Renovation and rental are two words that you don't hear too much in the same sentence, but even though you might not be able to completely overhaul your rental apartment, there are ways to cover up that old avocado-green tile, add storage to your small shower, or transform an ugly overhead light without making your landlord angry in the process.
- Add Storage: Rental bathrooms usually don't come with a lot of built-in storage, so small additions like shower caddies and wall-mounted shelves can help. SimpleHuman makes a few different caddies and soap pumps that can be suction-cupped, tension-mounted, or silicone-glued to the wall without damaging your tile. Their products are on the expensive side, but they're well made and most of them come with 5-year warranties. Plus, their shower caddies are designed not to slip, which is often the problem with cheaper versions.
- Dress Your Windows: If you have a bathroom window that needs privacy or overlooks an ugly view, dress it up with curtains or window film. British designer Emma Jeffs makes some very cool patterns like this Moroccan Tile Window Film, available for $76.
- Cover Up Ugly Tile: UK company Mibo makes waterproof Tile Tattoos, heavy-duty stickers that can be used to cover up existing tile patterns. When you move out, you can just peel them off. They're available at
at 2Jane.com for $16 per set of 6. - Use a Tension Rod: The old-fashioned tension rod remains a tried-and-true tool for rental bathrooms where you need to hang a shower curtain without drilling into tile. If you want to try something a little fancier than a standard rod, Umbra makes some nice versions in chrome and bamboo.
- Change the Lighting: Many rental bathrooms come with ugly, outdated fixtures, and it's not that hard to update them. Just change out the shades, replace the fixture, or see this post for more ideas.
- Add Distinctive Hooks: In a small space like the bathroom, details matter, and the right hooks can have a big impact on the way the room feels. We like the Stone Towel Hooks from Viva Terra, but you could also experiment with antique hooks.
- Decorate with Color and Pattern: Accessories always help when you want to add color without painting or making any huge changes. Try coordinating textiles (bathmats, shower curtains, towels) to create a unified color scheme. The shower curtain shown above is Marimekko's Madison Green Shower Curtain from Crate & Barrel.
- Spring for Some Lux Towels: Towels can make such a huge difference in how you feel about your bathroom. You use them so often (usually in the morning when you're tired and trying to wake up) that good ones are important. The Matteo Due Shag Bath Towels shown above are pricey ($36 - $54 each) but they're really fluffy and they're made from 100% Egyptian cotton. If you want good towel recommendations for less, check out Apartment Therapy's recommendations for best bathroom towels.
- Add Freestanding Furniture: If you've got the space, a stool, a storage cabinet, or even a chair can make a bathroom feel much homier. Waterproof pieces, like ceramic garden stools, are great because steam and moisture can't damage them. The one shown above is Wisteria's Chinese Garden Stool ($130).
- Fix Up Your Fixtures: If your rental toilet seat is sub-par or the hardware in your bathroom could use an upgrade, consider springing for some new fixtures. Some landlords will even deduct the cost from your rent or split the difference with you. Even if you end up paying from your own pocket, a simple project like replacing a toilet seat costs less than $50.
RELATED POSTS
• 10 Ways to Customize a Rental
• 11 Luxurious Touches to Add to Your Rental Bathroom
• A Rental Bath, Accessorized
Photos: SimpleHuman, Emma Jeffs, Mibo, Sarah Coffey, Gregory Han, Viva Terra, Crate & Barrel, Matteo, Wisteria











Sprout Side Table
Life's too short to live with ugly. If I was a renter, I'd ask the landlord if I could pay to remodel the bathroom. If I couldn't do it at my own expense, I'd move. As Kittie said, everything in your home should be beautiful or useful. An ugly bathroom isn't very useful.
Not all renters have the means to do a complete remodel of a bathroom that they may only have for a year or two. I think that these are some great, easy, quick fixes for us more frugal folks.
My bathroom, which is unpaintable due to its strange and rather ugly stucco walls and has a large but mostly useless vanity, is kind of ugly, and I can't afford to rip it out. However, I'm certainly not going to leave my excellently-priced and otherwise reasonably nice apartment just because I can't completely remodel the bathroom. I'll make the small changes I can and live with what I can't, personally.
I did "Tough as Tile" epoxy coating over my mismatched tile walls and it literally changed my life. My landlord approved. I added a new faucet a few weeks ago and a new shower head last weekend. Sure, to the average viewer it probably doesn't look very different but to me, it FEELS 100 times different and thus, infinitely better.
Love the towel hooks!!!
We, sadly (and grossly against fire code) have to share a bathroom with the tenant in the apartment next door! Storage is a huge issue, but was easily resolved with this:
http://www.kohls.com/kohlsStore/bedandbath/showercurtainsaccessories/curtains/PRD~317827/Home Classics MeshPocket Shower Curtain.jsp
We use it as a liner, but with the pockets it means that all of our storage is completely taken care of.
In my rental bathroom I replaced the faucet, the shower head, and the toilet seat and then bought new towels, bath mat and shower curtain. The difference this made was incredible. We're basically only living here while my boyfriend is still in school and I certainly can't afford to rip out the retro tile for a complete remodel. The next step for me is to ask my landlord if we can replace the light fixture and possibly rip out the hideous old school medicine cabinet with sliding doors...eurgh...
