Large shower areas often look best with a longer fixed screen that feels proportioned to the space. 1200mm wetroom panels are designed for generous walk-in showers, wetroom layouts and main bathrooms where splash control and open access both matter. The wider glass panel helps create a more defined showering zone while keeping the overall look minimal. This 1200mm wetroom shower screen size suits sleek, spacious bathroom designs.

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TAILS’ SCREEN WIDTH CHECK

Contain more spray across a wider opening

A 1200mm wetroom panel creates a broad fixed screen between the showering area and the rest of the room. Its extended width can improve splash control and give larger walk-in layouts a stronger glazed boundary, provided enough open access remains beside the panel for comfortable entry.

Is a 1200mm Wetroom Panel Right for Your Walk-In Layout?

Balance splash coverage, entrance width and fixing position

A 1200mm Wide Wetroom Screen Suits You If

You need broader splash coverage

The 1200mm span places more glass between the shower outlet and the open side than a shorter panel. This can help contain spray in larger walk-in areas, although performance still depends on shower position, water direction and room layout.

Your tray or floor area is generous

A 1200mm wide wetroom panel works best where the showering footprint can accommodate the screen without leaving an awkwardly narrow entrance. Mark the panel and access gap on the floor before buying to understand the completed proportions.

You want a strong glazed division

The broader panel can give an open shower a clearer architectural edge while preserving the door-free format. It suits schemes where the glass should define the wet zone rather than appear as a small protective screen beside the outlet.

Another Panel Width or Configuration May Suit You Better If

The entrance becomes too narrow

A shorter panel may provide easier access where the overall showering area is not much wider than 1200mm. The remaining opening must accommodate comfortable entry without forcing users to turn sharply around the glass edge.

The panel overhangs the shower base

The complete screen width must suit the tray, former or prepared wetroom floor area. A 1200mm panel should not be selected simply because the wall is long enough if its lower edge cannot be supported and sealed correctly.

One fixed screen will not contain spray

A return panel, deflector or different enclosure arrangement may be more effective where the shower outlet faces the open entrance or sits close to the screen edge. Panel width alone cannot compensate for an unsuitable spray direction.

1200mm Wetroom Panel FAQs

Access gaps, support bars and shower positioning explained

  • How much entrance space should remain beside the panel?

    The required opening depends on the users and room layout, but it must allow comfortable entry without contact with the glass or nearby fittings. Subtract the panel’s precise fitted width from the complete shower opening and assess the remaining gap on site.

  • Does a 1200mm screen need a support bar?

    That depends on the individual panel system. A broad fixed screen may use a stabilising bar, ceiling brace or another approved support arrangement, but contents and fitting methods vary. Check what is supplied and follow the manufacturer’s installation drawing.

  • Where should the shower head sit behind the glass?

    Position it so the main spray falls well within the protected side of the panel rather than towards the open entrance. The best location depends on the tray depth, panel return and spray pattern, so plan the outlet before finalising pipework.

DESIGNER’S NOTE

Align the 1200mm glass edge with a major tile joint or tray line, leaving a visibly generous entrance so the broad screen feels intentional rather than obstructive.