What Are Bathtubs Made Out Of?

September 2024 · 5 minute read

Bathtub materials used by the ancients would look strange in a modern bathroom. The Babylonians coated bricks with a mixture of bitumen and limestone to make them waterproof. Roman tubs were made from terra-cotta bricks and tiles, and the Chinese soaked in tubs hewn from tree trunks.

By contrast, many modern bathtub materials come from a factory. That doesn’t make them any less attractive than the natural materials people have used through the ages, but they are definitely more affordable and easier to keep clean.

Raf Howery, CEO and founder of Kukun, who parlayed his fix-and-flip expertise into a data-driven home improvement platform for design-conscious homeowners, doesn’t think any bathtub material is “best.” But to him, some score higher than others on his three most important factors: durability, cost and cleaning. Homeowners should also consider weight, heat retention and sustainability.

What People Look For in Bathtub Materials

Some people choose a bathtub based on aesthetics. Others are more interested in comfort, and still others mostly price. A typical priorities list would include:

Fiberglass Bathtub

Fiberglass, Howery says, is the least expensive material. These are manufactured by forming fiberglass resin into a bathtub shape and coating it with gel-coat resin.

Pros

Cons

Acrylic Bathtub

Similar in appearance to fiberglass, acrylic is manufactured by heating a sheet of plastic resin, forming it into a bathtub shape and reinforcing it with a fiberglass coating. Howery calls acrylic moderately expensive.

Pros

Cons

Cast Iron Bathtub

The design of the modern bathtub owes its origin to John Michael Kohler, who added legs to a cast iron horse trough and coated it with hard enamel to create the first clawfoot tub. To make a modern cast iron tub, molten iron is poured into a mold. Then a hard enamel coating is applied.

Pros

Cons

Enameled Steel Bathtub

A more lightweight alternative to cast iron, porcelain enameled steel is still a heavy bathtub material. Offering what Howery characterizes as “extremely limited” design options, it’s typically molded into alcove and other built-in tub models.

Pros

Cons

Solid Surface Bathtub

A relatively new addition to the market, solid surface bathtubs are made from various types of polymers.

Pros

Cons

Cultured Marble Bathtub

Made from a mixture of limestone and resin and coated with a layer of gel coat, cultured marble is a class of stone resin materials fabricated with natural crushed stone.

Pros

Cons

Ceramic Bathtub

Reminiscent of Roman terra-cotta baths, ceramic tubs are lined with ceramic tiles. This type of tub can be customized into any shape.

Pros

Cons

Specialty Materials

Most top-of-the-line bathtub materials are natural ones that people have used through the ages. They include natural stone, copper and wood, and are just as likely to be custom-made as purchased off the shelf.

If you’re looking for something exotic and cost is no object, you might consider a crystal tub. Tubs hewn from solid chunks of amethyst and quartz are out there, but beware: Their price tags are in the millions.

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