Bathroom Taps: Types, Finishes, and What to Decide Before Your Renovation Starts
This guide covers the decisions that come up before a tiler is booked: which tap type suits your layout, what the finish trade-offs actually are, how WELS ratings work, and what the price difference between tiers means in practice. It’s written for homeowners comparing options before committing to a specification or a quote — not after.
Tap selection looks like an aesthetic decision. It isn’t, entirely. The type of mixer you choose — concealed or exposed, wall-mounted or deck-mounted — determines what rough-in work the plumber needs to carry out, and when. Some of those calls have to be made before waterproofing starts. Once tiles are down, the options narrow considerably. Getting the specification right early costs nothing. Revisiting it after tiling has started costs a tile removal.
The Main Tap Types — and Where Each One Fits
Not all tap types are interchangeable. The right choice depends on your bathroom layout, what the plumber needs to rough in, and what you’re prepared to commit to before the first tile goes down. Below are the six categories that come up most often in Australian bathroom renovations.
The standard Australian bathroom tap. A single lever or dual handles, mounted through the benchtop or basin. Widely available at every price point, which means the quality range is wide too. One thing worth confirming before you order: how many tap holes your basin or benchtop has. A three-hole basin won’t take a single-hole mixer without an additional plate, and that conversation is easier to have at the selection stage than the delivery stage.
Indicative range: $80 – $900+
The spout and handles fix to the wall behind the basin rather than the basin itself. The result is a clean benchtop and a longer spout projection — both intentional. The constraint is that the rough-in position needs to be set before waterproofing and tiling. Height and horizontal placement can’t be revisited once tiles are on. If you’re specifying wall-mounted tapware, that conversation with your plumber needs to happen early in the job.
Indicative range: $250 – $1,500+
The trim, body, and connections are all visible on the wall surface. It connects to the existing plumbing rough-in — which means it’s generally retrofittable without significant structural work. Lower labour cost. More product options at every price point. For most standard Australian shower renovations, this is the sensible starting point unless there’s a specific reason to go concealed.
Indicative range: $150 – $1,200+
Only the trim plate and handle are visible on the finished wall. The rough-in body — the pressure valve or thermostatic cartridge housing — sits inside the wall cavity and is set before waterproofing and tiling. The result is clean. The constraint is significant: rough-in placement is permanent, the plumber needs the product specification ahead of waterproofing, and not all trim plates are cross-compatible between brands. Specify the product and the plumber installs the rough-in. In that order.
Indicative range: $350 – $2,500+
Used for freestanding or built-in baths. Floor-mounted sets require the floor rough-in to be completed before the screed is poured — another sequence constraint that punishes late decisions. Diverter sets (spout, handshower, and riser) are sometimes sold as a complete set, sometimes specified individually. Confirm with your plumber which approach suits your rough-in configuration before purchasing.
Indicative range: $400 – $3,000+
Maintains a pre-set water temperature regardless of pressure fluctuation in the supply line — so a toilet flush mid-shower doesn’t change what’s hitting you. Separate controls for temperature and volume. The safety and accessibility case is real: relevant for households with young children, elderly occupants, or anyone with reduced heat sensitivity. Higher cost than standard pressure-balancing mixers; covered in more detail below.
Indicative range: $600 – $3,500+
Related: How tap type decisions fit into the renovation sequence — and when the decision window closes. See our bathroom renovation process guide ›
Tap Finishes: What Holds Up and What Doesn’t
The finish you choose will be on the wall for a decade or more. That’s long enough for the wrong choice to become noticeable — not dramatically, but persistently. Mineral deposit marking on matte black. Chips on a painted-over-brass product marketed as brushed gold. The table below covers the practical reality of each finish, not just the aesthetic case.
One thing to know before reading it: the quality gap within finishes is as significant as the gap between them. A PVD-coated matte black tap and a paint-over-brass matte black tap look identical in a product photo and can carry a $400 price difference. The product listing won’t always tell you which one you’re looking at. The technical specification sheet will. Ask for it before you specify.
