Trends · 5 min read

Bathroom Renovation Trends for 2026: Winnipeg Design Guide

Discover the top bathroom renovation trends for Winnipeg homes in 2026. From warm wood floating vanities to heated floors and custom tile designs.

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Georgia

Bathroom Renovation Trends for 2026: Winnipeg Design Guide

To adapt 2026 bathroom renovation trends for Winnipeg homes, prioritize warm wood floating vanities, heated porcelain tile floors, matte brass hardware, and frameless walk-in showers. These choices balance modern aesthetics with critical heat distribution and moisture control required for harsh Manitoba winter climates.

I’ve been tracking what’s actually showing up in renovations across Manitoba, not just what looks good on Pinterest boards that never get built. Some of these trends have real staying power in local homes. Others are going to date faster than you’d expect. Here’s my honest take.

Trend 1: Warm Minimalism in Winnipeg Bathroom Designs

The cold, all-white, spa-inspired bathroom of the 2010s is fading. In its place: warm minimalism. The same movement reshaping living rooms and kitchens has reached the bathroom.

What it looks like:

Why it works: Warm minimalism makes bathrooms feel calming rather than clinical. The warmth of natural materials creates a sense of comfort that cold white bathrooms never achieved, no matter how many candles you added.

How to apply it: Start with the vanity, a solid wood vanity in oak or walnut immediately warms the room. Pair with a natural stone-look tile (or real stone if budget allows) and matte brass or brushed gold hardware. Keep the overall palette to three or four tones, all in the warm family.

Trend 2: Statement Tile Floors

The safe, neutral floor tile is giving way to pattern. Bold floor tiles, geometric patterns, encaustic cement, Moroccan-inspired designs, and even checkerboard, are becoming the focal point of bathrooms in 2026.

Popular choices:

The balancing act: When the floor is bold, everything else should be restrained. White or cream walls, a simple vanity, minimal accessories. The tile does the talking.

Longevity check: Pattern floors are a commitment. If you’re renovating for resale in the next 2–3 years, a subtler pattern (small hexagon in neutral tones) is safer than a dramatic geometric. If you’re staying and you love it, go for it, great tile never truly goes out of style, only trends move past it temporarily.

Trend 3: Floating Vanities Everywhere

Floating (wall-mounted) vanities have become the default choice in modern bathroom renovations. And for good reason, they make even small bathrooms feel significantly larger by exposing the floor underneath.

Practical advantages:

The concern: Wall-mounted vanities require solid blocking in the wall during rough-in. If you’re renovating an older home, your contractor needs to open the wall and install proper support. This adds $200–$400 but is absolutely necessary, a vanity loaded with water and a stone countertop is heavy.

Best materials in 2026: Solid oak with a natural or light stain is the dominant choice. Walnut for a darker, more dramatic look. White oak for a mid-century modern vibe. Avoid all-white lacquer vanities, they’re firmly in the last decade’s aesthetic now.

Trend 4: Walk-In Showers Replace Tubs in Winnipeg Remodels

The bathtub-versus-shower debate has a clear 2026 winner: the walk-in shower. Across Canadian renovations, tubs are disappearing from primary bathrooms and being replaced by spacious, curbless (or low-curb) walk-in showers.

Why the shift:

Keep at least one tub in the house. Realtors consistently advise that a home should have at least one bathtub, families with young children need it, and its absence can narrow your buyer pool. The smart move: remove the tub from the primary ensuite, keep it in the main or secondary bathroom.

Walk-in shower must-haves:

Winnipeg-specific note: Curbless showers require careful waterproofing and precise sloping of the entire bathroom floor toward the drain. In Manitoba’s climate, where humidity and temperature fluctuations are extreme, hire an experienced tile installer who specialises in curbless designs. A failed waterproof membrane in a shower is one of the most expensive renovation failures.

Trend 5: Matte Black Hardware Is Peaking, Brass Is Rising

Matte black fixtures had a strong run from 2018 through 2024. They’re not going anywhere, but the momentum has shifted. In 2026, the rising hardware finish is warm brass, specifically matte brass, brushed brass, and unlacquered brass.

