Short definition
A rain shower is an oversized showerhead — typically 8 to 16 inches across — mounted on the ceiling or via a high-arc shower arm. Sprays straight down with a soft, rain-like pattern: minimal pressure feel, maximum coverage. Often paired with a handheld unit (dual shower) for both the rain experience and practical washing.
What it is
The defining geometry is size and orientation: the head is oversized so the pattern covers your whole body without you stepping in and out of a stream, and it points straight down (rather than out at an angle from the wall). Mounting options:
- Ceiling-mount. Cleanest aesthetic; supply runs through the ceiling. More install work.
- Wall-mount with high-arc shower arm. Arm projects 12 to 18 inches and angles up; head pointed down at a slight angle. Easier retrofit.
Federal max flow is 2.5 gpm; WaterSense-labeled rain showers cap at 2.0 gpm. Many rain showers on the market are sold at 2.0 to 2.5 gpm — verify the rating before buying if conservation matters to you.
Cost ranges:
- Rain showerhead: $50 to $500.
- Premium / oversized: $500 to $2,500.
- Ceiling-mount install (running supply through the ceiling): $400 to $1,500 incremental on top of the head.
Why it matters to a homeowner
Rain showers are an aesthetic and experience choice, not a performance upgrade. The “rain” pattern is gentle by design — if you have low household pressure (under 40 psi static, common in older WA homes without a pressure-boosted main), a rain shower will feel weak. Verify your static pressure with a hose-bib gauge before committing.
The pairing pattern is important: most homeowners who install a rain shower also install a separate handheld on a slide bar, and a diverter to switch between them. Rain alone doesn’t easily wash a kid or rinse soap from a shoulder; the handheld covers that gap.
In WA water conservation terms, rain showers vary widely. A WaterSense-labeled rain showerhead at 1.8 to 2.0 gpm uses no more water than a standard showerhead and qualifies for utility rebates. A non-WaterSense 2.5-gpm rain showerhead uses 25% more water for the same shower duration — meaningful over years of daily use.
Common failure modes
- Mineral scale on small spray nozzles. Descale by soaking the head in white vinegar.
- Drips after shower-off. Air trapped in the head; no functional issue.
- Low household pressure makes the rain feel weak. Address whole-house pressure first; don’t expect a head replacement to compensate.
Common variants
- Rain shower (this entry) vs. fixed standard shower. Pressure feel and pattern are the differentiators.
- Ceiling-mount rain vs. wall-arm rain. Different install difficulty; same spray feel.
- WaterSense rain (≤2.0 gpm) vs. non-WaterSense rain. Efficiency choice.