10 Creative RV Bathroom Remodel Ideas and DIY Renovation Tricks
Let’s talk about RV bathrooms for a second. You know, that closet-sized space where you can simultaneously wash your hands, brush your teeth, and sit on the toilet without moving?
Yeah, that one. Mine was so small I had to step outside just to change my mind. After two years of performing daily contortionist acts just to shower, I finally decided enough was enough.
Here’s the truth nobody tells you when you buy an RV – that bathroom is going to drive you absolutely bonkers unless you get creative.
I’ve renovated three different RV bathrooms (one for me, two for friends who bribed me with campfire cocktails), and I’ve learned what actually works in these microscopic spaces versus what just looks good on Pinterest.
Whether you’re weekend camping or full-timing like I did for 18 months, these ideas will transform your RV bathroom from “portable prison cell” to “surprisingly functional space that doesn’t make you miss your house quite as much.”
And the best part? Most of these won’t require you to sell a kidney or possess carpentry skills beyond hammering and hoping.
1. Space-Saving RV Bathroom Hacks

Space in an RV bathroom is more precious than gold. Actually, scratch that – you could probably fit more gold in there than functional storage. My Class C had a bathroom so tiny that I literally couldn’t bend over to pick up dropped items without my head hitting the wall. Not ideal.
The secret to RV bathroom success is using every single inch, including the weird spaces you didn’t think could hold anything. I once found 6 inches of wasted space behind my bathroom door and turned it into towel storage. Changed. My. Life.
Vertical Storage Is Your Religion Now
Forget horizontal space – you don’t have any. Look up instead. I installed adhesive shelves all the way to the ceiling, and suddenly I had room for all my stuff without performing organizational gymnastics.
Command strips are your best friend. I have hooks on every available wall space holding everything from towels to my hair dryer. The walls in my RV bathroom now work harder than I do on Monday mornings.
Over-the-door organizers aren’t just for college dorms. I have one with 12 pockets hanging on the back of my bathroom door, and it holds more than my old house linen closet. Okay, that’s an exaggeration, but it holds a surprising amount.
Utilize Dead Zones
That awkward corner where nothing fits? Corner shelves exist for exactly this situation. I installed a three-tier corner unit that holds toiletries, and it takes up literally zero floor space.
Under-sink areas in RVs are usually disaster zones. I added a sliding drawer organizer, and now I can actually find things without unpacking everything like some weird scavenger hunt.
The space above your RV toilet is prime real estate. I installed a cabinet there, and guests always ask where I found such a “perfectly sized” unit. Amazon. I found it on Amazon.
2. Budget-Friendly RV Bathroom Upgrades

RV renovations can get expensive fast. Trust me, I know – I once priced out my dream RV bathroom remodel and it cost more than my actual RV. That’s when I learned to get creative with budget solutions that don’t look cheap.
Paint is your secret weapon. I transformed my beige bathroom nightmare into a fresh white oasis for $15. That’s less than one campground night, and it made way more difference.
The Power of Paint and Peel
Peel-and-stick everything has saved my sanity and my wallet. I used peel-and-stick tiles on my bathroom floor, and they’ve survived two years of road travel. They cost $40 and look like I spent ten times that.
Painting fixtures instead of replacing them is genius. My old brass faucet looked like it escaped from 1987, but spray paint made it look modern and intentional. Total cost: $6.
Contact paper transforms countertops instantly. I covered my horrible laminate with marble-look contact paper, and everyone thinks I installed actual stone. I don’t correct them.
Shop Smart, Not Expensive
Dollar stores have amazing bathroom organizers. My entire drawer organization system came from the dollar store, and it works better than the expensive Container Store stuff I bought for my house.
RV salvage yards are treasure troves. I found a perfect medicine cabinet for my bathroom at an RV salvage yard for $20. Cleaned it up, repainted it, and nobody knows it came from someone else’s demolished RV.
3. Tiny RV Bathroom Storage Solutions

