When we plan a bathroom renovation, the vanity is usually one of the earliest decisions we make because it influences layout, storage, mirror placement, lighting, tapware coordination, and how spacious the room feels. In our experience, homeowners often focus first on colour and finish, but the more important question is how the vanity will perform in daily use.
For compact bathrooms, we usually look for styles that preserve floor visibility, reduce visual bulk, and keep movement comfortable around the basin and shower. In larger bathrooms, we have more flexibility to prioritise storage volume, double-basin arrangements, stronger symmetry, and furniture-style detailing. If you are planning a full bathroom renovation or a broader interior renovation, getting the vanity style right early makes the rest of the design process much smoother.
What a bathroom vanity needs to do
We do not treat vanity choice as a purely decorative decision. A well-selected vanity should support five practical goals:
- provide enough storage for the people using the bathroom
- fit the room without interrupting circulation
- work with existing or planned plumbing locations
- match the visual scale of the space
- stay easy to clean and maintain over time
That is why we often compare vanity styles in terms of both appearance and performance. A beautiful unit that makes a room feel cramped or leaves too little drawer space usually becomes a frustration after handover.
Summary table: best vanity styles by bathroom size
| Vanity style | Best for | Main advantages | Main tradeoffs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Floating vanity | Small bathrooms, ensuites, powder rooms | Opens visible floor area, feels lighter, easier floor cleaning | May offer less storage than full-height cabinetry; wall support matters |
| Slim-depth vanity | Narrow bathrooms | Improves clearance in tight walkways | Smaller basin and reduced drawer depth |
| Corner vanity | Awkward or very compact layouts | Uses difficult space efficiently | Less benchtop area and fewer style options |
| Open-base vanity | Small to medium bathrooms | Lighter visual footprint, room for baskets or easy access below | Exposed storage can look cluttered |
| Freestanding single vanity | Medium to large bathrooms | Strong storage capacity, broad style range | Heavier visual presence |
| Double vanity | Large family bathrooms and master ensuites | Better shared use, more storage, balanced layout | Needs enough width to remain comfortable |
| Furniture-style vanity | Large bathrooms, character homes | Adds warmth and design personality | Can reduce internal storage efficiency |
| Custom-built vanity | Bathrooms with specific storage or layout requirements | Tailored sizing, finish, and function | Usually higher cost and longer planning time |
Best vanity styles for small bathrooms
1. Floating vanities
In small bathrooms, floating vanities are often our first option because they reveal more floor area and reduce visual heaviness. Design publications and homeowner discussions alike repeatedly highlight the same benefit: when the floor continues underneath the vanity, the room tends to feel more open. That does not create extra square metres, but it can noticeably improve the perception of space.
We also find floating units useful when clients want a cleaner contemporary look or easier floor access for cleaning. The tradeoff is that they may not hold as much as a full-height unit of the same width, so we usually review drawer configuration carefully before locking in the design.
2. Slim-depth vanities
Where circulation is tight, depth matters just as much as width. A vanity that projects too far into the room can create daily frustration, especially near shower entries, towel rails, or toilet clearances. In these projects, we often recommend a slim-depth vanity with a basin designed for compact use. This is one of the simplest ways to make a narrow bathroom more comfortable without changing the room envelope.
3. Corner vanities
Corner vanities are not right for every project, but they can solve specific layout problems in very small bathrooms or powder rooms. When door swing, shower placement, or wall lengths limit standard options, a corner layout can free up valuable movement space. We usually reserve this option for rooms where a conventional vanity would dominate the plan.
4. Open-base or legged vanities
An open-base vanity can give a small bathroom a lighter look without going fully wall-hung. We sometimes use this style when clients want a softer or more furniture-like appearance but still need the room to feel visually open. The downside is that open shelving and exposed baskets need more discipline to look tidy.
5. Custom compact vanities
Some small bathrooms simply do not suit off-the-shelf sizing. In those cases, a custom vanity can make the room work far better by adjusting width, depth, drawer layout, benchtop overhang, and basin position. If a bathroom has awkward wall lengths, unusual plumbing constraints, or a need for every millimetre to count, our custom design process is often the most practical path.
Best vanity styles for large bathrooms
1. Double vanities
In larger bathrooms, especially master ensuites and busy family bathrooms, double vanities can be an excellent functional upgrade. We usually recommend them only when there is enough width for both users to move comfortably and enough adjacent space for mirrors, lighting, and storage to feel balanced rather than crowded. A double vanity works best when it genuinely improves how the household uses the bathroom, not just because the room is large enough to fit one.
