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NKBA | KBIS Releases Annual 2026 Bath Trends Report

Rapidly evolving home technology stands to reshape the modern bath, as personal lifestyles drive design decisions
Image courtesy of Getty Images.

Bethlehem, PA – (November 11, 2025) — The National Kitchen & Bath Association (NKBA | KBIS), the world’s leading trade association for the $228 billion kitchen and bath industry, representing nearly 55,000 North American kitchen and bath industry professionals, has released its 2026 Bath Trends Report. Comprised of data generated from a survey completed by nearly 700 industry experts, including designers, manufacturers, remodelers, architects, and more, the report provides a comprehensive look into current and upcoming trends in residential baths that will have the biggest impact in 2026 and beyond.

According to the report, the bath design landscape is currently in a state of flux – the evolution of bathroom technology marks an upcoming shift emerging in the home. As residential tech continues to present more opportunity and innovation, three areas of growth in the bath are standing out: 

  • Technology in Design Inspiration: Younger homeowners are turning to AI for design inspiration that integrates smart features, sustainability, and style.
  • Technology in Fixtures: Smart home integration is expanding rapidly through intelligent showers, lighting, and energy systems.
  • Technology for Wellness: Health-oriented features, stress-reduction tools, and aging-in-place innovations are becoming mainstream.

Beyond technology, personalized tastes and lifestyles are continuing to be the driving force behind color, style, and materials selection, as well as storage configurations and bath layout. “Bath design is becoming deeply personal,” said Bill Darcy, Global President & CEO of NKBA | KBIS. “Beyond considerations like resale value, designers are focusing on how spaces support a homeowner’s individual rituals, preferences, and self-care routines. This perspective encourages creativity, niche trends, and designs that truly reflect how people live today.”

The full report is available at NKBA.org with free access for NKBA members. Key findings include:

Colors & Materials: What’s In, What’s Out

  • Light Neutrals Win: In near total agreement, 96% of respondents identified neutrals as the most popular bath colors, with off-white (58%), light brown/tan (54%), and white (40%) earning the dominant response ahead of dark brown (30%), black (18%), and dark gray/slate (18%). 
  • Shades of Green: Brown-based greens – sage (64%) and olive (43%) – are expected to be popular choices, while bolder hues – teal/turquoise (19%) and emerald/juniper (16%) – received far less attention. 
  • Timeless Design: Transitional/timeless design tops the list, with 70% of respondents naming it as a popular style in the next three years. The style is followed by organic/natural (65%) and contemporary/modern/minimalism (57%) designs.
  • Removing Fine Lines: Homeowners are looking for smaller or no grout lines on the floor, according to 89% of those surveyed. Additionally, 91% agree that durability and practicality to minimize upkeep is the top consideration for choosing a flooring material, supporting 80% who believe large format flooring will be the most popular over the next three years.
  • Natural Materials: Wood-faced vanities (62%) have overtaken painted (53%) in popularity as biophilic design continues to be prioritized in the bath.
  • Polished Is Out: For faucets, matte (54%), brushed (51%), and satin (46%) were all more popular than a polished finish (39%), playing into organic, natural design cues.

A Growing Footprint

The overall bath footprint will increase to make room for wellness-centered spaces, universal design considerations, and efficient storage solutions, according to 72% of respondents. Meanwhile, the space allocation in the primary bath is a top priority according to 89% of respondents. More than half (55%) say a larger shower size is more important than having a bathtub, which allows for more spa-like features and amenities within the shower, including steam options, saunas, aromatherapy, chromotherapy, and integrated seating and shelving.

Hospitality Inspiration for Wellness

Tying bath design to a homeowner’s hotel or resort experience is expected to be a popular practice, according to 77% of respondents, supporting the unification of wellness, technology, and sustainability into a singular, cohesive design philosophy. This isn’t about one individual feature like a smart toilet (though 51% agree smart toilets will rise in popularity over the next three years) or a new tile color (patterned and textured tiles are gaining prominence, according to 66%). Instead, it’s a fundamental shift in how we perceive and use the primary bathroom. It’s moving from a purely utilitarian space to a sanctuary dedicated to physical and mental well-being, while also being smart and environmentally conscious.

Spreading the Light

Lighting quality is a top consideration when it comes to bath design, according to 91% of respondents. In practice, this means prioritizing layers and levels of lighting: 

  • Task Lighting: 92% agree that task lighting should always be included in the primary bath
  • Mood Lighting: 51% predict mood lighting in shower will gain prominence
  • Time-of-Day Lighting: 80% are including nighttime-specific lighting, and 88% list natural lighting as a top priority
  • Aesthetic Lighting: 47% favor integrated lighting in mirrors over the next three years 

Custom Bath Solutions

On a growing scale, smart technology is being integrated to achieve a more individualized daily ritual and as a tool to impact overall well-being. On a simpler level, custom storage solutions with configurable modules to simplify life are being thoughtfully integrated into bath vanity and cabinetry design. Item-specific storage includes built-in storage for hair tools, makeup, and medications, electrical integration, custom dividers and organizers to maximize drawer efficiency, and charging stations for electronic devices within vanity cabinetry. Coupled with personalized style inspiration, these considerations represent a deep shift towards bespoke living.

Accessibility is Elegant

Aging-in-place design elements have become so mainstream that in addition to function, these universal design fixtures prioritize beauty as well. Grab bars, curbless showers, shower benches, barrier-free shower entries, and wider doors are subtle, crucial safety features that make a primary bath look more luxurious and elevated. Of those surveyed, 32% agree that aging-in-place is now a mainstream trend; 48% agree that it’s on its way to becoming one.

