Bathrooms are the most overlooked rooms in the Australian home — and the highest-leverage. Compact footprints, short-but-frequent visits and walls of hard surfaces make them perfect candidates for a single confident design decision. A feature wall of wallpaper is that decision. One roll transforms a powder room from plain to memorable in a day. One mural turns a main bathroom into the kind of room guests actually comment on.
This is the complete Olive et Oriel guide to choosing, placing and living with bathroom wallpaper in Australian homes — humidity rules for every climate zone, seven fully-styled bathroom moods built around our murals, rental-friendly options, and a designer FAQ. Everything here is drawn from ten-plus years of making custom wallpaper on the Central Coast of New South Wales and shipping to more than forty countries with all import duties paid.
If you finish this guide with one feature wall in mind and a $4.99 sample ordered, you have already won. Most bathrooms never get past the towel rail.
Ethereal Horizons Mural · Molton Wallpaper · Eucalyptus Haze Mural
Why the bathroom is the smartest wallpaper room in the house
Every room in a home earns its square metres a little differently. Living rooms carry the weight of entertaining. Bedrooms have to feel calm. Kitchens are both hub and highway. The bathroom, by contrast, is the room with the shortest individual visits and the highest total traffic — you walk in, brush your teeth, shower, walk out. Thirty seconds here, four minutes there. Over the course of a week, a household of two uses the main bathroom more than any other room except the kitchen.
That traffic pattern is exactly what makes the bathroom such a strong candidate for wallpaper. You are not committing to looking at a large-scale pattern for hours at a time the way you would in a living room. You are creating a series of short, memorable moments — the first look in the morning, the last glance before bed, the pause between hand-washing and reaching for the towel. A well-chosen wallpaper works harder per second of exposure in a bathroom than almost anywhere else in the house.
Bathrooms are also small, which is a wallpaper advantage most people treat as a limitation. Smaller rooms need less product to transform them. A three-square-metre powder room can be completely redesigned with one feature wall of custom-sized wallpaper, often for less than the cost of a single designer light fitting. The same budget would barely reupholster a sofa.
The bathroom is the only room in the house where one wall of wallpaper can change the entire feeling of the home. Use that.
The humidity question — what wallpaper survives in Australian bathrooms
The first question every customer asks is whether wallpaper actually holds up in a bathroom. The honest answer: yes, with sensible rules. Modern non-woven wallpaper is a very different product from the paper-backed vinyls of twenty years ago. It breathes, it tolerates humidity cycles, and when installed correctly with a paste-the-wall method the seams sit tight and resist peeling.
There are three variables that matter far more than the wallpaper itself: ventilation, splash zones and climate. A well-ventilated bathroom with a working extraction fan or a decent window will handle a feature wall indefinitely. A bathroom where the mirror fogs for twenty minutes after every shower will challenge any wall finish, wallpaper or paint.
- Splash zones: Avoid wallpapering inside shower cubicles, directly behind a freestanding bath where water actively lands, or the wet side of a twin vanity where hands drip constantly. Feature walls opposite the shower, above the vanity, or behind a powder-room toilet are all fair game.
- Ventilation: A working extraction fan run for fifteen minutes after every shower is non-negotiable. If you have one window and no fan, crack the window.
- Climate: Humidity-heavy regions — Queensland, the Top End, Far North Queensland, and the sticky summer months across the entire east coast — reward the addition of a dehumidifier or the daily use of air-conditioning. Homes in Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth and Hobart face fewer humidity stresses year-round.
- Installation method: Paste-the-wall is the gold standard for bathroom installations. The paste dries with the paper already bonded to the wall rather than pooling on a damp back — read the paste-the-wall install guide for the full method.
One more climate-specific tip for Australian homes in Queensland and the Northern Territory: if you are wallpapering in the wet season, wait for a clear window of three dry days and run the air-conditioning during the install. Wallpaper paste cures faster and cleaner in stable conditions.
Ocean Tides in Navy Blue · Palm Sanctuary in Light Blue
Seven bathroom wallpaper moods to steal
Before we get into the rules for scale, placement and pattern, here are seven fully-styled bathroom moods, each built around a different mural from our collection. Use these as direct references: if one of these rooms looks like the feeling you want, click through and order the sample. Every one of these walls is available as a custom-sized wallpaper cut to the exact dimensions of your wall.
1. Moody jungle — Daintree Mist Canopy in Khaki Green
This is the mood for a bathroom you want to feel like a well-kept secret. Deep khaki greens, misty canopy layers and hints of Australian rainforest atmosphere make the room feel hidden inside a much larger landscape. Pair it with matte black tapware, an oak vanity and restrained styling — the mural carries the room. The same pattern is also available in Blue and Sand Beige if the khaki reads too dark for your space. Shop the Khaki Green colourway or browse the full range of panoramic wall murals.
