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Which Bathroom Accessories Do You Actually Need — and Which You Don't

The Problem With Most Bathroom Accessories

Walk into any homeware store and you'll find dozens of bathroom accessories. Most of them solve problems you don't have or duplicate things you already own. Here's a clear-eyed list of what genuinely earns its place in a bathroom — and what doesn't.

What You Actually Need

A Shower Squeegee

If you have a glass shower screen or tiles, a squeegee is the single most useful bathroom tool you can own. Fifteen seconds after every shower keeps glass spotless and significantly reduces mould and limescale. Our 28 cm squeegee with hanging hook covers most shower sizes and stores neatly on the wall.

Proper Towel Storage

Towels draped over doors or radiators dry poorly and create visual clutter. A set of over-the-door hooks gives every towel a proper home. No drilling required.

A Good Bath Mat

A mat that stays damp, smells within weeks and grips nothing is worse than no mat at all. A diatomite stone bath mat dries in seconds, never develops odour and lasts indefinitely. It's the upgrade most bathrooms need most.

A Toilet Roll Holder That Works

The single roll balanced on the cistern is a universal frustration. A freestanding toilet roll holder holds five rolls, requires no installation and looks deliberate rather than makeshift.

What You Probably Don't Need

Decorative storage baskets that collect dust. A second soap dish when one will do. Matching sets that include a toothbrush holder, soap dish, cotton ball jar and lotion pump — most bathrooms use none of these on the counter. A toilet brush that sits in a holder on the floor and needs cleaning itself every week.

The Rule

Every accessory in a bathroom should earn its place by solving a specific, recurring problem. If it doesn't, it's clutter. Browse the bathroom accessories collection with that question in mind.

Veelgestelde vragen 6 vragen
The essentials are a shower squeegee, proper towel hooks, a quality bath mat and a toilet roll holder that holds more than one roll. Everything beyond these should earn its place by solving a specific, recurring problem.
Decorative storage containers that collect dust, matching sets with items you never use (cotton ball jars, lotion pumps) and a second soap dish when one is sufficient. If it doesn't solve a daily problem, it's probably clutter.
Yes, if you have glass shower screens or tiles. Used after every shower it takes fifteen seconds and prevents the limescale and mould buildup that makes bathroom cleaning hard. It's one of the most cost-effective bathroom tools available.
Yes — wet bathroom floors are a slip hazard. A diatomite stone mat is the best option: it absorbs water instantly, never stays damp and doesn't develop the mould and odour that fabric mats get after a few weeks.
A shower squeegee is arguably the most useful — it actively prevents the most common bathroom maintenance problem (limescale and mould on glass and tiles) in fifteen seconds a day. A stone bath mat comes a close second.
One hook per person who regularly uses the bathroom, plus one spare. Over-the-door hooks are ideal because they add multiple hooks without drilling and can be repositioned or removed without damage.
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