
Deep Baths vs Large Baths: What's the Difference and Which One Should You Choose?
Deep baths are for people who want to be fully submerged. Large baths are for people who want more room to move.
Most people shopping for a new bath use the words 'deep' and 'large' as if they mean the same thing. They don't, and confusing the two is one of the most common and most expensive mistakes in bathroom design.
A deep bath is about immersion. A large bath is about space. Both feel indulgent. Both look beautiful. But they serve completely different purposes, and the one that belongs in your bathroom depends almost entirely on how you actually use a bath.
This guide explains what each one really is, what it feels like to use, what it costs, and — most importantly which one you'll still be glad you chose ten years from now.
First — What Actually Makes a Bath 'Deep' or 'Large'?
These terms get used loosely by retailers, so here's what they actually mean in practice:
A Deep Bath
Depth refers to the internal height of the bath that simply means how far down the water sits from the rim to the floor of the tub. A standard UK bath has an internal depth of around 400–420mm. A deep bath typically starts at 450mm and can go up to 600mm or beyond in Japanese-influenced soaking baths.
That extra 50–180mm of depth doesn't sound significant. In practice, it's the difference between water lapping at your hips and water reaching your shoulders and chest. That is a fundamentally different bathing experience.
A Large Bath
Large refers to the overall external dimensions, primarily length and width. A standard UK bath is 1700mm long and 700mm wide. A large bath might be 1800mm long, 900mm wide, or both. Some double-ended large baths stretch to 1800 x 900mm — nearly double the bathing area of a standard tub.
A large bath doesn't necessarily mean a deep one. You can have a wide, long bath that's the same depth as a standard model. The extra size gives you room to stretch, turn, or share — not necessarily to submerge.
*The key distinction is Deep = vertical dimension (immersion). Large = horizontal dimensions (space). A bath can be both, either, or neither
Deep Baths: The Full Picture
Deep baths have their roots in Japanese bathing culture, where soaking means fully immersed, quietly, for 20 minutes that is considered as essential to daily life as eating well. That philosophy has arrived firmly in UK bathrooms over the last decade, and the demand for genuinely deep baths has grown with it.
The Real Benefits
Full immersion changes the experience entirely. When water reaches your shoulders and chest rather than just your hips, the therapeutic effect is immediate. Muscle tension, joint aches, and stress respond differently when the whole body is submerged, not just the lower half.
Same floor footprint, dramatically different experience. Most deep baths are the same length and width as a standard bath. You don't need a bigger bathroom. You need a deeper tub, which is a design decision, not a space decision.
Ideal for people with aching muscles or joint pain. Deep soaking baths are consistently recommended by physiotherapists and sports recovery specialists. Particularly popular among runners, athletes, and people with arthritis or chronic back pain.
They look more dramatic. A deeper bath, especially in freestanding form, commands the room in a way a standard tub never does. It's the difference between a bath you ignore and one that becomes the focal point of the whole space.
The Honest Downsides. Higher water bills as a 500mm deep bath uses significantly more hot water than a standard model
- Takes longer to fill, factor this into daily routines
- Getting in and out requires more care , not ideal for households with young children or elderly relatives
- Your boiler must be able to handle the volume — worth checking before purchasing
Best for: People who bathe regularly for relaxation or recovery, households without young children, master bathrooms where the bath is the centrepiece
Large Baths: The Full Picture
A large baths is about generous proportions. More room to stretch your legs properly. Space for a book without your elbows hitting the sides. Room for two people without either of you feeling like you've drawn the short straw.
They tend to be a lifestyle purchase rather than a therapeutic one as though the two aren't mutually exclusive. And in a UK market where bathrooms are small by European standards, a large bath is a genuine statement of intent about how seriously you take the room.
The Real Benefits
Comfort for taller people. Anyone over 6 feet who has spent years folding themselves into a 1700mm bath will understand why 1800mm matters. A longer bath is one of those upgrades that, once experienced, you never want to go back to.
Double-ended baths work beautifully in larger spaces. A 1800 x 900mm double-ended bath with taps in the middle, room for two people facing each other, is one of the most elegant fixtures in bathroom design. In the right room, it defines the space entirely.