| Finish | Durability | Maintenance | Price vs Chrome | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chrome | High | Low — standard cleaning, no restrictions | Baseline | Widest product range; most replacement stock available if a fitting needs to be matched later. |
| Brushed Nickel | High | Low-medium — hides water spotting better than chrome | +10–20% | Good middle ground; more forgiving in hard water areas. |
| Matte Black | Medium — varies significantly by manufacturer | Medium-high — pH-neutral cleaners only; no abrasives; regular drying in hard water | +15–30% | Confirm PVD coating in the technical spec, not just the listing. Paint-over-brass matte black chips within 2–4 years in a wet environment. |
| Brushed Brass / Gold | Medium — PVD coating critical | Medium — non-acidic products only; no vinegar or citrus | +20–40% | Warm palette; verify PVD before purchasing. Finishes vary between manufacturers — matters if mixing brands. |
| Gunmetal | Medium-high | Medium | +20–35% | Growing presence in contemporary Australian renovations; fewer SKU options than chrome or matte black. |
| Brushed Bronze | Medium | Medium-high — similar restrictions to brushed brass | +25–45% | Niche specification. Confirm the manufacturer will carry stock in 5–10 years if a fitting needs replacing. |
Maintenance: Low — standard cleaning, no restrictions
Widest product range; most replacement stock available if a fitting needs to be matched later.
Maintenance: Low-medium — hides water spotting better than chrome
Good middle ground; more forgiving in hard water areas.
Maintenance: Medium-high — pH-neutral cleaners only; no abrasives; regular drying in hard water
Confirm PVD coating in the technical spec, not just the listing. Paint-over-brass matte black chips within 2–4 years in a wet environment.
Maintenance: Medium — non-acidic products only; no vinegar or citrus
Warm palette; verify PVD before purchasing. Finishes vary between manufacturers — matters if mixing brands.
Maintenance: Medium
Growing presence in contemporary Australian renovations; fewer SKU options than chrome or matte black.
Maintenance: Medium-high — similar restrictions to brushed brass
Niche specification. Confirm the manufacturer will carry stock in 5–10 years if a fitting needs replacing.
A note on finish consistency: matching across brands is not reliable. If finish uniformity across tapware, accessories, and hardware matters to your renovation, specify the same manufacturer for all of it. Two different brands’ “matte black” are not the same colour in person.
WELS Ratings: What the Stars Mean and Why They Matter
WELS — the Water Efficiency Labelling and Standards scheme — is Australia’s mandatory water efficiency framework for taps, showers, and toilets. Products sold in Australia must be registered under the scheme. The star rating on the label runs from zero to six: more stars means lower flow rate. That’s the whole system.
Where it gets relevant for a renovation: minimum star ratings apply. Basin mixers and shower mixers currently require a minimum 3-star WELS rating — that’s a flow rate of no more than 9 litres per minute. A 6-star basin mixer comes in around 4.5 L/min. The functional difference is real, though most people adjust to a lower-flow fixture without noticing after a few uses.
Current WELS minimums (basin and shower mixers)
Minimum 3 stars — ≤ 9 L/min
A 4-star mixer delivers approximately 7.5 L/min. A 6-star, approximately 4.5 L/min.
Confirm current requirements at waterrating.gov.au — minimums are subject to review.
The compliance question matters more if you’re specifying through an import or direct-supply channel. Tapware sold in Australia must be WELS-registered — not just manufactured to a comparable standard, but registered. A product sourced through a grey-market channel that isn’t on the WELS register isn’t compliant, regardless of what the label says. For investment properties, WELS-rated tapware is the baseline specification, not an upgrade.
What Bathroom Taps Cost — and What the Price Difference Actually Buys
Tap pricing in Australia runs from around $80 for an entry-level basin mixer to well above $2,000 for a premium concealed system. The honest question isn’t what’s cheap or what’s expensive — it’s what changes as you move up, and whether those changes matter for your specific renovation.
What changes as price increases: body material, cartridge longevity, finish durability, warranty coverage, and parts availability over the product’s life.
What doesn’t change: basic function. A $200 basin mixer delivers hot and cold water. So does an $800 one. The question is how long it does that reliably, what the real cost is when it doesn’t, and whether the finish still looks as specified in year five.
One more thing worth saying: the most expensive tap in a budget renovation is a misallocation. The cheapest tap in a premium renovation is a visible inconsistency. Specify to the tier of the renovation — not to the tier of whichever fixture happens to be front of mind.
Concealed vs Exposed: The Decision That Can’t Be Undone
This is the most consequential tap selection decision in a bathroom renovation — not because of the cost difference, but because of when the decision has to be made. Concealed tapware requires a rough-in to be installed before waterproofing. Once tiles are on the wall, you’re committed to whatever rough-in position was set. There’s no adjusting it later without tile removal and re-waterproofing.