Storage in RV bathrooms requires the creativity of a Tetris champion and the determination of someone who really needs to store 47 skincare products in a 2-foot space. I’ve mastered both out of pure necessity.
Every item in your RV bathroom should pull double duty. If it doesn’t serve at least two purposes, it doesn’t deserve precious space. I’m ruthless about this now, but it took losing three bottles of shampoo during a bumpy drive to learn.
Magnetic Solutions That Stick
Magnetic strips solve problems you didn’t know you had. I installed one inside my medicine cabinet for bobby pins, tweezers, and nail clippers. Never losing small metal items again feels like a superpower.
Magnetic spice racks work perfectly for bathroom storage. I mounted two on my bathroom wall and filled them with small bottles and makeup. They stay put during travel, which is basically magic.
Hidden Storage Wins
The space inside cabinet doors is wasted space until you use it. I added adhesive pockets inside every cabinet door, and suddenly I had room for everything from makeup to cleaning supplies.
Drawer dividers prevent the “everything slides around during travel” disaster. I learned this after finding my toothbrush in the shower after a particularly bumpy mountain road. Now everything stays put.
Shower caddies that hang from the shower head free up floor space. Mine has three tiers and holds all my shower products without touching the tiny RV shower floor. Game changer.
Also Read: 12 Quick Simple Bathroom Remodel Ideas Anyone Can Try
4. Modern RV Bathroom Makeover Ideas

Modern design in RV bathrooms is about clean lines and not trying to cram in a million decorative items. I went modern in my latest RV bathroom remodel, and the simplicity makes the small space feel way bigger.
White and light colors are your friends. Dark colors might look dramatic in a house bathroom, but in an RV, they make the space feel like a cave. I learned this after painting one RV bathroom dark gray and immediately regretting it.
Sleek Fixtures Make a Difference
Replace old RV fixtures with modern ones. My original RV faucet looked like it belonged in a gas station bathroom. I swapped it for a modern waterfall faucet from Amazon for $45, and suddenly my bathroom looked intentional.
Matte black fixtures are trending, and they look amazing in RV bathrooms. I replaced all my chrome hardware with matte black, and the transformation was instant. Plus, they don’t show water spots, which matters when you’re living in a tiny space.
Minimalist Is Maximum
Keep surfaces clear. I know it’s tempting to add decorative items, but in an RV bathroom, clutter makes everything feel smaller. I keep my counter completely clear except for a soap dispenser, and it feels spacious.
Frameless shower doors look modern and make small RV showers feel less claustrophobic. I replaced my shower curtain with a glass door, and I no longer feel like I’m showering in a closet.
Simple, modern lighting updates everything. I replaced my old dome light with a modern LED fixture, and my bathroom went from “vintage RV” to “contemporary tiny home.”
5. DIY RV Bathroom Renovation Tips

DIY in an RV requires slightly different skills than DIY in a house. Everything is smaller, weirder, and held together with more screws than seems necessary. I’ve learned through trial and error (emphasis on error) what actually works.
Measure everything twice. Actually, measure it three times because RV measurements are never standard. I once bought a “standard” medicine cabinet that didn’t fit because apparently my RV manufacturer had their own idea of standard.
Tools You Actually Need
A good drill is essential. I use mine for everything from installing shelves to removing panels. Invest in a quality cordless drill – you’ll thank yourself later when you’re working in tight spaces.
Adhesive products are your best friend in RVs. You can’t always drill into RV walls without hitting something important (like your water lines, ask me how I know). Heavy-duty adhesive solves this problem.
Flexible tools work better in tight RV spaces. Standard-length screwdrivers don’t fit in many RV spots. I have a set of stubby tools that actually fit where I need them to.
Common RV Bathroom DIY Mistakes
Don’t assume anything is level in an RV. I installed shelves using the ceiling as a guide, and they looked drunk because the ceiling itself wasn’t level. Now I use an actual level for everything.
Test water fixtures immediately. I once installed a new faucet and didn’t test it for two days. Turns out I’d cross-threaded a connection, and water went everywhere when I finally turned it on. Learn from my soggy mistake.
Remove everything from the bathroom before starting projects. Seems obvious, but I once painted with all my toiletries still in there and got paint specks on everything. Your toothbrush shouldn’t be a craft project.
6. Stylish RV Shower & Vanity Ideas

