The right shower can make daily routines feel easier, more comfortable and better matched to the rest of the bathroom. Showers include options for different installations, from exposed and concealed valves to complete shower kits, mixer showers and matching handsets. They suit en-suites, family bathrooms and bath shower setups where control, reach and finish all matter. A well-chosen bathroom shower helps bring the whole wash space together.

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TAILS’ SHOWER CHECK

Start with the system behind the fittings

Buying a shower starts with the water and services behind the wall, not only the head and controls on show. This range brings together electric showers, mixer showers and complete shower systems, helping you compare heating method, outlet configuration and installation style before settling on the final design.

What Should You Consider When Buying a Shower?

Work from the installation, household routine and required outlets

Compare Complete Shower Options If

You are planning a new installation

Starting before pipework, electrics and wall finishes are finalised gives you more freedom to compare electric shower units, mixer shower sets and concealed or exposed arrangements. The installer can then plan the services around the selected system.

You need a complete shower setup

Complete shower packages can bring the controls, fixed head, handset and associated outlets together in one planned arrangement. This is useful when replacing several parts at once or purchasing everything required for a newly created showering area.

Your household wants different functions

Some users prefer a fixed overhead spray, while others value a separate handset for rinsing, cleaning or more targeted use. Comparing single-outlet and multi-outlet shower systems helps establish which configuration will be used regularly rather than added unnecessarily.

Narrow the Product Type First If

The required system is already known

If the property has already been assessed for an electric, mixer or another specific shower type, concentrating on that category will make comparison more relevant. You can focus on suitable controls, ratings, outlets and installation formats.

Only one shower part needs replacing

A replacement head, handset, hose or control component is usually better sourced from its dedicated product range. Check dimensions, connections and manufacturer compatibility carefully, because a similar appearance does not guarantee that the new part will fit.

Existing concealed components must remain

Installed valve bodies and concealed pipework can restrict which visible controls and outlets may be used. Purchase only components confirmed as compatible with the existing first fix rather than selecting a different shower system solely for its finish or styling.

Shower Buying FAQs

Water supplies, replacement projects and package contents

  • What should I confirm before buying a shower?

    Establish the available water supplies, electrical provision where relevant, intended shower position and number of outlets required. You should also decide whether the installation will be exposed or concealed and whether existing services need to remain.

  • Can a new shower use my existing connections?

    Possibly, but connection positions, pipe centres, cable requirements and concealed components vary between products. A replacement shower may therefore need alterations even when it uses the same general system type as the model being removed.

  • What comes with a complete shower system?

    Contents vary considerably. A set may include controls, a fixed head, handset, hose, rail, wall arm or outlet, while other fittings remain separate. Read the full product description before purchase rather than relying on the installation image alone.

DESIGNER’S NOTE

Arrange the controls, handset and fixed head around one clear vertical line, keeping each fitting comfortably spaced and visually balanced within the tiled shower area.