More freestanding style options. Large baths tend to come in the most architecturally interesting shapes that may include roll-tops, boat baths, and slipper baths. If the aesthetic of the bath matters to you as much as the function, the large bath category offers considerably more to work with.
Great for young families. A wider, longer bath makes bath time with children far less of a physical exercise. More room in the tub, less water on the floor.
The Honest Downsides
- Demands more floor space, which means it’s not suitable for bathrooms under 5 square metres without careful planning
- Heavier than standard baths mean reinforced floors may be needed for large cast iron or stone resin models
- Wider baths can feel colder because there is more surface area exposed above the water line
- Expensive to tile around if built-in, the precise measurements and planning required
*That bath is best for Larger bathrooms, couples, tall individuals, families with young children, homeowners making a design statement
Deep vs Large: The Complete Comparison
|
Feature |
Deep Bath |
Large Bath |
|
Length |
Standard (1500–1700mm) |
Extended (1700–1800mm+) |
|
Width |
Standard (700–750mm) |
Wider (800–900mm) |
|
Depth |
450–600mm (the key factor) |
Standard (400–450mm) |
|
Water Volume |
Much higher — 250–350 litres |
Higher — 200–280 litres |
|
Floor Space Needed |
Same as standard bath |
More — longer & wider |
|
Immersion When Bathing |
Shoulders & chest submerged |
More room to lie & stretch |
|
Best For |
Deep soakers, therapeutic use |
Couples bathing, tall people |
|
Price Range (UK) |
£400 – £2,500+ |
£500 – £3,000+ |
|
Heating Cost |
Higher — more water to heat |
Moderate — wider not deeper |
|
Most Common Style |
Japanese, freestanding, built-in |
Double-ended, freestanding |
Three Questions to Help You Decide
1. Why do you actually use a bath?
Be honest here. If you use a bath primarily for the ritual is warmth, stillness, full-body relaxation or a deep bath will transform that experience in a way a wider bath simply won't. If you use a bath for practicality like washing the kids, stretching out, sharing the space — a large bath serves you better.
|
Deep Bath |
Large Bath |
|
For relaxation, recovery, and full immersion. The depth changes everything. |
For comfort, space, and practicality. Room to stretch, room to share. |
2. How big is your bathroom?
A deep bath can go almost anywhere a standard bath goes. A large bath needs the floor space to justify its size and not look cramped. If your bathroom is under 5 square metres, a deep bath in standard dimensions is far more achievable than a large one.
|
Deep Bath |
Large Bath |
|
Works in most UK bathroom sizes — same footprint as a standard bath. |
Needs space. A 1800 x 900mm bath in a 4sqm bathroom looks wrong and feels worse. |
3. Who else uses the bathroom?
Young children, elderly relatives, and people with mobility considerations all affect this decision. Deep baths require more careful entry and exit. Large baths, especially with a lower side, are more accessible. If the bath is shared across a household with varied needs, a large bath with a shallower depth is often the most practical choice.
|
Deep Bath |
Large Bath |
|
Best for adults bathing alone in a household where safety isn't a concern. |
Better for mixed households — more accessible and more adaptable to different users. |
Can You Have Both?
Yes, and this is increasingly what UK bathroom designers recommend for master bathrooms and renovation projects where the bath is a priority purchase.
A deep, large bath, think 1800mm long, 800mm wide, and 500mm+ deep that exists and is spectacular. If you are looking for a truly luxurious experience, then Japanese soaking baths may be your choice. These come with higher prices and heavier installation costs, requiring more hot water to fill in. A 1700mm or 1800mm bath can be an economical choice, offering a perfect balance of immersive experience at an economical price.
The Final Word
If bathing is something you do for pleasure, not just hygiene, invest in depth. It will change the way you use your bathroom more fundamentally than any other single decision.
If your bathroom is a family space, or if size and proportion matter more to you than immersion, a large bath rewards you every time someone actually uses it comfortably rather than just fitting into it.
And if this is a once-in-a-decade renovation and you can stretch the budget and choose a bath that's both. You will not regret it.



















