support, plumbing concealment and surrounding storage.
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How do I choose the right basin size?
Measure the available wall width and front clearance, then compare both the basin width and projection. Allow practical space beside doors, toilets, baths and furniture rather than selecting the largest bowl that will physically fit.
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Do all bathroom basins have a tap hole?
No. Some have one or more prepared tap holes, while others are undrilled for wall-mounted or worktop-mounted brassware. Check the individual basin specification before choosing taps, as the mounting arrangement cannot be assumed from the basin shape.
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Which basin type provides the most storage?
A basin combined with a vanity unit or fitted bathroom furniture generally provides the most enclosed storage. Pedestal and wall-hung basins prioritise sanitaryware form and open space instead, although separate cabinets or shelves can be added nearby.
DESIGNER’S NOTE
Choose the basin format before the mirror and taps, then repeat its strongest shape through one nearby element so the wash area feels coordinated without becoming overly matched.