2. Coastal dream — Ethereal Horizons
Ethereal Horizons is what a bathroom looks like when you stop thinking of it as a wet room and start thinking of it as a retreat. Soft pastel cloud gradients wrap the walls and dissolve the corners of the room — ideal for small ensuites where you want to feel the ceiling lifting rather than pressing down. Style with crisp white joinery and warm brass tapware; let the wallpaper do all the talking. See Ethereal Horizons Mural, or explore the coastal beach house wallpaper range for similar soft-palette options.
3. Calm bushland — Eucalyptus Haze
For anyone who grew up near the Australian bush, Eucalyptus Haze is the most emotionally resonant wallpaper in the range. Silver-green gums fade into morning mist; the palette is built on pale sage, warm sand and a whisper of dusty lilac. It works best in bathrooms with plenty of timber — an oak vanity, a timber-framed mirror, warm brass hardware. Discover the Eucalyptus Haze Mural or browse Australian botanical wallpaper.
4. Luxe moody — Molton
Molton is for the customer who wants the bathroom to feel like the inside of a gallery. Painterly black, bronze and deep plum layers create a sense of depth that is almost sculptural — this is the one wallpaper in the range that reads more as a painted artwork than a pattern. Pair it with honed dark stone, polished brass fixtures, and low, moody lighting. Shop Molton Wallpaper.
5. Coastal fresh — Ocean Tides in Navy Blue
Ocean Tides is the cleanest, most energetic coastal mural in the range. The flowing navy waves read as movement rather than pattern — exactly right for a bathroom that needs to feel fresh and alive first thing in the morning. Style with white freestanding furniture, natural linen towels and warm brass tapware. Shop Ocean Tides in Navy Blue or browse the full coastal beach house wallpaper range.
6. Tropical beige — Palm Escape Cream & Beige
The smartest way to do "tropical" in an Australian bathroom without tipping into theme-park territory is to strip the palette back to creams and warm beiges. Palm Escape in Cream & Beige does exactly that — the palm silhouettes are there, but the whole wall sits in a quiet neutral register that lets the rest of the room breathe. Ideal for tiled bathrooms that already lean warm. Shop Palm Escape Cream & Beige or explore palm leaf wallpapers.
7. Hamptons coastal — Palm Sanctuary in Light Blue
For Hamptons devotees and anyone styling a light-filled beach-house bathroom, Palm Sanctuary in Light Blue is the natural choice. The palette is soft powder blue, cream and white, with palm fronds that read as elegant rather than busy. Pair with shaker-style cabinetry, polished nickel tapware and a simple round mirror. The same pattern is also available in Beige and Grey. Shop Palm Sanctuary in Light Blue.
Scale and pattern — how to choose the right wallpaper for a small bathroom
Scale is where most bathroom wallpaper choices go wrong. Customers default to small repeating patterns "because the room is small" and end up with a wall that feels busy and cluttered. The truth is the opposite: small rooms reward large-scale or panoramic wallpapers more than tight repeats, because there is less visual chop when the eye travels around the room.
The designer rule we use with every Olive et Oriel customer is this: the smaller the bathroom, the larger the pattern should be. A panoramic mural on one wall of a three-square-metre powder room reads as a custom art installation. The same wallpaper in a large open-plan ensuite reads as a single wall of detail.
- Powder room (under 3m²): go panoramic. A single feature wall of mural wallpaper — Daintree Mist Canopy, Molton, Ocean Tides — is the entire design story.
- Ensuite (3–6m²): large-scale murals on one feature wall opposite the vanity; neutral paint on the remaining three walls.
- Main bathroom (6m²+): can carry either a panoramic mural or a larger-format repeat pattern. Feature wall behind the bath or behind a freestanding vanity works best.
For help choosing the pattern scale for your specific space, read our guide on how to choose wallpaper pattern and scale.
Placement — where bathroom wallpaper actually lives
Feature wall opposite the shower
The default placement, and usually the best. You see the wallpaper every time you step out of the shower, and the wall is far enough from the water to stay dry. Works elegantly with full-height panoramic murals like Ethereal Horizons or Eucalyptus Haze.
Behind the vanity
A wallpapered wall behind the vanity reads immediately as a design decision. Keep the mirror simple — a round brass-framed mirror or a frameless rectangle — so the wallpaper has room to breathe. Avoid wallpaper that will be partially hidden by an oversized mirror; the visible strip on either side of the mirror needs to tell the full story.
Behind a freestanding bath
One of the most photogenic moments in any Australian bathroom. A panoramic mural rising behind a freestanding bath transforms the bath from a fixture into a destination. Keep the bottom of the wallpaper at least 200mm above the floor — a skirting or timber float protects the lower edge from cleaning splash.
