The 10 Most Popular Bathrooms So Far in 2024
Creativity flows freely in ways big and small in these inspiring colorful and neutral baths
This Trending Now story features the most-saved bathroom photos uploaded to Houzz between Dec. 15, 2023, and March 15, 2024.
Designers use a range of strategies to add style and function to a bathroom, and you’ll find many of them in this countdown of the most-saved bathroom photos uploaded to Houzz so far this year. Get ideas for curbless and low-curb showers, light and moody color palettes, large and small layouts and more.
Designers use a range of strategies to add style and function to a bathroom, and you’ll find many of them in this countdown of the most-saved bathroom photos uploaded to Houzz so far this year. Get ideas for curbless and low-curb showers, light and moody color palettes, large and small layouts and more.
9. Shining Example
This transitional bath in Austin, Texas, by Kelley Design Group speaks quietly to luxury rather than shouting about it. Sunlight pours in from a shower window onto a floating double vanity with an eye-catching ribbed detail in front of both sinks, making the mixed metals of the hardware and fixtures shine. The shower walls and ceiling are clad in the same light-colored, vertically installed tile, creating a defined look and allowing the slat flooring to stand out, while a bench runs the length of the shower for convenience.
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This transitional bath in Austin, Texas, by Kelley Design Group speaks quietly to luxury rather than shouting about it. Sunlight pours in from a shower window onto a floating double vanity with an eye-catching ribbed detail in front of both sinks, making the mixed metals of the hardware and fixtures shine. The shower walls and ceiling are clad in the same light-colored, vertically installed tile, creating a defined look and allowing the slat flooring to stand out, while a bench runs the length of the shower for convenience.
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8. High-Contrast Concept
Black and white star in this Seattle-area bath by Design Harmony. A freestanding tub with a black base grounds the otherwise mostly white space, while the black shower frame adds an elegant geometric touch. Basket-weave floor tile, Roman shades in a wide pinstripe pattern and Carrara marble tile with deep gray veining keep the look lively. And generous natural light from the windows and skylight bolsters the brightness.
Should You Get a Freestanding or Built-In Bathtub?
Black and white star in this Seattle-area bath by Design Harmony. A freestanding tub with a black base grounds the otherwise mostly white space, while the black shower frame adds an elegant geometric touch. Basket-weave floor tile, Roman shades in a wide pinstripe pattern and Carrara marble tile with deep gray veining keep the look lively. And generous natural light from the windows and skylight bolsters the brightness.
Should You Get a Freestanding or Built-In Bathtub?
7. Boy Wonder
Two teenage boys in Texas have a handsome new bath that will grow with them, courtesy of their designer mom, Jennifer Kizzee. With its weathered wood vanity, black marble-look porcelain wall tiles and gray stone-look ceramic countertop, the space has a masculine vibe with a modern edge. Two walls of the low-curb shower, which has a steam feature, sport slatted-wood-look tile for an organic, textural element.
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Two teenage boys in Texas have a handsome new bath that will grow with them, courtesy of their designer mom, Jennifer Kizzee. With its weathered wood vanity, black marble-look porcelain wall tiles and gray stone-look ceramic countertop, the space has a masculine vibe with a modern edge. Two walls of the low-curb shower, which has a steam feature, sport slatted-wood-look tile for an organic, textural element.
Shop for bathroom vanities on Houzz
6. Hotel Style at Home
Designer Amanda Lehmann of Lehmann Creative Studio gave this bath in a home north of New York City a modern look. The owners wanted a hotel vibe, and all the special details in tasteful neutrals deliver just that: raw concrete atop a custom floating vanity, mosaic shower tile set in a diamond pattern, and a floating shower bench that matches the shower’s low curb saddle, for starters.
Designer Amanda Lehmann of Lehmann Creative Studio gave this bath in a home north of New York City a modern look. The owners wanted a hotel vibe, and all the special details in tasteful neutrals deliver just that: raw concrete atop a custom floating vanity, mosaic shower tile set in a diamond pattern, and a floating shower bench that matches the shower’s low curb saddle, for starters.
5. Grand Entrance
An arched shower entry gives this moody Cardiff, California, home office bathroom a special touch. Designer Melissa Prevost matched the office’s look here with a custom deep blue wall paint, which complements a dark marble vanity countertop. Zellige tile in a light color, unlacquered brass fixtures and a white oak vanity keep the design from veering too far over to the dark side.