2. Wide single vanities
A wide single vanity is often the better alternative when one basin is enough but substantial storage and bench space are still needed. We recommend this layout quite often because it preserves generous drawer storage and a calm, uncluttered look while avoiding the plumbing and cleaning complexity of a double-basin setup.
3. Furniture-style vanities
Large bathrooms can handle more visual character, which makes furniture-style vanities a strong option. Timber detailing, shaped legs, shaker fronts, and decorative profiles can all work well in bathrooms with enough breathing room. We tend to use this approach in homes where the bathroom should feel integrated with the rest of the interior rather than purely minimalist.
4. Full custom wall-to-wall vanities
When clients want maximum storage, a tailored look, or seamless integration with mirrors and tall cabinetry, a custom wall-to-wall vanity can perform exceptionally well. This approach is especially useful in family homes where daily storage demand is high. If the bathroom renovation forms part of a larger design package, this is where coordinated joinery decisions can add real value.
How we help clients choose between floating and freestanding vanities
The floating-versus-freestanding question comes up often, and there is no single right answer. We generally assess it through four lenses:
- visual openness: floating vanities usually help a room feel larger
- storage volume: freestanding vanities often provide more usable cabinetry
- cleaning access: floating units make floor cleaning easier, but the underside still needs attention
- installation conditions: wall structure and plumbing coordination matter more with wall-hung units
Community discussions among renovators frequently echo what we see on site: people like floating vanities for the sense of space they create, but many still prefer freestanding models when storage is the top priority. In practice, the best choice usually depends on whether the bathroom’s main problem is visual crowding or storage shortage.
Vanity materials, storage, and maintenance considerations
Style is only one part of the decision. We also guide clients through the practical details that affect performance over time.
Drawer storage vs cupboard storage
In most modern bathrooms, we prefer drawers over deep cupboards because they make everyday items easier to access and organise. Cupboards still have a place, especially around plumbing, but good drawer planning usually improves usability.
Moisture resistance
Bathrooms are demanding spaces. We recommend finishes and materials that can handle humidity, routine cleaning, and occasional water exposure around the basin area. Even a well-designed vanity will disappoint if material selection is poor for the environment.
Countertop and basin integration
Integrated tops can simplify cleaning, while vessel basins can create more visual impact. We choose between them based on the client’s style preference, splash control, available height, and how much benchtop working space the bathroom needs.
Toe-kick, legs, or wall-hung clearance
These details subtly change how large or heavy the vanity feels. In small bathrooms, we typically avoid bulky bases unless storage demand makes them necessary. In larger rooms, a grounded furniture-style base can add welcome substance.
Common mistakes we recommend avoiding
- choosing a vanity that is too deep for the room
- prioritising trend over practical storage needs
- using a double vanity in a room that cannot comfortably support it
- ignoring plumbing and wall support requirements for floating units
- selecting finishes that look good in photos but are difficult to maintain
- forgetting how mirrors, lighting, and power points need to align with the vanity layout
Most of these issues are avoidable when the vanity is considered as part of the whole room rather than as an isolated product decision. That is why we prefer to resolve vanity sizing and style early in our renovation planning process.
Practical takeaways
If you are deciding on the best vanity style for your bathroom, this is the framework we usually suggest:
- choose a floating or slim-depth vanity when the room feels tight and every visual gain matters
- consider a corner vanity only when the layout is unusually constrained
- use a freestanding or wide single vanity when storage is more important than visual lightness
- install a double vanity only if the room is wide enough to keep the layout comfortable
- invest in custom sizing when standard options waste space or compromise circulation
In our experience, the best vanity is the one that matches the scale of the room and the daily habits of the household. A small bathroom does not always need the smallest vanity, and a large bathroom does not always need a double vanity. The right answer comes from balancing storage, proportion, maintenance, and layout efficiency.
References
- Houzz: 15 Small-Bathroom Vanity Ideas That Rock Style and Storage
- Lowe’s: Floating Vanity vs. Freestanding Vanity
- Angi: Floating Vanity vs. Freestanding Vanity: Which Is Best for You?
- Reddit discussion: Bathroom vanity – floating or freestanding?
- Reddit discussion: Floating Vanity – Is 100mm from the ground enough?
Author / Editorial Team
This article was produced by our internal renovation and design-build editorial team at Cspace Renovation. We write from the perspective of professionals involved in residential renovation planning, bathroom upgrades, interior detailing, project coordination, and practical design decision-making. Our content process combines hands-on renovation experience, layout and material planning knowledge, and review of reputable public sources so we can publish guidance that is useful, realistic, and aligned with how bathrooms are actually designed and delivered.