Electric vs Mixer vs Digital Showers: Flow Rates, Costs & Installation Differences
Electric showers heat cold mains water on demand and suit low-pressure or budget scenarios (rated 7.5-10.5 kW; flow rate 6-10 l/min). Mixer showers blend hot and cold supplies and deliver higher flow rates (12-20+ l/min) but require good hot water pressure and a thermostatic valve. Digital showers use a remote valve and processor unit for precise temperature control; suitable for complex layouts.
Summary
Shower type selection affects the plumbing design, the electrical requirements, and the customer experience. An electric shower can be installed almost anywhere with cold mains water; a power shower needs both hot water and reasonable pressure. Getting this wrong — fitting a thermostatic mixer shower in a property with gravity-fed hot water at low pressure — is a frequent source of callbacks.
The key variable is water pressure. UK properties vary enormously: gravity-fed systems (header tank in the loft, hot water cylinder) may have as little as 0.1 bar of static pressure; combi boiler systems typically provide 1-3 bar mains pressure to the cold supply; properties with unvented cylinders typically have 2-3 bar on both hot and cold. Each scenario suits different shower types.
Key Facts
- Electric shower — heats cold mains water using an internal element; independent of hot water system; rated 7.5kW, 8.5kW, 9.5kW, 10.5kW; requires dedicated 40A/45A electrical circuit; minimum mains pressure 1.0 bar
- Manual mixer shower — blends pre-existing hot and cold water; no heating element; requires both hot and cold supplies; flow rate depends on pressure available
- Thermostatic mixer shower (TMV) — as mixer but with thermostatic cartridge maintaining set temperature; Building Regulations recommend thermostatic control for safety; minimum 0.1 bar differential pressure between hot and cold required
- Power shower — mixer shower with an integral pump; boosts both hot and cold supply; suited to gravity-fed systems; requires hot water cylinder (not compatible with combi boilers)
- Digital shower — remote processor unit (under bath, in cupboard, or in ceiling void) connected to a shower head; temperature set digitally; suited to complex plumbing layouts or multiple shower head configurations
- Minimum dynamic pressure for thermostatic mixers — most valves require minimum 0.1 bar; some high-performance valves require 0.5 bar; always check manufacturer's minimum
- Temperature regulation — thermostatic valves maintain temperature ±2°C; protect against scalding when cold water pressure drops
- G3 regulation — unvented hot water cylinders are regulated under Building Regulations Part G3; relevant to system showers
- Building Regulations Part G3 — domestic hot water storage and supply; maximum hot water temperature at outlets used by vulnerable people (e.g. care homes) is 44°C; domestic threshold is 48°C from a TMV
- TMV3 — Thermostatic Mixing Valve type 3 standard; required by Building Regulations Part G for certain applications; domestic shower TMVs should be TMV2 minimum
Quick Reference Table
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Try squote free →| Type | Hot Water Source | Min. Pressure | Flow Rate | Electrical Req. | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electric shower 7.5kW | Mains cold only | 1.0 bar | 5-8 l/min | 40A radial, 6mm² cable | Low/unreliable hot water |
| Electric shower 10.5kW | Mains cold only | 1.5 bar | 7-10 l/min | 45A radial, 10mm² cable | Better flow; needs mains pressure |
| Manual mixer | Existing hot + cold | 0.1 bar (gravity) | 5-15 l/min | None | Simple retrofit; all system types |
| Thermostatic mixer | Existing hot + cold | 0.1-0.5 bar | 6-20 l/min | None | Most domestic showers; safety |
| Power shower | Gravity hot + cold | Gravity fed | 10-20 l/min | Pump supply needed | Gravity-fed systems only |
| Digital shower | Existing hot + cold | Varies by product | 6-20 l/min | Low-voltage processor | Complex layouts; multiple heads |
| System shower (unvented) | Unvented cylinder | 1.5-3 bar | 15-25 l/min | None | High-pressure system |
Detailed Guidance
Electric Showers
Electric showers are the most common shower type in UK rental properties and budget renovations. They require only a cold mains connection and a dedicated electrical circuit — no hot water infrastructure required.
How they work: cold water enters the unit and is heated by an electric element as it flows through. Higher kW rating = more heat energy = higher flow rate at the same temperature.
Power and flow rate:
| Rating | Flow Rate (approximate at 40°C) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 7.5 kW | 4-6 l/min | Adequate; poor performance in cold water |
| 8.5 kW | 5-7 l/min | Standard budget option |
| 9.5 kW | 6-9 l/min | Most common trade recommendation |
| 10.5 kW | 7-10 l/min | Best performance; needs 45A circuit |
Electrical requirements:
- 8.5kW: minimum 40A radial circuit, 6mm² cable, RCD or RCBO protection
- 10.5kW: 45A radial circuit, 10mm² cable; double-pole isolating switch within sight of the shower
Advantages: independent of hot water system; can be installed where no hot supply exists; any electrician can add the circuit.
Disadvantages: lower flow rate than mixer or power showers; performance drops in winter as incoming cold water is colder and requires more heating time.
Thermostatic Mixer Showers
A thermostatic mixer valve (TMV2 or TMV3) is the preferred shower type for most residential bathrooms that have an adequate hot water supply. It blends hot and cold water and maintains a set temperature regardless of fluctuations in supply pressure or temperature.
Thermostatic cartridge: the heart of the valve; fails over time (hard water calcification is the primary cause). Quality of the cartridge determines valve longevity. Budget valves from unknown brands often fail within 5 years; reputable brands (Grohe, Hansgrohe, Aqualisa) last 10-15 years.
