The Real Reason Why So Many Hotel Showers Have Just Half a Door

by SharonKurheg

If you’ve stayed at a hotel in the past few years, you’ve probably had the experience. You go to take your first shower in the room and the shower setup is just…weird.

There’s no shower curtain.

a bathroom with a bathtub and towels

 

There are no sliding doors.

a bathroom with a glass shower door

 

If it’s a standalone shower, there may not even be an actual hinged shower door, period.

a glass shower with a sink and a mirror

Instead, you have a shower stall with just a plexiglass wall to fill in part of the space where a traditional curtain or sliding door would be. If you’re lucky, it will take up half of the shower space, but I’ve been in a shower or two where this clear “wall” was less than half the width of the shower space.

a shower with a glass door

The design admittedly looks nicer and aesthetically cleaner than the traditional ones, but it pretty much guarantees a chilly shower stall and a wet bathroom floor, possibly both. Oh, and if you wanted to turn the shower water on and let the water warm up before you step into the shower? Depending on where the wall is in comparison to the shower nozzle, you may be out of luck. I hate that aspect of them.

When it started

People aren’t sure exactly about the roots of the half-wall trend. Some say it started in Japan, where minimalist, spa-inspired design is a big thing. Others, including Condé Nast Traveler, suggest it started in Europe in the 1980s.

“A lot of it comes down to people trying to design hotel rooms with limited space,” boutique hotel designer Tom Parker told the magazine. “It’s about the swing of the shower door, because it has to open outward for safety reasons, like [if] someone falls in the shower. You have to figure out where the door swing’s going to go, make sure it’s not [hitting] the main door. It’s just about clearances.”

During my searching, I saw people complaining about them, at least in Europe, as far back as the early 2000s. And they seemed to start getting a toehold here in the U.S. about 10 or 15 years ago.

OK, but WHY?????

There are several reasons why hotels choose this half-door design:

Lower costs

If you’re a hotelier and have to choose between a full 2-panel sliding door (that will require the tracks to be cleaned, and might need occasional maintenance because it has a moving component), and a half a wall, the latter is going to be less expensive, both in the initial cost and maintenance time/costs. And lower costs are always preferable to hoteliers.

Aesthetics

As we said earlier, the design has a “cleaner” look. It has a “sleek” design and makes the hotel bathroom appear less “cluttered.” Some say it makes the bathroom appear larger. And let’s face it – anything is nicer looking that a shower curtain, LOL!

Easier & faster to clean

A single pane of plexiglass is going to be far faster and easier to clean than 2 panes of glass and the tracks they’re in. Shaving a minute or two off cleaning a room will mean housekeeping has more time to attend to other responsibilities.

Shower curtains are nasty

A hotelier is never going to say this part out loud, but let’s face it – shower curtains are nasty. They’re bacteria traps, you know they’re not washed very often and I don’t even want to know what’s lingering on them from other people doing who knows what. And then they blow on you and stick to your wet body. Ew.

Will they take over?

Hopefully (and, for those of us who aren’t fans, happily) not. The one thing that “all in one” tub/showers have going for them is that they’re cheap. So we’re probably still going to see them in lower-end chains for a long, long time.

But higher end and potentially even some mid-range hotels? Yeah, we’ll probably still see them in more hotels over time. Yuck.

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3 comments

Gene July 24, 2025 - 2:29 pm

Cleaned? They just skip that anyways…

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DaninMCI July 24, 2025 - 5:02 pm

I kind of like them if installed properly, but many aren’t. I believe part of this trend is the wet room approach to bathrooms. Many are installing these types of rooms in houses where the floor around the shower is designed to get wet during the shower, but the idea of the partial glass is to keep the direct spray inside the shower stall. I am living in my second home here in the US, which has this design. The first one still had a shower curb to hold the water in, the current one is zero entry, and I’m not a fan of that.

I can see how some don’t like this, but I still feel it’s better than some shower curtain touching your body and still leaking water all over the floor anyway 🙂

Reply
Christian July 25, 2025 - 4:05 pm

I’m staying at a hotel in Europe right now that has one of these and it sucks. What makes it suck even worse is that it’s over a very tall bathtub so stepping out of the tub with the swinging half door of glass onto a wet floor because the halfway glass doesn’t prevent that floor from flooding and with nothing stable to hang on to and it’s a miserable experience.

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