Bathroom Lighting
Task and Atmosphere in the Same Room
Bathrooms demand more of lighting than any other room in the home: mirror task light accurate enough for grooming, ambient light warm enough to feel like a retreat, and IP ratings that comply with the electrical zones created by water proximity. Our bathroom lighting collection covers all three—vanity lights for mirror accuracy, ceiling fixtures for ambient warmth, and wall sconces that bridge both functions. In larger bathrooms, a small crystal pendant or compact chandelier over a freestanding bath creates the kind of spa atmosphere that makes a bathroom more than a utility room. Every fixture in this collection is selected with zone compliance in mind.
- IP-rated fixtures: Bathroom lighting must comply with electrical zone requirements—Zone 0 (inside the bath/shower) requires IP67; Zones 1–2 require IP44 minimum. Check individual product pages for IP ratings before purchasing.
- Vanity accuracy: For mirrors, neutral white (3000–4000K) produces the most accurate colour rendering for grooming—warm light flatters but distorts; cool light is accurate but harsh. The ideal vanity light is neutral.
- Ambient warmth: Overhead or ambient bathroom fixtures can use warm white (2700–3000K) for the spa-like atmosphere. The combination of a neutral vanity light and warm ambient light is the bathroom lighting ideal.
- Chrome, brushed nickel, matte black: Standard bathroom-compatible finishes across the range. Check each product for available options.
Why Bathroom Lighting Deserves the Same Attention as the Kitchen
- The mirror is everything: Most people spend more time in front of a bathroom mirror than any other reflective surface in the home. Getting the light right—neutral, even, without shadows—is not a luxury, it's a functional necessity. Overhead-only light creates shadows under the eyes and nose that make every grooming task harder.
- The freestanding bath moment: A freestanding bath in a well-designed bathroom deserves a light fixture above it. A compact crystal chandelier or pendant positioned over a freestanding bath—provided it's IP-rated for Zone 1—creates an atmosphere that no towel rail or tile selection can replicate.
- The spa alternative: Hotel spa bathrooms are lit with indirect, layered, warm light. This is achievable in any bathroom—overhead fixture for ambient warmth, vanity light for task accuracy, and a dimmable switch for the overhead. Total cost of this upgrade: minimal. Impact: significant.
- Coordination with the rest of the home: A bathroom with chrome fittings but matte black light fixtures creates unnecessary tension. Matching your light fixture finish to your tapware, shower fittings, and door hardware creates the kind of cohesion that signals a considered renovation.
Layering Bathroom Light
- Overhead ceiling fixture (ambient, warm white) + vanity mirror light on either side (neutral, task-focused) = the complete bathroom lighting scheme
- For larger bathrooms with a freestanding bath: add a pendant or compact chandelier above the bath as a third, atmospheric layer
- For ensuite bathrooms opening off a bedroom: match the finish of bathroom light fixtures to the bedroom light fixtures for continuity
Explore Bathroom Lighting
Overhead: Ceiling Lights | Chandeliers
Vanity & Mirror: Wall Lights
Statement: Crystal Collection
By Style: Minimalistic | Marble Lighting
Shop: All Bathroom | Best Sellers
How to Choose Bathroom Lighting
- Identify your zones first: Zone 0: inside the bath or shower tray (IP67 required). Zone 1: above the bath or shower to 2.25m height (IP44 required). Zone 2: 60cm outside Zone 1 (IP44 recommended). Outside these zones: standard domestic fittings are generally acceptable. Consult a licensed electrician if you're unsure.
- Mirror light placement: Side-mounted lights at eye level (approximately 60 inches from floor to centre) on either side of the mirror provide the most accurate, shadow-free task light. Overhead mirror lights are a compromise—better than nothing, but not the ideal.
- Colour temperature by function: Vanity/mirror light: 3000–4000K. Overhead ambient: 2700–3000K. If you can only have one colour temperature in the bathroom, 3000K is the best compromise between accuracy and warmth.
- Match the metalwork: Your bathroom light fixture finish should match your tapware finish—chrome to chrome, brushed nickel to brushed nickel, matte black to matte black. This is the most cost-effective way to make a bathroom feel coherently designed.
Installation Note
All bathroom electrical work must comply with local building codes and IEC 60364-7-701 zone requirements. A licensed electrician is mandatory for all bathroom wiring—do not attempt DIY electrical work in a bathroom.















