Pressure requirements: most standard TMVs require a balanced supply — both hot and cold at similar pressure. An imbalanced supply (mains cold at 3 bar, gravity hot at 0.2 bar) causes the valve to be dominated by the high-pressure cold supply, making accurate temperature mixing difficult.
For gravity-fed hot water systems, a pressure-balancing valve or system shower pump is needed for satisfactory thermostatic mixer performance.
Installation: the thermostatic valve connects to both hot and cold supplies (typically 15mm). The valve body can be surface-mounted (concealed valve with exposed controls) or fully concealed (flush wall installation with only the control plate visible). Fully concealed valves require the service pipes to be planned and installed first.
Bar pressure guide:
| System Type | Typical Pressure | Suitable TMV? |
|---|---|---|
| Gravity (header tank + cylinder) | 0.1-0.3 bar | Marginal; check valve spec; consider pump |
| Combi boiler (mains cold only) | 1-3 bar cold; variable hot | Yes if hot and cold reasonably balanced |
| Unvented cylinder | 2-3 bar balanced | Excellent performance |
| Cold water booster pump | 2-3 bar boosted | Yes |
Power Showers
A power shower is a thermostatic or manual mixer shower with an integral pump that boosts both hot and cold supplies simultaneously. They are specifically designed for gravity-fed systems and are not suitable for combi boilers.
Why not on a combi boiler? Combi boilers draw hot water on demand — the pump in a power shower would attempt to boost the flow rate faster than the combi can heat it, resulting in cold water from the shower. Fitting a power shower on a combi is a common mistake.
Pump ratings: power shower pumps are rated in bar boost (0.3 bar, 1.5 bar, 3 bar). For standard residential bathrooms, 1.5 bar is typically sufficient.
Noise: pump-integrated shower units are audible during use — factor this in for master bathrooms or rooms adjacent to bedrooms.
Digital Showers
Digital showers (Aqualisa iSystem, Quartz Digital, Grohe F-Digital) use a processor unit that can be positioned remotely — under the bath, in a cupboard, in a ceiling void. The shower controls in the bathroom communicate with the processor electronically (wired or wireless).
Advantages: the processor can be positioned away from the shower enclosure, simplifying the bathroom wall installation; allows precise temperature control and pre-setting; can supply multiple heads (overhead, handset, body jets) simultaneously from one valve.
Disadvantages: more complex installation; processor requires both hot and cold water supplies and electrical connection; more components that can fail; premium price.
Good applications: large bespoke showers with multiple heads; complex layouts where traditional in-wall TMV installation is not practical; en suite renovations where the service pipe route is through an adjacent bedroom.
Shower Head and Flow Rate
The shower head (rose) determines the flow rate the system must supply to achieve the desired spray pattern.
| Head Type | Typical Flow Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard rose (100-200mm) | 6-10 l/min | Suitable for most domestic systems |
| Rainfall head (300-400mm) | 15-25 l/min | Needs good pressure; unvented or boosted |
| Handset only | 4-8 l/min | Low demand; suits electric shower |
| Body jets (4-6 jets) | 10-20 l/min each | High demand; needs unvented system |
A mismatch between flow demand and supply pressure is the most common cause of a disappointing shower experience.
Frequently Asked Questions
What shower is best for a combi boiler?
A thermostatic mixer shower or electric shower. Do NOT fit a power shower (integral pump) on a combi. A thermostatic mixer on a combi typically delivers 8-12 l/min from a decent combi boiler; performance depends on the boiler's DHW (domestic hot water) output capacity.
Can I fit a shower without a plumber?
Basic swap like-for-like (replacing an electric shower with another electric shower on the same circuit and same pipe) is within the capability of a competent DIYer in their own home. However, any electrical work in a bathroom requires Part P compliance (registered electrician, or Building Control notification). Any work involving new pipework requires Water Regulations compliance. If in doubt, use a registered trade.
My thermostatic shower runs cold — what's wrong?
Check: 1) Is the hot water supply reaching the valve? (test at the hot isolation valve under the bath or behind the panel); 2) Is the hot supply pressure adequate? (compare hot and cold; gravity hot supply may be too low for the valve to blend correctly); 3) Is the thermostatic cartridge faulty? (cartridge replacements are available for most branded valves). See no hot water for a systematic diagnosis.
What is TMV2 vs TMV3?
Both are thermostatic mixing valve standards governed by the Buildcert TMV2 and TMV3 approval schemes. TMV2 is the residential standard; TMV3 meets additional requirements for healthcare and higher-risk settings (care homes, nursing homes). For domestic showers, a TMV2-approved valve is the minimum required by Building Regulations Part G where thermostatic control is specified.
Regulations & Standards
Building Regulations Approved Document G (2022) — sanitation, hot water safety and water efficiency; thermostatic control requirements; unvented cylinder (G3) requirements
Water Supply (Water Fittings) Regulations 1999 — backflow prevention on shower installations; relevant to handset connectors on mixed supply showers
BS EN 1112 — sanitary tapware; shower outlets for sanitary tapware for water supply systems
Buildcert TMV2 Approval Scheme — thermostatic mixing valve standard for domestic applications
Building Regulations Part P — electrical circuit for electric shower must be installed by a registered competent person or notified to Building Control
Aqualisa Technical Support — digital shower installation and troubleshooting
Grohe Technical Data — thermostatic shower valve specifications
Building Regulations Approved Document G — full regulation text
wetroom construction — wet room construction for shower areas
bathroom ventilation — extract ventilation requirements for shower rooms
hot water systems — boiler and cylinder selection affecting shower performance
no hot water — diagnosing a shower with insufficient hot water
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