Powder-room alcove or full-height
The powder room is the one place in the house where you can wallpaper all four walls without it feeling claustrophobic. Guests spend thirty seconds in the room, alone, with no competing visual information. A single mural carried around all four walls is the entire design.
Ceiling wallpaper
An underused move. Wallpapering only the ceiling of a powder room, with calm tiles on the walls, creates an unexpected moment every time someone looks up. Best with moody, atmospheric patterns — Molton works particularly well on a ceiling.
Powder room, ensuite, main bathroom — different wallpaper rules
Not every bathroom wants the same wallpaper treatment. Three rules of thumb for three room types:
- Powder room: go bold. Dark murals, full-height installations, all-four-walls coverage. Guests are in and out quickly and the room is almost never humid. This is the place for the moodiest Molton or Daintree Mist Canopy treatment.
- Ensuite: calm and personal. Soft coastal or bushland murals on one feature wall, neutral paint elsewhere, quiet tapware. You see this room at 6am — it needs to feel settling rather than exciting.
- Main family bathroom: practical and welcoming. Wipeable tiles to splash height, one feature wall of wallpaper above, a working extraction fan. Ventilation is critical here — main family bathrooms see the most steam, and wallpaper rewards a well-ventilated room.
Rental bathrooms — the damage-free wallpaper playbook
Rental bathrooms are the most constrained and the most rewarding to wallpaper. A small amount of effort transforms the rental experience without risking the bond. The product of choice is our peel-and-stick wallpaper — properly removable, leaves no residue when taken off within five years, and available in the same patterns as our traditional paste-the-wall range.
- Always on the dry side of the room. Peel-and-stick is designed for a ventilated bathroom wall, not the wall inside a shower cubicle or directly behind a bath.
- Prep the wall. Clean, dry walls are non-negotiable. Read the peel-and-stick preparation guide before you start.
- Start with one wall. A single feature wall behind the vanity or opposite the shower transforms the room without committing the entire bathroom to rental-friendly product.
- Document the before state. Photograph the wall before installing. Bond-return disputes die on evidence.
- Plan the removal. When it is time to move, read how to remove peel-and-stick wallpaper without damaging walls.
If you are serious about a more involved install and you have landlord approval, our wallpaper installer directory lists trades across Australia who specialise in rental-sensitive installations.
Colour and palette in the bathroom
Colour does more work in bathrooms than almost any other room. The space is small, the lighting is unforgiving, and the moments you spend there bracket the entire day — your first sight on waking, your last before bed. Used deliberately, wallpaper colour can shift the emotional register of the room completely.
- Calming (greens, soft blues, warm greys): the evening-bath palette. Eucalyptus Haze, Ethereal Horizons, Palm Sanctuary in Light Blue.
- Energising (crisp whites, clear blues, fresh coastal): the morning-shower palette. Ocean Tides in Navy Blue, fresh white-ground florals.
- Spa-like (warm neutrals, dusty sand, soft cream): the retreat palette. Palm Escape Cream & Beige, Palm Sanctuary in Beige.
- Dramatic (deep greens, moody plums, rich bronzes): the hidden-room palette, ideal for powder rooms. Molton, Daintree Mist Canopy in Khaki Green.
If you are unsure which register your bathroom wants, the most useful test is this: walk into the room at 7am, close your eyes for a moment, and ask what the room should make you feel in the first three seconds. That is your palette.
The most common bathroom wallpaper mistakes
- Wallpaper inside the shower cubicle. The single most common failure mode. Wallpaper outside the splash zone is a different product from wallpaper behind a showerhead — the latter will fail within months regardless of ventilation.
- Skipping the extraction fan upgrade. If your current fan rattles, does not clear steam in five minutes, or is fifteen years old, upgrade it before you wallpaper. The fan is the single biggest factor in wallpaper longevity.
- Pattern too small for the space. Small bathrooms reward large-scale murals, not tiny repeats. Tight repeats in a tight room read as visual noise.
- Wrong install method. Paste-the-wall is the right choice for bathroom installations; paste-the-paper is not. If your installer offers you paste-the-paper, ask why.
- No sample ordered. Bathroom lighting is often unflattering — colours shift noticeably under cool downlights versus warm wall sconces. The $4.99 sample tells you in a week what a photograph cannot.
- Ignoring the ceiling. A freshly wallpapered feature wall next to a tired yellowed ceiling undoes the entire effect. Repaint the ceiling white before the installer arrives.