To download a PDF version of this release, click here.

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NKBA Survey Methodology

This survey was conducted online among 688 respondents, who are members of the NKBA community and targeted occupations including designers (which make up 61% of responses), showrooms, dealers, specialists, manufacturers, kitchen and bath remodelers/contractors, and architects. If not qualified as the previous occupations, fabricators, home centers, honorary members, and installers were excluded from the field. Respondents must have designed, specified, or sold products for at least one bath project in the past year. All ages qualified and gender was allowed to fall naturally. The NKBA sample-sourced, self-administered survey was augmented with a third-party sample interviewer-administered survey. 

About the National Kitchen & Bath Association (NKBA) and the Kitchen & Bath Industry Show (KBIS)

NKBA is the not-for-profit trade association that owns the Kitchen & Bath Industry Show® (KBIS). With 55,000 members in all segments of the kitchen and bath industry, the NKBA has informed, educated, and supported the industry since the association was founded in 1963. The mission of the NKBA is to inspire, lead, and empower the kitchen and bath industry through community, professional certification, and learning and events. For more information, go to NKBA.org or call 1-800-THE-NKBA (843-6522). KBIS® and NKBA® are registered trademarks of the National Kitchen & Bath Association.

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Kohler Exec Natalie Black Kohler Dies at 74

The widow of Herbert V. Kohler Jr. held several key posts for the plumbing giant and the Kohler Foundation’s philanthropic endeavors.

By Dianne M. Pogoda

Natalie Black Kohler, who served as general counsel and senior vice president of corporate communications of Kohler Co., led the Kohler Foundation, and sat on the company’s board of directors, died at her home in Oostburg, WI, on Sept.10. She was 74.

She will be remembered as a passionate and purposeful individual, devoted to her family, her dogs, and her husband, Herbert V. Kohler Jr., whom she married in 1988. Herbert passed away in 2022 at the age of 83. Natalie’s 33-year career at Kohler Co. included her role as general counsel, protecting the company’s legal interests worldwide, guiding Kohler through significant global expansion and unprecedented growth through a series of mergers and acquisitions, and ensuring its privately held status through a historic stock recapitalization.

As SVP of corporate communications, she established The Beacon, Kohler Co.’s state-of-the-art global communications headquarters — a modern architectural masterpiece serving as a brick-and-mortar culmination of her career-long passion for promoting and elevating the flagship label as an aspirational brand. Among her memorable achievements were the avant-garde As I See It advertising campaigns, a string of Most Remembered Exhibit Booth honors at KBIS, and the Kohler Design Center, a showcase of artistic products, breakthrough design ideas, and unique company history. Natalie and her husband were inducted into the Wisconsin Advertising Hall of Fame in 2019.

She served on the Kohler Co. board from 1987 to 2022, and as a member, then president, of the Kohler Foundation from 1998 to 2022.

Natalie Black was born on Dec. 19, 1949, in Bakersfield, CA, to Eugene and Ann Black. She received an A.B. degree in economics and mathematics from Stanford University in 1972 and graduated magna cum laude from Marquette University Law School in 1978. She was also a graduate of the Harvard Business School’s Program for Management Development in 1982. Natalie joined Kohler Co. in 1981 as a member of the Legal Department after working since 1978 as an attorney with the Milwaukee law firm of Quarles & Brady, specializing in securities and general corporate work. 

In addition to her roles at Kohler Co., Natalie was active on numerous professional boards and organizations, including membership in the American, Wisconsin, and Sheboygan County Bar Associations; Chairman of the Committee on Corporate Law Departments for the Section on Business Law of the American Bar Association, and on the Board of Trustees for Marquette University from 1993 to 2013. She served on the board for Johnson Controls Inc. from 1998 to 2018; was a member of the policy advisory board of the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University since 1991; was on the board of trustees for the Medical College of Wisconsin from 1997 to 2009 and on boards of the Sheboygan County YMCA and The Milwaukee Ballet Company.

Known for her curiosity and many interests, Natalie was a passionate reader with a deep love of fiction and a dedication to female authors. Believing fundamentally in the power and importance of reading, Natalie started the Black Spring Foundation, a non-profit that focuses on literacy, education, hunger, and animal welfare. She gave generously to these causes, focusing much of her philanthropic efforts on Sheboygan County and providing substantial funding to the Sheboygan County Food Bank, Sheboygan County Humane Society, and Sheboygan Public Education Foundation. She will be remembered for her emphasis on the importance of giving back to one’s community by her step-grandchildren, whom she involved in her philanthropy from their young age. 

In addition to her husband, Natalie was predeceased by her parents; her sister, Denise Gross; nephew Derek Rhodehouse; brother-in-law, Frederic Kohler, and sister-in-law Ruth DeYoung Kohler II. She is survived by her sister, Jennifer (Bill) Westbrook; niece Stacey Westbrook; two stepdaughters, Laura Kohler (Steve Proudman), and Rachel Kohler (Mark Hoplamazian), and stepson, David Kohler (Nina). She is further survived by 10 step-grandchildren, and three step-great-grandchildren. 

A website celebrating Natalie’s life and accomplishments will be available soon.

A private service is being held with burial at Woodland Cemetery in Kohler. In lieu of flowers, donations in Natalie’s name can be made to Black Spring Foundation or the Sheboygan County Food Bank.