RV showers are notoriously terrible. Mine was so small I had to wash one body part at a time, rotating like a rotisserie chicken. But with some creativity, even the tiniest RV shower can become bearable, possibly even enjoyable.
Vanities in RVs are usually afterthoughts. Mine was literally a piece of countertop with a sink hole. I transformed it into something I’m actually proud of, and you can too without a complete rebuild.
Shower Glow-Up Ideas
Tile over ugly RV shower walls with peel-and-stick tiles. I used white subway tile stickers, and my shower went from “sketchy truck stop” to “boutique hotel.” They’ve survived water, steam, and road travel like champions.
Rainfall shower heads make tiny showers feel luxurious. I installed one rated for RV water pressure, and showering in my RV no longer feels like punishment. It actually feels… nice?
Glass shower doors instead of curtains make everything look cleaner and more modern. Plus, shower curtains in RVs mildew faster than you can say “ventilation issues.”
Vanity Transformations
Paint your RV vanity cabinets. Mine were that horrible honey oak color, but two coats of white paint made them look custom. Add new hardware, and boom – instant upgrade.
Replace the RV mirror with something better. My new round mirror cost $30 from Target and makes my whole bathroom look more expensive. Sometimes it’s the simple swaps that matter most.
Add a backsplash behind your RV sink. I used peel-and-stick tiles, and they protect the wall while looking intentional. Bonus: they’re way easier to clean than painted walls.
Also Read: 10 Elegant Bathroom Remodel Ideas and Modern Touches
7. RV Bathroom Color Palette Inspiration

Color choices in RV bathrooms are crucial. The wrong colors make small spaces feel like prison cells. The right colors create the illusion of space and don’t make you feel claustrophobic every morning.
I’ve tried multiple color schemes in different RV bathrooms. White and light gray is my winner for making tiny spaces feel bigger. Navy and gold looked amazing for approximately two days before I felt suffocated.
Light and Bright Wins
All-white bathrooms never go out of style. My current RV bathroom is entirely white, and it feels twice its actual size. Sure, it shows dirt faster, but that just means I clean more often. Silver lining?
Light gray adds sophistication without darkness. I used light gray for accents in my white bathroom, and it keeps it from looking sterile. It’s the difference between “hospital” and “spa.”
Adding Color Without Overwhelm
Accent colors work best in small doses. I added pops of coral through towels and a shower curtain. I can change them easily if I get bored, and they don’t permanently commit me to a color I might hate later.
Natural wood tones warm up cool color palettes. My white bathroom has bamboo accessories, and they prevent it from feeling cold. Plus, bamboo is lightweight, which matters in RVs.
BTW, avoid dark colors on large surfaces. I painted one RV bathroom ceiling dark blue thinking it would look sophisticated. It looked like a cave. A pretty cave, but still a cave.
8. Multi-Functional RV Bathroom Designs

Everything in an RV bathroom needs to multitask harder than a parent with three kids under five. Single-purpose items don’t earn their keep in tiny spaces. I’m ruthless about this now, but I learned through having way too much stuff.
Your RV bathroom can be more than just a bathroom. With smart design, it can serve multiple purposes without feeling cluttered. My bathroom doubles as a storage closet and getting-ready station, and it works surprisingly well.
Furniture That Works Overtime
Mirrors with storage behind them serve double duty. I installed a medicine cabinet with a mirror front, and it holds everything while taking up zero extra space. Genius.
Vanities with drawers instead of cabinets store more. I can organize drawers way better than I can organize the black hole under a sink cabinet.
Shower storage that extends outside the shower helps. I have corner shelves that technically sit in the shower space but hold products I use both in and out of the shower.
Flexible Design Elements
Removable elements let you reconfigure as needed. My shower curtain rod is tension-mounted, so I can remove it when I need the bathroom to feel more open.
Folding or sliding doors save space. My bathroom door slides instead of swinging, which means I don’t have to plan my movements around door clearance.
9. Compact RV Vanity & Sink Remodels

