1600mm front bath panels suit straight baths that need a slightly shorter finish than the common 1700mm size. They are a good option for bathrooms where space is limited but you still want the bath to feel properly built in. The front panel covers the exposed long side, helping conceal supports, plumbing and the underside of the bath for a tidier look.
TAILS’ 1600MM BATH FINISH
Complete the long exposed side of a shorter bath
A 1600mm front bath panel covers the main exposed length beneath a compatible straight bath, hiding the frame, pipework and unfinished underside. This less-common length is especially relevant where a 1700mm panel would be oversized, but the exact bath dimensions, panel height and fixing arrangement still need to correspond.
Finishing a 1600mm Bath Without an Oversized Fascia
Compare true bath length, panel height and the amount of adjustment available
The bath has one long exposed side
This panel is intended to finish the principal side of a bath installed against a wall, rather than the shorter end. It creates a cleaner exterior where the bath frame and plumbing would otherwise remain visible from the room.
A standard 1700mm panel is too long
The 1600mm format is better proportioned for a shorter straight bath and avoids relying on excessive cutting or overlap. Selecting a panel closer to the actual bath length can also preserve the intended border, texture or decorative detailing.
You want the bath exterior to feel coordinated
White, coloured, timber-effect and decorative finishes can connect the bath with nearby vanity furniture, flooring or wall surfaces. Compare the panel face with the rest of the room as well as the bath itself, especially when it will occupy a prominent horizontal area.
The bath is shaped rather than straight
P-shaped, L-shaped and curved baths usually require a panel formed specifically around their wider or shaped frontage. A flat 1600mm panel will not follow those contours or meet the screen end correctly.
The installed height falls outside range
Bath legs, flooring and rim height determine the vertical space the panel must cover. Another model may be required where the panel cannot reach the floor, sits too tall beneath the rim or lacks suitable height adjustment.
A short end also remains visible
The front panel only finishes the long side. A compatible end panel may also be required where one short side faces into the bathroom, and the two pieces should meet neatly at the exposed corner.
1600mm Front Bath Panel FAQs
Questions about shortening, end panels and matching the bath exterior
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Can a 1600mm front panel be shortened?
Some panels allow limited trimming, while moulded, framed or patterned designs may not. Check the individual product guidance before cutting, as removing material can affect the finished edge, strength or position of the fixing points.
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Will I also need a 700mm or 750mm end panel?
Only if a short end of the bath remains exposed. Choose the end panel by the bath’s actual width and compatible furniture range rather than assuming one standard depth applies to every 1600mm bath.
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Should the panel match the bath or the bathroom furniture?
Either approach can work. A white panel lets the bath read as one ceramic-style form, while a furniture finish can integrate it with nearby cabinetry. The strongest choice depends on which element you want the bath exterior to relate to visually.
DESIGNER’S NOTE
Treat the 1600mm panel as a major horizontal surface: use white for a quiet, continuous bath profile or echo nearby furniture when you want the bathing area to feel more built in.