The brass spectrum:

Mixing metals is acceptable, and even encouraged. A brass faucet with matte black cabinet pulls, or brass towel bars with a chrome showerhead. The key is intentionality: choose a primary metal (brass) and a secondary accent (black or chrome), and distribute them consistently.

If you’re selling soon: Brushed nickel and polished chrome remain the safest choices. They’re neutral, they match everything, and no buyer has ever rejected a house because of chrome faucets.

Trend 6: Backlit Mirrors and Vanity Lighting Evolution

The frameless, backlit mirror has become the signature element of 2026 bathroom design. Functionally, it provides even, shadow-free lighting for grooming. Aesthetically, it makes any bathroom look more polished and considered.

What to look for:

Beyond the mirror: Vanity sconces mounted at eye level (roughly 60–66 inches from the floor) provide the most flattering facial lighting. Overhead recessed lights alone create harsh shadows under the eyes and chin. The ideal setup: backlit mirror plus two wall sconces flanking it.

Pricing: Quality backlit mirrors run $300–$800. Worth it for the visual impact.

Trend 7: Natural Stone Makes a Comeback

After years of porcelain tile dominating bathroom design, natural stone is returning. Travertine, limestone, and marble, in honed (matte) finishes rather than polished, are showing up in showers, on floors, and as countertop materials.

Why now: The warm minimalism trend demands authentic, textured materials. Porcelain can mimic stone, but it can’t replicate the depth and variation of real stone. In a warm, minimalist bathroom, that authenticity matters.

Practical considerations for Canadian bathrooms:

My recommendation: Use natural stone strategically, a feature wall in the shower, the vanity countertop, or a niche surround. Use quality porcelain for the high-traffic, high-moisture areas where maintenance matters more. You get the warmth and authenticity where you see it most, with the practicality of porcelain where you need it.

Trend 8: Colour in the Bathroom (Beyond White and Grey)

The all-neutral bathroom is getting pushback. In 2026, colour is returning, not the bold turquoise or fire-engine red of the past, but soft, muted, nature-inspired tones that add warmth without overwhelming.

Trending bathroom colours:

The safest way to add colour: Through accessories and paint rather than permanent tile. You can repaint a wall in an afternoon. Replacing coloured tile is a renovation.

Trend 9: Heated Floor Tiles for Manitoba Winters

In-floor radiant heating has moved from luxury feature to expected amenity in Canadian bathroom renovations. The cost has dropped, the installation process has simplified, and the comfort impact, especially in a Winnipeg winter, is enormous.

Cost: $500–$1,500 for a typical bathroom (electric mat system). This includes the mat, thermostat, and installation labour. Adds minimal height to the floor (about 3mm).

Operating cost: A 50-square-foot bathroom costs roughly $5–$10/month to heat with in-floor electric heat. Most homeowners program the thermostat to activate 30 minutes before their morning routine and shut off after.

Best paired with: Porcelain or natural stone tile, which conducts heat efficiently. LVP works too but transfers heat less effectively. Avoid thick carpet or underpad, which insulate against the heat.

Is it worth it? For a renovation in a cold climate, absolutely. It’s one of those upgrades where clients consistently tell me they wish they’d done it sooner.

Trend 10: The Wellness Bathroom

The biggest macro trend in bathroom design isn’t about any single fixture or finish, it’s the idea that the bathroom is a wellness space, not just a utility room.

Elements of the wellness bathroom:

Do these add resale value? Minimal. But they significantly improve daily life. If you’re staying in your home and your budget allows, these are the details that transform a bathroom from a room you use into a room you enjoy.

What’s on Its Way Out

Every trend has a counter-trend. Here’s what’s fading in 2026:

How to Renovate Without Over-Spending

A full bathroom renovation in Canada ranges from $15,000 for a basic update to $50,000+ for a high-end primary ensuite. Here’s where to invest and where to save:

Invest in:

Save on:


Thinking about a bathroom renovation? Georgia Home Design offers virtual consultations where I’ll help you sort the trends worth following from the ones you’ll regret. I can also help you plan project budgets using our Winnipeg home staging costs guide to maximize resale value. Book a consultation →

bathroom renovation trends 2026 Winnipeg interior design home improvement Manitoba remodels