My previous rental came complete with very un-mod late 60s wallpaper, a tub with no shower and tile going only half way up the wall (at least THEY were cute atomic-style tiles). I talked my landlord into going to the ceiling with white tile, the rest I did myself. Stripped the wallpaper, spackled, primed and painted the walls and trim, installed a sliding showerhead bar, a ceiling mounted curtain track (to make the ceilings feel taller), towel bars, toilet seat, over toilet shelving and a cluster of 2 dozen vintage Vespa ads found online and housed in those cheap little wood Ikea frames. I'm glad I did it because I ended up living there for 5 years, but I vowed to never put so much work into a rental again.
Meesh, thanks for sharing.
At the very least, change the showerhead. For us frugal folks who are only in a place for one or two years, it's an easy fix that you can take with you.
Can anyone recommend less expensive options for patterned window film? Thank you!
FYI - Marshalls & Home Goods has that exact Chinese Garden stool for $30 right now in a variety of colors (including white like the pic)
natalia - I ordered this one from Amazon it worked out great for my laundry room back door
http://www.amazon.com/Etched-Leaf-Window-Film-24-by-36-Inch/dp/B001L7Y1MY/ref=pd_cp_hi_2
more information and sources found here, one mention Lowes sells window film, not decorative just plain frosted-
http://www.notmartha.org/archives/2009/07/09/everything-i-know-about-window-film/
how is paying to do renovations of any long term benefit to the renter... The only way I see that being ok is if they (landlords) deducted a certain amount from the rent.
aseiwert, I've never heard of this? Why kind of rental do you live in? Do you actually have to go into their home to use it or this a community bathroom? Very odd.
I agree, most people can't afford a remodel or don't want to put money into a place they'll live in a short time without any benefit. It's much easier to fix it up with tips like these. I like razor holder on that first thing. I don't see a lot of rentals in my area with windows in bathroom, but I love the window film. The tile tattoos are pretty too.
Dayum, if I'd had that showerhead in any of my rental bathrooms I wouldn't have cared about anything else...
We ended up getting a $50/month discount partly because our apartment was one of the few that doesn't have brand new flooring. So we replaced the carpet in the entry with wood laminate (free from my dad) and covered the horrible, horrible linoleum sticker tiles in the bathroom with a wood linoleum that looks sort of like textured laminate (actually found this one at Lowes). We also took down the towel rod and replaced it with a cute shelving unit with towel rod on the bottom and repainted the walls with a $2 gallon mis-tint from Sherwin Williams (courtesy of my bro). That was a one-time expense of about $45 for all supplies and a day of work, just under one month of savings. Not all rental renovations are a waste. And now I just feel so comfortable living here. It hardly feels like a rental.
@yves
Some metro areas are simply expensive. I live in Boston, which is the 4th or 5th most expensive city in the country.
Right now I live 30 seconds from the highway and subway. Can walk anywhere, and getting to work takes 25 minutes round-trip. I could <I>easily</I> buy a house in the burbs, and then be like coworkers who spend 2 1/2 to 3 hours a day commuting on a good day.
If I wanted to buy something I'd <I>actually want to own</I> in Boston (i.e. nice place in a nice neighborhood), realistically I'd have to consider 50% down. That's possible, just going to take 8 to 10 years to save that. And that's with me making considerably more than the median salary.
If you're going to live in your apartment for 10 to 12 years, you bet you'd consider customizing it to your taste. That or you just find somewhere you really like, customize it, and never bother buying anything -- honestly not sure what I could buy in the city that would get me a deeded, off-street space and this close to highway/subway anyways.
Any advice on what to do about creating privacy in the "smallest room" while the windows are open in nice weather?
There are two single-hung windows in my bathroom, at right angles to each other in the corner, and both are inside the shower/tub enclosure. Window film won't work when the windows are open. I live in a rental, so I can't do something major such as installing windows that open from the top-down (double-hung, right?), like I had in my previous apartment. Right now I leave the ugly vinyl blinds down over the windows so that I don't flash the neighborhood. Since they are fairly lightweight, if a strong breeze comes up, I have to do a little dance to preserve my modesty. Plus, the blinds get really dirty because they get wet and collect dust that blows in the windows. I am at a loss as to an affordable solution that will allow me to have much-needed fresh air in my unair-conditioned apartment.
Ideas?
There are blinds/roman shades that operate either top-down or bottom-up. A really cheap way to go is to install fabric panels -- not curtains -- over the windows in a sheer that lets light in without letting others see in (translucent rather than completely sheer) and using drapery weights or a length of hardware chain sewn into the hem to keep the hanging straight so you don't have to cha-cha-cha every time a breeze blows. If the fabric is washable, that will take care of the dirt. In that case, though, make sure the drapery weights or chain won't rust. I think you're safer with the drapery weights, which are also used on dresses.
@HeyNowTex No, the bathrooms are linked together by doors to the individual apartments on either side.
williamsweyr -- If one had the money to remodel each bathroom each time they moved, they probably could afford a house.
Tile-tattoos are such an amazing idea! I thought its a nice way to dress up our place without spending too much.
Also if you have an old cabinet mirror above the sink you can take out the old mirror and go to a glass shop. They can remake the old piece for you and it makes the bathroom look much better with a new glass mirror.