
Bathroom trends in Melbourne’s south-east
Bathroom trends in Melbourne’s south-east — what homeowners are choosing in 2026
The bathroom has quietly become one of the most personal rooms in the house. It’s no longer just functional — it’s where Melbourne homeowners are investing seriously, choosing products that feel considered, calm, and genuinely lovely to use every day.
At Aussie Home and Floor, we supply bathroom products across Melbourne’s south-east — from Dandenong South to Berwick, Cranbourne, Noble Park, and beyond. Here’s what we’re seeing customers gravitating toward in 2026, and why it works so well in Melbourne homes.
| Trend 1 Warm neutrals replacing stark white |
| All-white bathrooms dominated for a long time, and they’ll never disappear entirely — but in 2026 the colour story in Melbourne bathrooms has warmed up significantly. Warm whites, soft creams, greige wall tiles, and sandy grout lines are replacing the clinical, cool-white palette of the previous decade.
This shift makes a lot of sense for Melbourne homes. Many south-east houses have warm brick exteriors, timber elements, and established gardens. A warm bathroom palette connects naturally to the rest of the home rather than feeling like a separate, sterile environment. The warmth is showing up in tiles, in vanity colours, in bath finishes, and especially in tapware — where brushed brass and brushed gold are increasingly replacing chrome.
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| Trend 2 Brushed brass and matte black tapware taking over from chrome |
| Chrome tapware is reliable and versatile, but it no longer reads as premium or considered. In 2026, Melbourne south-east homeowners are choosing brushed brass, brushed gold, gunmetal, and matte black tapware — finishes that add warmth, texture, and a sense of intentionality to the bathroom.
Brushed brass pairs beautifully with warm neutral tiles and timber vanities — a combination we’re seeing repeatedly in our showroom. Matte black remains popular in more graphic, contemporary bathrooms where strong contrast is the design intent. The practical news: brushed finishes are more forgiving of water spots and fingerprints than polished chrome, which is a genuine daily quality-of-life improvement in a room that gets used multiple times a day.
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| Trend 3 Freestanding baths as a lifestyle statement |
| The freestanding bath has crossed from luxury item to aspirational standard. In 2026, we’re seeing Melbourne homeowners include a freestanding bath in bathroom renovations at a budget level that would have seemed unlikely five years ago — driven partly by better product availability and partly by a genuine cultural shift in how people think about the bathroom.
The bath is no longer just for bathing. It’s a centrepiece — the element the room is designed around. Whether it’s a classic roll-top in a heritage home or a sleek oval in a contemporary new build, the freestanding bath anchors the bathroom in a way no built-in can match. For Melbourne south-east homeowners, the key consideration is space: a freestanding bath needs room to breathe on at least three sides to look and function at its best.
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| Our local tip:
If you’re planning a bathroom renovation in the south-east Melbourne corridor, freestanding baths are one of the most impactful upgrades you can make for resale value. Buyers notice them, remember them, and respond to them at inspection. |
| Trend 4 Frameless shower screens and wet room designs |
| The shower screen frame has been disappearing from Melbourne bathrooms for several years, and in 2026 it’s close to gone entirely in any renovation with design intent. Frameless and semi-frameless glass screens create a visual openness that makes even a modest bathroom feel generous.
Taking it a step further, wet room and walk-in shower designs — where a full glass wall or open entry replaces the traditional screen — are increasingly popular in larger bathroom renovations. The absence of a shower tray or step makes the bathroom feel more like a spa and less like a utility room.
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| Trend 5 Mirrors and storage working harder together |
| The bathroom mirror has evolved. In 2026, Melbourne homeowners are choosing LED-backlit mirrors, shaving cabinets with integrated lighting, and full-width mirror cabinets that provide generous storage without cluttering the vanity surface.
The practical driver is simple: bathrooms in Melbourne’s south-east corridor are often not large, and smart mirror and cabinet choices can dramatically improve the daily functionality of the room without requiring a structural change. A well-chosen mirror also lifts the perceived quality of the entire bathroom — it’s one of the most cost-effective upgrades available.
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Shop bathroom products online — delivered across Melbourne
Everything we’ve covered in this post is available through Aussie Home and Floor. We supply bathroom products online with delivery across Melbourne and Victoria — tapware, mirrors, cabinets, freestanding baths, shower screens, accessories, and more. Visit our website or come into our Dandenong South showroom to see current ranges in person.
| Explore our bathroom range:
Browse tapware, baths, mirrors, vanities, accessories, and toilets at Aussie Home and Floor — online with Melbourne-wide delivery, or in our Dandenong South showroom. |
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