No login needed!
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
No login needed!
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
No login needed!
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Bathroom renovations tend to provoke a rare kind of optimism—the idea that with the right combination of tiles, taps, and lighting, you might engineer a space that feels like a minor daily reward, rather than just another high-traffic zone chronically short on towel hooks. Wickes, the dependable workhorse of British… read more »Bathroom renovations tend to provoke a rare kind of optimism—the idea that with the right combination of tiles, taps, and…
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Working Offer
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
You may wish to try them anyway, sometimes they can still work!
Likely expired on: 1st Jul 2025
Likely expired on: 29th Nov 2025
Likely expired on: 30th January
Likely expired on: 16th Sep 2025
Bathroom renovations tend to provoke a rare kind of optimism—the idea that with the right combination of tiles, taps, and lighting, you might engineer a space that feels like a minor daily reward, rather than just another high-traffic zone chronically short on towel hooks. Wickes, the dependable workhorse of British DIY, has leaned into this aspiration with its Bespoke Bathrooms line: a fairly streamlined blend of showroom design kits, mid-tier component quality, and the kind of finance options you’d expect at checkout rather than in a contract. Some of it’s good. Some of it looks good until water gets involved. The current discount codes—15% off selected enclosures, trays, taps, and toilets—don’t hurt either. They run until late August, but these kinds of offers tend to return like commuter rain.
Functionally, it’s entirely adequate. Flush performance is decent, the ceramics feel solid under hand, and the seat—though called “slim”—is more about visual minimalism than actual sparseness. The soft-close mechanism doesn’t slam, and hasn’t yet loosened up after repeated use, which is more than can be said for some of its rivals at this price point. Installation is back-to-wall, so your plumber may mutter when it comes to sorting the waste line, but most will have seen trickier. It’s bundled with the seat included, which helps soften the £20-30 margin you’d otherwise spend on add-ons that ought to be standard.
A semi-recessed basin tends to suit mid-sized bathrooms that want to feel bigger, without abandoning surface space altogether. The Teramo does that competently. The ceramic has a clean, slightly matte finish—not quite the high-gloss showroom look, but less prone to water marks. Fitting is straightforward if you’ve dealt with semi-recessed before; predictably irritating if you haven’t, mostly due to bracket positioning and the usual tap-hole alignment guesswork. It’s £5-10 cheaper than similar designs from Victoria Plum or B&Q, and occasionally included in multi-buy promotions with their units and furniture lines.
Space-saver bath-showers often look a bit apologetic—like they’re trying to do too much in too little room—but the Veroli makes a decent case for itself. The L-shape gives a practical standing space at the shower end, without costing the entire bath its soakability. The acrylic isn’t thick enough to be luxurious, but resists flexing well enough that you won’t worry about every creak. At 1500mm, it’s on the shorter end, so taller users should temper expectations. Requires the matching screen and end panels, which—of course—aren’t included. As of writing, there’s no direct discount on this model, but it tends to get looped into seasonal "suite" savings. It’s worth waiting.
This is arguably the best of the bunch for its price. The chrome finish is clean, minimal, and surprisingly fingerprint-resistant—even if it does start to dull slightly after a few months without polishing. The lever action feels smoother than you'd expect at this level, and flow control is predictable, even on medium-pressure systems. It lacks the heavy-duty brass internals of more expensive taps, but in practical terms, the trade-offs are minor. Installation is, again, standard fare—one hole, one bolt, and the usual curse when the washer drops behind the basin. It’s often part of the recurring 15% discount on bathroom taps, and rarely more.
Wickes' Bespoke bathroom kits are best approached with realistic expectations. They’re rarely luxurious, but usually serviceable. The components tend to match each other reliably, which helps your final install look coherent—something that’s no small feat when sourcing piece by piece. And when the 10-15% discounts land, the value proposition becomes easier to justify. If you can live with the occasional design compromise (and aren’t too precious about brand hierarchy), there's enough good here to make a new bathroom feel vaguely reward-shaped. Just add a towel hook or three.
Wickes offers a surprisingly nimble range of delivery options for a retailer best known for plasterboard and power tools. Click & Collect is free and promises readiness within 30 minutes—assuming your chosen store isn't overwhelmed by other DIY emergencies. Standard delivery starts at £4, while "Big & Bulky" items move from a more lumbering £35. There’s also a “Rapid Delivery” option, presumably for those who need a radiator or bathroom tap in a hurry, though details are sparse.
Delivery is available to most of mainland UK, but a fair number of postcode areas are either restricted or entirely excluded. These include the usual suspects—remote Scottish islands, parts of Cornwall, and the odd outer postcode that seems to repel logistics networks. A full list is provided, and customers are gently encouraged to check before ordering, lest they find themselves out of range with nothing but a digital receipt to show for it.
Once you’ve placed your order, edits are off the table. Want to change it? You’ll need to cancel and start over. For that, there’s a phone number and, one hopes, a little patience.
Returns and refunds are mentioned in the site's footer, though not elaborated on in the delivery section. Presumably, there is a process—somewhere between intuitive and arcane—but one would need to dig further to uncover it. As with many things in DIY, a little extra effort may be required.
Last updated:
Looking for more ways to save? These similar retailers also offer NHS discounts and keyworker deals across a range of categories.