Right-hand L-shaped shower baths suit bathrooms where the wider showering end needs to sit on the right for the best access and screen position. The angular shape creates a modern showering zone with more standing space than a standard bath, while keeping the comfort of a full bathing area. They work well in family bathrooms, en-suites and renovations where one footprint has to do both jobs. A right-hand layout helps the bath feel aligned with the room, the plumbing and the way the space is used.

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TAILS’ HANDED FIT

Gain extra width on the right

Right-hand L-shaped shower baths place the broader, squared section on the right-hand side, adding useful standing space while retaining a full bathing area. They suit layouts where the projection clears nearby furniture and sanitaryware, offering a roomier showering footprint than many straight baths within one combined installation.

Is a Right-Hand L-Shaped Shower Bath Right for Your Layout?

Check the wider projection, room clearance and compatible fittings

A Right-Hand L-Shaped Bath Suits You If

The projection fits on the right

This handed format works where the wider L-shaped section needs to extend on the right-hand side of the room. Confirm the orientation from the manufacturer’s drawing because the viewpoint used to define right-handed products can vary.

You want greater standing space

The squared section gives the showering end more width around the user than a typical straight bath. It can make daily showering feel less confined without taking the separate floor area required by a standalone enclosure.

You can purchase matching parts

Selecting the bath with its intended screen and panels makes the correct right-hand configuration easier to establish. Check each product description carefully, as the screen, front panel, end panel and other pictured components may be sold separately.

Another Bath Configuration May Suit You Better If

The wider section needs the left

A left-hand L-shaped shower bath is required when the broader projection must occupy the opposite side. The wrong orientation may obstruct a doorway, toilet or vanity even when the overall bath length appears suitable.

Right-side clearance is restricted

The expanded showering section uses more floor width than the rest of the bath. A straight shower bath may preserve a clearer route where bathroom furniture, sanitaryware or an inward-opening door sits close to the right-hand side.

You prefer a softer outline

The angular step in an L-shaped bath creates a distinctly squared appearance. A P-shaped shower bath may work better where rounded sanitaryware, curved furniture or a softer room scheme makes a sweeping showering section visually more appropriate.

Right-Hand L-Shaped Shower Bath FAQs

Handing, maximum width and matching screens explained

  • What makes the bath right-handed?

    The right-hand description refers to the side carrying the wider, projecting L-shaped section rather than the precise position of the shower controls. Always verify the viewing direction and orientation on the individual manufacturer’s drawing.

  • How wide is the projecting shower end?

    The maximum width varies between models and may differ from the nominal category dimensions. Check the technical drawing at the broadest point, then allow additional clearance for the screen, panel edges and nearby bathroom fittings.

  • Can I use any bath screen?

    No. The screen must suit the bath’s squared rim, dimensions and right-hand arrangement. Some products are reversible, while others are handed, so confirm compatibility rather than selecting a screen solely by its overall width.

DESIGNER’S NOTE

Balance the right-hand projection with open floor space beside it, then reinforce its angular form through a square-edged screen, linear brassware and orderly tile joints.