Exposed installation: The tap body, trim, and connections are all visible on the wall surface. It connects to the existing plumbing rough-in, which means it can generally be specified or changed without significant structural work. Lower labour cost. More product options at every price point. Can be upgraded or replaced without tile disturbance — which matters more than it sounds if you’re designing a bathroom you expect to live in for fifteen years. For most standard residential renovations, exposed is the practical default unless there’s a clear aesthetic or spatial reason to go concealed.
Concealed installation: Only the trim plate and handle are visible on the finished wall. Clean. Minimal. The rough-in body — the pressure-balancing valve housing or thermostatic cartridge housing — sits inside the wall cavity. That rough-in needs to be set before waterproofing, at the correct height and horizontal position. Once tiled, it’s fixed. Trim plates are not universally cross-compatible between brands or even between product ranges within the same brand — specifying the product before rough-in commences isn’t a preference, it’s a requirement. Labour cost is higher than exposed, and the coordination between you, the designer, and the plumber is real.
The sequence for concealed tapware
- Tap type and product confirmed
- Rough-in installed by licensed plumber at correct position
- Waterproofing membrane applied — rough-in position is now fixed
- Waterproofing inspected; certificate of compliance issued
- Tiling completed — trim plate opening cut to specification
- Trim plate and handle fitted at practical completion
The concealed vs exposed decision needs to be made before step 2. Not during. Not after. Before.
Related: Waterproofing compliance under AS 3740 — the inspection and certificate process that follows rough-in. See our AS 3740 waterproofing compliance guide ›
Thermostatic Mixers: When the Premium Makes Sense
A thermostatic mixer maintains a pre-set water temperature regardless of what’s happening with the water pressure elsewhere in the house. A toilet flushing, a washing machine running a cycle, someone turning on a kitchen tap — none of it changes the temperature coming out of your shower. Separate controls for temperature and volume. Temperature memory from one use to the next.
That’s what they do. What they don’t do: heat water faster. A thermostatic mixer regulates temperature — it doesn’t generate it. If you’re expecting a faster hot water response, that’s a hot water system question, not a tap question.
The primary case for specifying thermostatic is safety. Pressure drops cause temperature spikes in standard mixers — a brief but sometimes significant surge of hot water. For households with young children, elderly occupants, or anyone with reduced sensitivity to heat, that’s not a minor inconvenience. It’s a scalding risk. Thermostatic mixers are the standard specification for accessible bathroom designs and disability-compliant wet area modifications for this reason.
The cost premium is real. Expect to pay $400 to $2,000 more than an equivalent non-thermostatic specification at the same quality tier. For a primary bathroom used by a young family or older occupants, the case is clear. For a low-traffic guest bathroom or an investment property, the feature-to-return ratio probably doesn’t support it.
Where Tap Selection Fits in the Renovation Sequence
Tap selection is a specification decision with trade coordination consequences. The reason it belongs early in the planning process — not after a tiler has been booked — is that the plumber needs the product specification to carry out the rough-in correctly, and the rough-in happens before waterproofing. Which happens before tiling. Which means the decision window is earlier than most homeowners expect.
Confirm tap type (concealed vs exposed)
Before any rough-in work commences. This is the hard constraint. Everything downstream depends on it.
Select the specific product and obtain the technical specification sheet
The plumber needs the rough-in dimensions: height, horizontal position, wall depth, and centre-to-centre measurements. These come from the product’s technical spec, not from an estimated guess. Don’t confirm the rough-in without the actual product confirmed.
Rough-in installed by licensed plumber
Before substrate preparation and waterproofing. The rough-in body is positioned, connections are made, and the set position is locked.
Waterproofing membrane applied
Rough-in positions are now fixed. The waterproofing membrane goes over and around the rough-in penetrations in accordance with AS 3740.
Waterproofing inspected — certificate of compliance issued
A mandatory step before tiling proceeds. The certificate documents that the waterproofing was installed correctly and inspected. Not a formality that can be skipped to save time.
Tiling completed
The trim plate opening is cut to specification. Position is permanent.
Fit-off at practical completion
Trim plates, handles, and spouts installed by the licensed plumber once the room is tiled and finished. This is when the tap actually becomes a tap.
