Short definition
A curbless shower has no raised curb at the entry — the bathroom floor and the shower floor are continuous, with the slope built into the shower side toward a drain (typically a linear trench drain or a center drain in a sloped pan). Allows wheelchair and walker access, reads as modern aesthetically, and demands meticulous waterproofing.
What it is
The defining feature is the absent threshold. Where a standard shower has a 3 to 6-inch curb separating the stall from the rest of the bathroom, a curbless shower has nothing — the floor flows from bathroom into shower without a step.
The water containment job that the curb did in a standard shower is now done by:
- Floor slope. UPC 411 requires 1/4 inch per foot toward the drain. The slope is built into the shower side of the floor only; the rest of the bathroom stays level.
- Drain placement. Most curbless showers use a linear (trench) drain along one wall or at the entry, paired with a single-direction slope. Center drains work but require a four-way slope (more cuts in large-format tile).
- Tanking (waterproofing). The shower zone, and often the curb-adjacent floor, is sealed with a continuous waterproof membrane (Schluter Kerdi, RedGard, Hydro Ban) before tile.
Pre-formed curbless shower pans from Schluter, Wedi, and USG simplify the slope-and-membrane work — you set the pan, bond the membrane, and tile.
Why it matters to a homeowner
Curbless is the standard for two homeowner cases:
- Aging-in-place / accessibility. A curbless shower lets a wheelchair, walker, or shower bench enter without a barrier. Combined with grab bars and a comfort-height toilet, it forms the core of a Universal Design bathroom.
- Modern aesthetics. No curb plus large-format tile plus a slim linear drain reads as high-end contemporary.
Costs are real:
- Curbless shower remodel: $5,000 to $25,000 typical, depending on demo and waterproofing scope.
- Linear / trench drain: $300 to $1,200 part.
- Pre-formed curbless pan kit (Schluter Kerdi-Shower, Wedi): $400 to $1,500.
ADA roll-in shower minimums are 60 by 30 inches with a curbless threshold; if accessibility is the goal, design to those numbers and add fold-down seat and grab-bar blocking during framing.
Common failure modes
- Improper slope. Water pools in the shower or migrates outside the shower zone.
- Inadequate tanking. Water reaches subfloor; major rot in framing and joists.
- Drain not low enough below floor. Water sits above drain level instead of flowing in.
- Linear drain installed crooked. Uneven flow; water pools at the high end.
Common variants
- Curbless shower (this entry). Waterproofing focused in the shower area; rest of bathroom conventional.
- Wet room. Entire bathroom waterproofed; works as a giant shower.
- Roll-in shower. Accessibility-specific curbless design at ADA dimensions.
- Walk-in shower with low curb. Often confused with curbless; has a small (1/2-inch or less) threshold.