RV sinks are usually hilariously small. Mine was roughly the size of a cereal bowl. You couldn’t wash your hands without water splashing everywhere like some kind of tiny fountain show nobody asked for.
Vanity space is equally precious. Most RVs give you approximately 6 inches of counter space and expect you to store everything you own there. Creative solutions are necessary for survival.
Sink Solutions
Replace your RV sink with a deeper one if possible. I swapped my shallow sink for a deeper model, and suddenly I could actually wash my face without flooding the bathroom.
Vessel sinks save counter space. They sit on top of the counter instead of being recessed, which means you can use shallower cabinets and gain storage underneath.
Corner sinks work wonders in tiny RV bathrooms. I’ve seen friends install them and gain so much functional space just by utilizing that awkward corner.
Maximizing Vanity Space
Floating vanities create the illusion of more space. They also make cleaning the floor easier, which matters when you’re in a compact space that shows every speck of dirt.
Add a shelf under your vanity for extra storage. I installed one for towels, and it uses previously wasted space effectively.
Wall-mounted faucets free up counter space. Mine mounts directly to the wall, which means my tiny counter doesn’t have a faucet taking up precious real estate.
Also Read: 10 Modern Frame Bathroom Mirror Ideas and Sleek Styles
10. Eco-Friendly RV Bathroom Remodel Ideas

Eco-friendly choices in RV bathrooms make sense for multiple reasons. You’re already living in a small space with limited resources, so why not optimize for sustainability? Plus, many eco-friendly options save money, which I’m always in favor of.
Water conservation matters even more in RVs. Your fresh water tank is finite, and running out mid-shower is a special kind of awful. Ask me how I know.
Water-Saving Fixtures
Low-flow shower heads save water without sacrificing pressure. I installed one designed for RVs, and my showers use half the water without feeling like I’m being misted by disappointment.
Composting toilets eliminate black tank issues entirely. I don’t have one yet, but friends who do swear they’ll never go back to regular RV toilets. The learning curve seems steep though.
Motion-sensor faucets prevent water waste. I installed one, and it turns off automatically when I’m not using it. My water tank lasts way longer now.
Sustainable Materials
Bamboo everything is lightweight and sustainable. My bathroom has bamboo shelves, a bamboo bath mat, and bamboo organizers. It looks cohesive and helps the planet.
Recycled materials for renovations reduce waste. I used reclaimed wood for shelving, and it looks better than new wood while being eco-friendly.
Natural cleaning products work just as well and don’t fill your tiny RV with toxic fumes. I switched to vinegar and essential oils, and my bathroom is just as clean without the chemical smell.
Making It All Work Together
After three RV bathroom remodels, here’s my honest take: start with the changes that bother you most.
Don’t try to do everything at once unless you enjoy living in construction chaos while camping. I learned this after dismantling my entire bathroom and living without a functioning sink for three days.
Prioritize function over aesthetics. A beautiful bathroom that doesn’t work is just a pretty problem. My first RV bathroom remodel looked amazing but had zero functional storage. I redid it six months later.
Remember that your RV bathroom doesn’t need to be perfect. It needs to work for your lifestyle. Weekend warriors have different needs than full-timers. My full-timing bathroom focused on durability and storage. My current weekend RV bathroom is more about style because it gets less use.
Test everything before hitting the road. I’ve made the mistake of finishing a project and immediately leaving for a camping trip. Something always needs adjustment, and discovering problems 200 miles from home is no fun.
FYI, every RV is different. What worked in my Class C might not work in your Class A or travel trailer. Adapt these ideas to your specific RV and situation. The principles are the same, but the execution varies.
The best RV bathroom is one that makes you happy and works for your needs. Whether that’s a minimalist zen space or a slightly organized chaos that somehow functions, make it yours.
Life’s too short to hate the tiny room where you start every morning. Now grab some peel-and-stick tiles and make that RV bathroom less terrible 🙂
