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Bathroom Hooks: The Right Hook for Every Spot in Your Bathroom

Bathroom Hooks: The Right Hook for Every Spot in Your Bathroom

Walk into any well-organised bathroom and you will notice that hooks do a lot of the heavy lifting. A bathroom hook in the right place keeps towels off the floor, robes accessible without a cabinet and wet swimwear off the furniture. But not all hooks serve the same purpose — and choosing the wrong type for a location leads to hooks that fall, scratch or simply do not fit the wall.

This guide walks through every hook situation in a typical bathroom and tells you what to use where.

Towel Hooks Next to the Shower or Bath

Towel hooks beside the shower are the most used hooks in any bathroom. They need to hold a damp, heavy towel multiple times per day and survive in a humid environment without rusting or losing grip. Key requirements:

  • Rust-resistant material — stainless steel is ideal
  • Strong enough adhesive or fixing for the weight of a wet towel (typically 500g to 1kg)
  • Positioned at chest height — around 150 to 160 cm from the floor for adults

A set of Minismus Self-Adhesive Square Wall Hooks or the round base version mounts directly on tiled walls without drilling. Each hook holds up to several kilograms — more than enough for towels and light robes.

Robe Hooks Behind the Bathroom Door

Behind-door hooks need to hold more weight than towel hooks — a thick bathrobe can weigh 1.5 kg or more when dry, and considerably more when damp. Over-the-door hooks are the best solution here because they distribute weight across the door frame rather than relying on a single adhesion point.

The Minismus Stainless Steel Door Hooks hang over any standard door and hold towels, robes and bags without touching the wall at all. Available in black, silver and white.

Hooks in the Shower Itself

Inside the shower, hooks face the toughest conditions: direct water spray, constant humidity and temperature changes. Adhesive hooks in the direct spray zone tend to fail faster — if you need a hook inside the shower, an over-door hook on the shower door panel is more reliable.

The Minismus Shower Door Hook with Silicone Coating hooks directly over a glass shower door panel without touching the wall. The silicone coating protects the glass from scratches and prevents slipping. Useful for hanging a loofah, wash bag or shower cap within easy reach.

Small Utility Hooks Around the Sink

Near the sink, small hooks are useful for hand towels, flannels and bathroom bags. These hooks carry lighter loads than towel or robe hooks, so a smaller adhesive hook is perfectly adequate. Position them at a height where the hanging item does not touch the sink or counter surface — typically around 80 to 90 cm from the floor.

How Many Hooks Does a Bathroom Need?

As a baseline: one hook per person who regularly uses the bathroom, positioned where each person naturally wants to hang things. For a household of two sharing one bathroom, that means at minimum two towel hooks beside the shower and two robe hooks behind the door. Add a small utility hook near the sink for hand towels.

A pack of six self-adhesive hooks gives you enough for a full bathroom setup with some left over for the kitchen or hallway. Browse the complete Minismus Bathroom & Toilet collection to find hooks for every location in the right finish.

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As a minimum, one hook per person who regularly uses the bathroom. Position one beside the shower for the bath towel and one behind the door for a robe. For a household of two, that means four hooks as a baseline — two towel hooks and two robe hooks.
For inside the shower itself, an over-door hook on the glass panel is more reliable than a wall adhesive hook. Constant direct water spray weakens adhesive bonds over time. A shower door hook with silicone coating grips the glass without slipping and requires no installation.
Yes. Self-adhesive wall hooks and over-door hooks work equally well in kitchens for tea towels, oven gloves and bags. Choose a finish that matches your kitchen hardware. Avoid placing adhesive hooks directly beside the hob where heat and steam accelerate adhesive degradation.
For bath towels, mount hooks at chest height — approximately 150 to 160 cm from the floor for adults. For children's towels, lower to 100 to 120 cm so they can reach independently. For robe hooks behind the door, 160 to 170 cm works well for most adults.
No — adhesive hooks need a smooth, flat surface to form a proper bond. Textured or rough tiles have too little contact area for the adhesive pad. For textured tiles, use over-door hooks or consider drilling. On smooth glazed tiles, adhesive hooks work reliably.
Choose hooks with silicone or rubber pads on the contact surfaces that touch the door. These create a cushion between the metal hook and the door finish, preventing scratches and paint transfer. Without protective pads, metal-on-painted-door contact will eventually leave marks.
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