How to Choose a Bathroom Vanity: Your Step-by-Step Guide
An arched shower entry gives this moody Cardiff, California, home office bathroom a special touch. Designer Melissa Prevost matched the office’s look here with a custom deep blue wall paint, which complements a dark marble vanity countertop. Zellige tile in a light color, unlacquered brass fixtures and a white oak vanity keep the design from veering too far over to the dark side.
How to Choose a Bathroom Vanity: Your Step-by-Step Guide
4. Neutral Expression
Handmade tile from a hotel in Ibiza, Spain, inspired the tile on the vanity wall, shower walls and bench in this Salt Lake City bath by Dorothy Day Huntsman of Dayhouse Studio. The complementary flooring is a mosaic marble tile, and atop it sits a white oak vanity with clear knobs. A bit of zing in the otherwise neutral space comes courtesy of a brightly colored rug.
Handmade tile from a hotel in Ibiza, Spain, inspired the tile on the vanity wall, shower walls and bench in this Salt Lake City bath by Dorothy Day Huntsman of Dayhouse Studio. The complementary flooring is a mosaic marble tile, and atop it sits a white oak vanity with clear knobs. A bit of zing in the otherwise neutral space comes courtesy of a brightly colored rug.
3. Ponying Up
A pony wall topped by glass separates the curbless shower from the freestanding tub in this Austin, Texas, bath. But designer Lilianne Steckel created visual continuity with a fresh green tile on the walls of both spaces as well as the pony wall itself. The floor tile, delightfully unexpected concrete with a brass inlay, is carried through both halves as well for a cohesive look that also allows for delineation. Brass fixtures throughout strike a lively note.
New to home remodeling? Learn the basics
A pony wall topped by glass separates the curbless shower from the freestanding tub in this Austin, Texas, bath. But designer Lilianne Steckel created visual continuity with a fresh green tile on the walls of both spaces as well as the pony wall itself. The floor tile, delightfully unexpected concrete with a brass inlay, is carried through both halves as well for a cohesive look that also allows for delineation. Brass fixtures throughout strike a lively note.
New to home remodeling? Learn the basics
2. Hitting the Slope
This Austin, Texas, bath has a sloped ceiling and a big window high on the wall, allowing in lots of natural light without compromising privacy. Designer Sharon George of Architecture by George also brought in a frameless and curbless glass shower enclosure, vertically stacked tile and plenty of white, creating a spacious design that belies the space’s size — a mere 33 square feet. The green tile not only adds interest but makes the shower seem deeper too.
This Austin, Texas, bath has a sloped ceiling and a big window high on the wall, allowing in lots of natural light without compromising privacy. Designer Sharon George of Architecture by George also brought in a frameless and curbless glass shower enclosure, vertically stacked tile and plenty of white, creating a spacious design that belies the space’s size — a mere 33 square feet. The green tile not only adds interest but makes the shower seem deeper too.
1. Fine Lines
Two lengthy linear vanities carve out a path straight to the wet room in this spacious Sun Valley, Idaho, bath by Krystal Swank of Mountainwood Construction. With its double shower, soaker tub, saloon-style glass doors, hemlock ceiling and drop-down lighting, the space has the soothing, luxurious feel of a high-end spa.
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Two lengthy linear vanities carve out a path straight to the wet room in this spacious Sun Valley, Idaho, bath by Krystal Swank of Mountainwood Construction. With its double shower, soaker tub, saloon-style glass doors, hemlock ceiling and drop-down lighting, the space has the soothing, luxurious feel of a high-end spa.
More on Houzz
Read more bathroom stories
Browse bathroom photos
Find a local bathroom remodeler
Shop for your bathroom
Zellige tile in a slate hue adds lovely color and depth to this guest bath in Los Angeles by Deirdre Doherty Interiors. The lack of a shower curb emphasizes how the patterned floor tile travels into the shower and up the wall for a beautiful cohesiveness. It also helps keep the eye moving, making the space seem bigger than its 45 square feet. Slate veining in the marble slab vanity countertop nods to the main wall tile, while brushed gold hardware brings the gleam.
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