This post may contain affiliate links. Please see my disclosure policy for details.
The Guest Bathroom Problem Nobody Talks About
Contents
Here’s the thing. Your guests spend an average of 5-7 minutes in your bathroom during a holiday gathering. That’s longer than they’ll spend admiring your mantel. Longer than they’ll look at your tree.
Yet we treat bathrooms like decorating afterthoughts.
I get it though. You’re asking yourself: “Do I really need to decorate every room?” “Won’t it look weird to have a small Christmas tree in the bathroom?” “How much is this going to cost me?”
Valid concerns, all of them.
But here’s what changed my mind completely.
Last year, I spent exactly $73 decorating our guest bathroom. I got more compliments on that space than on any other room in our house. My cousin literally took photos to recreate it at home.
What Makes a Bathroom Feel Festive (Without Looking Ridiculous)
The goal isn’t to stuff your bathroom full of Santa figurines until it looks like the North Pole exploded.
Nobody wants that.
What you’re after is this: intentional touches that make guests feel like you thought of everything.
The Foundation Pieces That Actually Matter
Start with what people touch and see most:
Towels – This is your easiest win. Swap out your everyday hand towels for Christmas hand towels in festive colors. I go for deep reds, forest greens, or crisp whites with subtle patterns. Nothing with cartoon characters unless you’ve got young kids.
Soap Dispenser – Your plastic Costco pump bottle needs to take a holiday vacation. Get a decorative soap dispenser in gold, bronze, or mercury glass. Fill it with something that smells like Christmas (peppermint, pine, cinnamon).
Shower Curtain – If you’re decorating a full bathroom with a shower, the curtain is your statement piece. This is where you can go bold with pattern or keep it sophisticated with texture. I prefer the latter because you’re not redecorating the whole bathroom around a Santa print.
The Mistake I Made (So You Don’t Have To)
Year one of my bathroom decorating journey, I bought every red and green item I could find. Crammed them onto every surface. It looked like Christmas threw up in there.
Too much is worse than too little.
What works better:
- Pick 3-5 focal areas maximum
- Stick to 2-3 colors plus neutrals
- Use odd-numbered groupings (3 candles, not 4)
- Leave breathing room between items
Think curated, not cluttered.
The Five Spots That Transform Everything
1. The Counter/Vanity Area
This is prime real estate.
I keep a small tray (mine’s a gold vintage one I found at a thrift store for $4) and arrange three things on it:
- A small candle in a festive scent
- A decorative soap dispenser
- A tiny succulent in a holiday pot or a small pinecone cluster
The tray keeps everything contained so it doesn’t look messy. It also makes it easy to move everything when you need to actually clean.
Pro move: Add a small battery-operated candle if you’re worried about fire hazards. The flicker gives that cozy vibe without the risk.
2. Floating Shelves or Cabinet Tops
If you’ve got open shelving, you’ve struck gold.
Layer your styling like this:
Back row (tallest items):
- A piece of festive artwork (I printed a vintage Christmas botanical from Etsy for $3)
- A small framed holiday quote
Middle row:
- A decorative storage box or basket
- Rolled hand towels in holiday colors
Front row:
- Small decorative items (ornaments in a glass jar, tiny bottle brush trees, pinecones)
Vary the heights. This creates visual interest instead of a flat, boring lineup.
3. The Toilet Tank
I know, I know. Decorating your toilet feels weird.
But a simple decorative box on the tank serves double duty:
- Stores extra toilet paper rolls (festive AND functional)
- Adds a finished, styled look
I use a woven basket with a lid. On top, I place a small cutting of pine greenery or a single ornament. Takes 30 seconds to set up. Looks intentional.
4. Towel Display
Don’t just hang towels normally.
Try this instead:
For hand towels:
- Roll them and place in a decorative basket
- Stack three rolled towels vertically and tie with ribbon
- Hang two coordinating patterns together for visual interest
For display towels:
- Fold into thirds lengthwise
- Drape over towel bar with ends at slightly different lengths
- Add a small sprig of greenery tucked into the fold
Sounds fussy, but takes literally two minutes and elevates the whole space.
5. The Mirror or Wall Space
Your bathroom mirror probably has bare wall space around it.
Use it.
I hang a small fresh greenery swag (or faux if you’re not replacing it weekly) from one top corner of the mirror. Costs about $8 at the grocery store and lasts 2-3 weeks if you spritz it with water.
Alternative ideas:
- A festive wreath on the back of the door
- Simple garland dr












