Project intent
Start with why the room is considering the category, not which brand sounds familiar.Which product lane fits?
Start with the type of project, not the brand name.
Most buyers do not need a catalogue. They need to understand which product lane fits the room, the user and the level of finish the bathroom is trying to achieve.
Scope
A full renovation points to different routes from a lighter-touch upgrade.User fit
The right lane depends on the room, the user and the level of support expected.Final check
The selector narrows the route first. Final product choice still needs room review.Interactive lane finder
Answer three quick questions and get a better starting point.
This selector is designed to narrow the conversation before you send a quote request. It is not a final specification, but it will show which lane is most likely worth reviewing first.
1. What matters most in this project?
2. How far is the bathroom project going?
3. What outcome feels closest to the brief?
A quick starting question
What is the main reason this bathroom is considering a smart toilet?
The strongest route usually becomes obvious once the room is clearer about whether the project is upgrade-led, design-led, support-led or trying to minimise disruption.
Premium everyday upgrade
If the client wants a cleaner, more refined bathroom experience in a serious renovation, the starting point is usually entry integrated.
Top-end bathroom finish
If the room is aiming for a more exceptional design result, flagship luxury is often the better place to start.
Independence and daily ease
If the user brief is led by comfort, dignity or supportability, the care and independence lane usually matters most.
Upgrade without a full replacement
If the client wants wash-and-dry performance but the room may not be ready for a full sanitaryware change, selected retrofit may be worth reviewing.
The four lanes
Each lane suits a different kind of room, user and expectation.
The lane decision comes before the final model recommendation because the room, the user brief and the project type matter more than the feature list on its own.
Entry integrated
The sensible route for many private home renovations where the client wants a proper long-term integrated unit without moving straight into flagship territory.
Integrated smart toilet View entry integratedFlagship luxury
Best suited to bathrooms where brand pedigree, design finish and a higher-spec room experience are part of the brief from the outset.
Higher-spec smart toilet View flagship luxuryCare and independence
The right place to look when the user brief is about everyday confidence, comfort or dignity rather than simply adding premium features.
Wash-dry toilet View care and independenceSelected retrofit
Sometimes the right conversation when the client wants a different hygiene experience without a full integrated replacement, but only where the route still makes sense.
Smart bidet toilet seat View selected retrofitWhat usually points you toward the right lane
The room and the user matter more than the feature list.
The best lane depends on the bathroom type, the intended user, whether the project is luxury-led or independence-led and whether the room is being rebuilt or upgraded more lightly. That is why the lane decision comes before the final brand recommendation.
Do not choose by brand awareness alone
A well-known name does not automatically mean the lane is right for the room or the user.
Do not assume retrofit is the easy answer
Sometimes it is the right conversation, but not every room or project should start there.
Do not force a luxury lane into a care brief
If the user brief is more support-led, the category needs to be handled differently from a pure design-led project.
Need help narrowing the lane?
Send the room details and we will point you toward the right starting route.
The best product decision usually begins with the room, the user and the project type rather than a fixed unit choice.