Thinking about remodeling a bathroom this year? Chances are you're more excited about adding a state-of-the-art shower than a new tub. Homeowners are hot for high-end showers loaded with spa-like amenities, but appear to be cooling off on bathtubs, according to a recent trend study.
Houzz, the popular online resource for home remodeling and design, surveyed more than 7,600 of its registered users in the United States and Canada to share their bathroom makeover priorities, and found that a sizable number of remodelers, 43 percent, plan to skip the tub altogether in their bathroom project, including in the master bath.
"For me, personally, that was a surprise," said Liza Hausman, vice president of community for Houzz. "I love my bathtub!"
But many of today's homeowners would rather spend their budget and square footage on upgrading their shower. "There's a swing toward super amazing showers," she said. "Most people don't have huge bathrooms and would rather put in a walk-in shower with all the bells and whistles."
Today's dream shower includes a glass enclosure, the choice of 79 percent for master bath makeovers, with frameless glass the top choice, preferred by 54 percent. (Shower curtains appear in only 10 percent of new master baths, and in 33 percent in other full baths.)
Frameless glass helps a bathroom appear more light and spacious, said Lynn Monson, owner of DreamMaker Bath & Kitchen and Monson Interior Design, St. Louis Park. And today's glass is easier to clean, he noted. "Water sheds off, and it doesn't etch like the older glass."
Body sprays and islands are other popular shower features, according to Catherine Harrington, interior designer with Ispiri in Woodbury. "People want bigger, better showers. We don't see as many of the old Jacuzzi tubs."
Monson has observed the shower's ascendancy and the tub's decline for several years, but he thinks the tub is evolving rather than disappearing. "For a while, we were taking out more tubs than we were installing," he said. "But we're starting to see a shift back," fueled by a recent wave of tub innovations, from sleek freestanding tubs that look like sculpture to tubs laden with features such as microjets or chromatherapy. "If you're going to have a tub, you have a [luxurious] one," he said. "The plain old soaking tub, that is going away."