The decisions that get deferred until tiling has started aren’t neutral. They either lock you into whatever is compatible with the existing rough-in, or they create tile removal costs to fix a specification that should have been confirmed three weeks earlier. A quote conversation is the right place to establish the sequence for your specific renovation — what’s in scope, in what order, and what decisions need to be made before each trade begins work.
mandatory for taps sold in Australia
and shower mixers
solid brass tap under daily use
can be moved after tiling
Common Questions About Bathroom Taps
Basin mixers and shower mixers currently need to meet a minimum 3-star WELS rating — that’s a maximum flow rate of 9 litres per minute. Products sold in Australia must be registered under the WELS scheme, not just manufactured to a similar standard. That distinction matters if you’re sourcing tapware through an import or grey-market channel: a product that isn’t on the WELS register isn’t compliant regardless of what the label says. Current requirements and registered products are searchable at waterrating.gov.au. Minimum ratings have been updated before and may be again — check the current requirements, don’t rely on what was correct a few years ago.
It depends almost entirely on whether the finish is PVD-coated or paint-over-brass — and the price difference between those two things isn’t always visible in a product listing. PVD matte black is durable. It resists chipping and corrosion under normal use and, with the right cleaning products, holds up well in a wet environment. Paint-over-brass matte black looks identical in a photo and sometimes in person. It chips at high-contact points — handle edges, spout tips — and surface degradation within two to four years in a regularly used bathroom is common.
Before specifying matte black, find the product’s technical specification sheet and confirm PVD coating is listed. Not “premium finish”. Not “high-quality coating”. PVD. If the spec sheet doesn’t say it, ask the supplier directly. If they can’t confirm it, that’s a useful data point.
One more thing: use pH-neutral cleaners on matte black tapware, and avoid abrasive cloths. Not optional — it’s in the warranty conditions of most matte black products for a reason.
Before the plumber carries out rough-in work. That’s the hard constraint. Concealed tapware rough-in has to be installed at the correct position before waterproofing commences — and once waterproofing is done and tiles are laid, that position is permanent. There is no adjusting it without tile removal and re-waterproofing.
In practice, that means: confirm tap type, confirm the specific product, and give the plumber the technical specification sheet before rough-in begins. Not when the plumber arrives on site. Before. If you’re still comparing options at that point, the decision window is closing faster than it should be.
Reversing a concealed specification after tiling is complete isn’t impossible. It’s expensive and disruptive, and it was avoidable.
A pressure-balancing mixer compensates for pressure fluctuations — when someone flushes a toilet and the pressure in the line drops, the mixer adjusts to moderate the temperature spike. It doesn’t eliminate variation, but it reduces the worst of it.
A thermostatic mixer maintains a specific pre-set temperature regardless of what’s happening with pressure elsewhere in the system. Separate controls for temperature and volume. Temperature memory between uses. The water coming out of a thermostatic shower is the same temperature every time — because the mixer is actively maintaining it, not just passively moderating fluctuations.
Thermostatic mixers are the right specification when scalding prevention is a genuine requirement: households with young children, elderly occupants, or disability-compliant wet areas. For standard residential use, pressure-balancing is the default. The cost premium for thermostatic — typically $400 to $2,000 more at the same quality tier — reflects the more complex cartridge engineering.
Yes, and it’s a common arrangement in Australian renovations. Most licensed plumbers will install customer-supplied products. There are a few things worth confirming before you order.
First: check the WELS registration. The product needs to be on the register — not just sold on a reputable website, not just described as compliant.
Second: confirm with the plumber upfront whether they’ll warranty their labour on a customer-supplied product. Some will. Some won’t, or will limit the warranty period. That’s a reasonable position from a plumber who can’t control the product quality — it’s worth knowing before you proceed, not after a fitting fails.
Third: get the technical specification sheet for the product before the rough-in is done. Rough-in dimensions need to match the product. An assumption made from a product photo that turns out to be wrong is a problem that lands on the renovation schedule.
Keep the specification sheet and the purchase receipt. If a cartridge fails in year four and you need to make a warranty claim, you’ll want documentation of what was installed and when.
Ready to Confirm Your Tap Specification?
If tap selection is part of a broader renovation — a full gut and rebuild, an ensuite addition, or a wet area rectification — the next useful step is a quote conversation with a licensed specialist. That conversation covers the rough-in requirements for your specific bathroom layout, flags any sequence constraints, and produces an itemised quote with tapware fit-off listed as a named line item. The specification questions above are ones your specialist should be able to answer for your job specifically — not in general, but for your wall, your rough-in, your renovation.
Lifestyle Bathrooms is a referral and connector service, not a licensed contractor. We connect homeowners, investors, and property professionals across Australia with vetted, licensed bathroom renovation specialists. All renovation work is carried out by independently licensed contractors.