Choosing the Right Bathroom Wallpaper Material
The single most important decision when wallpapering a bathroom isn't the pattern - it's the material. Bathrooms deal with humidity, steam, and occasional splashes that standard wallpaper isn't built to handle. Here's how to match the right material to your specific bathroom situation.
Standard Bathrooms with Good Ventilation
If your bathroom has an exhaust fan and doesn't trap steam for extended periods, both our peel and stick and Traditional Type II materials work well. Bathroom Peel and stick wallpaper installs without paste, repositions during application, and removes cleanly - making it ideal for renters, powder rooms, and anyone who likes to change things up. Traditional Type II is a commercial-grade vinyl that offers a heavier feel, a more polished finish, and superior long-term durability. Both are wipeable and moisture-resistant for everyday bathroom use.
High-Humidity Bathrooms
Bathrooms with poor ventilation, frequent hot showers, or steam that lingers need more protection. For these spaces, our waterproof wallpaper and Traditional Canvas Type II material are the better choice - they're non-porous and resist peeling, bubbling, and mold growth even in consistently humid conditions. If you're wallpapering directly behind a freestanding tub or near a shower opening, this is the material to choose.
Powder Rooms and Half Baths
Powder rooms have minimal humidity since there's no shower or bath - which means every material works beautifully. This is the room where you have complete freedom to go bold with pattern and color. Many of our customers use the powder room as their testing ground for dramatic designs they wouldn't risk in a larger space, and it almost always becomes the most-complimented room in the house.
Where Not to Wallpaper
Wallpaper - even waterproof wallpaper - should not be installed inside a shower stall or anywhere with direct, continuous water contact. It's designed for walls outside the splash zone: behind vanities, above wainscoting, on accent walls, and across full bathroom walls with proper ventilation.
The Best Bathroom Wallpaper Styles and Patterns
Bathrooms are one of the few rooms where you can go bolder than you normally would - especially in smaller spaces like half baths and powder rooms where you're only in the room briefly. Here are the styles our customers choose most for bathroom walls.
Bold and Moody Florals
Dark floral wallpaper on black or navy backgrounds is one of the most popular choices for bathroom feature walls. The dramatic, romantic look creates a jewel-box effect in small spaces and a spa-like atmosphere in larger ones. Oversized blooms in deep jewel tones pair beautifully with brass fixtures, warm wood vanities, and white or marble countertops. Browse our dark moody wallpaper and floral wallpaper collections for designs that work in this direction.
Tropical and Botanical Prints
Lush greenery, palm fronds, and exotic leaves bring a sense of freshness and escape to a bathroom. These patterns are especially effective in bathrooms with natural light, where the greens come alive. Our tropical wallpaper, biophilic wallpaper, and jungle wallpaper collections are worth exploring for this look.
Coastal and Nature-Inspired Designs
Ocean textures, wave patterns, soft blues, and sandy neutrals turn a bathroom into a coastal retreat without the clichéd seashell motifs. Our coastal wallpaper and nature wallpaper collections offer designs that capture this relaxed, beachy atmosphere with sophistication.
Grasscloth Textured Wallpaper
Grasscloth wallpaper, canvas textures add depth and warmth to a bathroom without competing with tile, hardware, and fixtures. These are the go-to choice for luxury bathrooms with a lot of existing visual elements - patterned tile floors, statement mirrors, decorative lighting - where you want the wallpaper to complement rather than compete.
Classic and Timeless Patterns
Toile, chinoiserie, and striped wallpaper bring elegant, heritage-inspired character to a bathroom. These patterns work especially well in older homes, formal powder rooms, and guest bathrooms where you want the space to feel polished and intentional.
Geometric and Modern Patterns
Clean lines, abstract shapes, and graphic patterns bring a contemporary modern edge to bathroom spaces. Geometric wallpaper in black and white, navy and gold, or soft neutrals creates a modern, architectural feel that pairs well with frameless mirrors, minimalist hardware, and floating vanities.
Bathroom Wallpaper Installation Tips That Actually Matter
Installing wallpaper in a bathroom follows the same general process as any room, with a few extra steps that make the difference between wallpaper that lasts years and wallpaper that peels within months.
Surface Prep Is Everything
Clean every wall surface with a damp cloth to remove dust, soap residue, and any moisture buildup. If you've recently painted, wait a full 30 days for the paint to cure - freshly painted walls are the number one cause of peel and stick adhesion failure in bathrooms. Patch any imperfections, sand them smooth, and make sure the wall is bone dry before you start.
Ventilation Before, During, and After
Run your exhaust fan for at least 30 minutes before installation to pull moisture from the walls, and keep it running while you work. After installation, proper daily ventilation is the single biggest factor in how long your bathroom wallpaper lasts. If your bathroom doesn't have an exhaust fan, consider adding one - it protects not just the wallpaper but also the walls, ceiling, and fixtures from moisture damage.
Start with the Most Visible Wall
In bathrooms, that's usually the wall you see when you open the door - often the wall behind the vanity or the wall opposite the entrance. If you're doing a single accent wall rather than the full room, this is the wall to choose. It gives you maximum visual impact with the least amount of material.
Cut Around Fixtures with Care
Bathrooms have more cutouts than any other room - mirrors, light fixtures, outlets, towel bars, toilet flanges. Remove anything you can before you start, and use a sharp utility knife (replace the blade often) for clean cuts around what stays. Our peel and stick material is repositionable, so you can lift and adjust around tricky spots without starting over.
Leave a Gap at Wet Zones
Don't bring wallpaper all the way down to the floor behind a toilet or right up to the edge of a bathtub or shower surround. Leave a small gap - even half an inch - where moisture is most likely to pool or splash. A clean termination line above a backsplash, wainscoting, or tile border looks intentional and protects the wallpaper long-term.