Designer tips — the Olive et Oriel shortlist
- Order the $4.99 sample. Our samples are 48cm x 40cm (19in x 16in). Tape the sample on the wall opposite your vanity mirror and check it under every light the room sees — morning daylight, afternoon sun, and the warm yellow glow of your bathroom fixtures. Samples ship globally with all duties paid.
- Measure before you buy. All our murals are cut to your exact wall dimensions — no roll-waste, no complicated pattern-matching for your installer. Follow the how-to-measure-a-room guide or the shorter how to measure guide, and send us the dimensions so we can confirm.
- Use a professional installer for murals. A single-wall panoramic mural takes a good tradesperson ninety minutes. The result is worth it. Find one near you on our wallpaper installer directory.
- Follow the full install guide. For DIY installs, read our how to install wallpaper guide before you open the roll.
- Ventilate, always. Run the extraction fan for fifteen minutes after every shower. This single habit extends the life of bathroom wallpaper by years.
- Clean it properly when the time comes. Non-woven wallpaper tolerates a damp cloth and gentle soap. Read the how to clean wallpaper guide for the full method.
The Olive et Oriel difference
We have been making custom wallpaper on the Central Coast of New South Wales for more than ten years and shipping to customers in more than forty countries. Every wallpaper is cut to your exact wall dimensions — no roll-waste, no tricky pattern-matching for you to solve. Every order ships with all import duties paid, whether you are in Sydney, London, Los Angeles or Singapore. Our production turnaround on full-price wallpaper is four business days. Our samples are $4.99, 48cm x 40cm, and tell you far more about a wallpaper than a photograph ever can.
Ready to plan your bathroom? Start by browsing the bathroom wall decor collection, the coastal beach house wallpaper, the Australian botanical wallpaper range, or the full panoramic murals. If you cannot find exactly what you want, we custom-print — see custom wallpaper made just for you. For more on styling walls in other rooms, read the rest of On the Wall, including our guides to Queenslander-style interiors, wallpaper trends for 2026, and coastal home design.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use wallpaper in an Australian bathroom?
Yes — modern non-woven wallpaper handles the short, high-humidity bursts of a well-ventilated bathroom well. The rules are: a working extraction fan, no direct splash zones, sealed seams, and a recommendation to avoid wallpapering inside shower cubicles or behind a freestanding bath where water actively lands on the paper. In humid Queensland and Far North Queensland homes, daily air-conditioning or a dehumidifier makes a real difference to longevity.
What is the best wallpaper for a small bathroom?
Counter-intuitively, a panoramic or large-scale mural beats a small repeat in a small bathroom. Large patterns travel smoothly across one wall and make the room feel bigger rather than busier. Ethereal Horizons, Eucalyptus Haze and Palm Sanctuary in Light Blue all work well in small ensuites and powder rooms.
Can I put wallpaper behind the bath?
Yes, with rules. A feature wall behind a freestanding bath is one of the most photogenic moments in any bathroom. Keep the bottom of the wallpaper at least 200mm above the floor so it sits clear of cleaning splash, and avoid wallpapering any wall where water actively lands during showering.
How do I wallpaper a rental bathroom?
Use peel-and-stick wallpaper on one feature wall on the dry side of the room. Our peel-and-stick is properly removable within five years and leaves no residue when taken off correctly. Photograph the wall before installing so you have evidence of its original condition for bond return.
Paste-the-wall or peel-and-stick in a bathroom?
For owner-occupied bathrooms with good ventilation, paste-the-wall is the gold standard — it bonds tightly, handles humidity well, and is rated to last decades. For rentals or customers who want to change the wallpaper within a few years, peel-and-stick is the right choice. Both are available in the same patterns across our range.
Should I order a wallpaper sample before my bathroom install?
Always. Our $4.99 samples are 48cm x 40cm (19in x 16in) and ship globally with duties paid. Tape the sample on the wall opposite your vanity mirror, live with it for a week, and check it under morning light, afternoon light and the warm glow of your bathroom lighting. Bathroom lighting is often unflattering — a colour that looks perfect in the showroom can shift noticeably in a small tiled room.
How do I measure my bathroom wall for wallpaper?
Measure the width and the height of the wall in centimetres at the widest and tallest points. Include any recessed areas, skirting and cornice heights. Send both measurements to us and we custom-cut the wallpaper to fit — no roll-waste, no pattern-matching maths for your installer. Follow the step-by-step method in our how to measure a room for wallpaper guide.
How much does bathroom wallpaper cost?
A typical powder-room transformation at Olive et Oriel is one feature wall of custom-sized wallpaper — priced per square metre and custom-cut to your wall. The entry point for a single powder-room feature wall is genuinely accessible, with panoramic murals adding a premium for the larger canvas. All import duties are paid on every order to 40+ countries — the price you see is the price you pay.






