Fit a Frameless Glass Shower Door (Step-by-Step)
UK homeowner’s guide. This walkthrough shows you how to fit a frameless glass shower door cleanly and safely — from measuring and drilling tiles to aligning hinges, sweeps and seals for a leak-free finish. If you’re comparing glass strength types, read our short primer on tempered glass first.
Overview
A frameless door relies on precise measuring, correct hinge placement and the right seals. Most domestic doors are 8–10 mm toughened glass with two hinges, a bottom sweep, and optional magnetic or edge seals. Plan slowly, work methodically, and use neutral-cure silicone around wet joints.
Safety & Prep
- Weight: A 900×2000×10 mm panel can weigh ~45–50 kg. Always lift with two people and suction cups.
- PPE: Gloves, eye protection, long sleeves; protect edges and corners at all times.
- Electrics: If drilling near cables/sockets, isolate power and scan the area.
- Glass facts: Toughened glass cannot be cut or drilled after manufacture — sizes and cut-outs must be final. Learn more about tempered glass.
Tools & Materials
- Two suction cups, soft pads, 1–2 mm plastic packers
- Spirit level, square, masking tape, pencil
- Drill/driver, low-speed setting; diamond or carbide tile bits
- Wall plugs/fixings for your substrate (tile over board/brick/stone)
- Neutral-cure sanitary silicone (clear) & sealant gun
- Hinges + gaskets, handle, bottom sweep & side seals (as supplied)
- Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) and lint-free cloths
Measure & Order
- Opening survey: Measure width at top/middle/bottom; height left/centre/right. Note the smallest numbers and any out-of-square.
- Hinge side: Decide left or right swing; check obstacles (vanity, towel rail, WC).
- Threshold: Check the tray/floor is level. A slight inward fall towards the shower is good; outward fall needs correcting.
- Deduct tolerances: For wall channels, the manufacturer specifies deduction. For wall-to-hinge glass (no channel), confirm hinge set-outs and seal allowances with the supplier.
- Order spec: Thickness (8–10 mm), hinge cut-outs (or channel), handle holes, clear polish edges, and safety stamp.
Installation Steps
Tip: Mask reference lines so you can mark accurately on finished tile. Work slowly; accuracy beats speed.
- Mark hinge positions: Offer the hinge side/channel to the wall; use a level to mark the vertical line. Mark fixing holes through the hinge plate or channel.
- Drill the tiles: Use a sharp diamond/tile bit on low speed. Start at a shallow angle to score the glaze, then go square. Do not hammer drill through the tile. Swap to masonry bit only after clearing the tile if the substrate requires it.
- Fix wall hardware: Insert appropriate plugs. For channels: run a thin bead of silicone behind the channel (moisture barrier), then screw off plumb. For surface-hinges: fit the back plates level, using the supplied gaskets.
- Dry-fit the door: With two people and suction cups, lift the glass onto packers. Engage hinges loosely. Check gaps to the wall, tray and head; adjust as needed. This is where you perfect alignment.
- Tighten hinges correctly: Fit all gaskets; never allow metal to touch glass. Tighten evenly to the manufacturer’s torque guidance — firm, not brutal.
- Fit handle & sweep: Install the handle with its gaskets. Cut the bottom sweep to length and push it on; the fin should just kiss the threshold for smooth closing without scraping.
- Edge/magnetic seals: If supplied, push-fit along the latch side or fixed panel. Ensure the magnets meet with a gentle draw, not a slam.
- Final alignment: Close the door and check: even gaps, consistent sweep contact, smooth swing without self-opening. Use hinge adjustments to correct drift (out-of-level causes creep).
- Seal as needed: Silicone the outside perimeter where glass meets wall channel and where the channel meets tile. Do not trap water by sealing both inside and outside; follow the hinge/channel instructions.
- Cure time: Leave silicone to cure fully (often 24 hours) before heavy showering or cleaning.
Clearances & Tolerances (Quick Reference)
Detail | Typical value | Notes |
---|---|---|
Perimeter gap to wall | 2–4 mm | Hidden by channel or seal |
Bottom sweep contact | Light touch | Fin just kisses threshold |
Magnetic latch line | Flush meeting | No forced overlap |
Hinge set-back | Per hinge data | Protects tile edge; prevents binding |
Common Mistakes (and Fixes)
- Over-tightening hinges: Can bruise glass or warp alignment. Loosen, re-seat gaskets, re-tighten evenly.
- Wrong silicone: Acetoxy (vinegar smell) near back-paint/metal can cause issues — use neutral-cure.
- Sealing inside and outside: Traps water; only seal as the hardware instructions specify.
- Ignoring fall of the floor: If water runs outward, adjust sweep angle or correct the threshold before sealing.
- No dry-fit: Always test with packers and tape before final tightening.
Aftercare & Maintenance
- Daily: Quick squeegee after showers to prevent mineral lines.
- Weekly: pH-neutral cleaner + microfibre on glass and hardware; never abrasive pads.
- Quarterly: Check hinge screws and seals; replace yellowed sweeps. Consider a protective coating to slow limescale.
FAQs
8 mm or 10 mm?
Both are common. 10 mm feels more premium/heavy; 8 mm is lighter and easier to hang. Either way, use properly rated hinges and fixings.
What causes drips at the hinge side?
Usually a missing or incorrect seal, or the door not sitting plumb. Re-seat gaskets, add the correct seal and re-align.
My door drifts open/closed by itself — why?
The opening or hinge line is slightly out of level. Use hinge adjustment (if available) or re-shim the plate.
Is laminated glass better than toughened?
Laminated adds a bonded interlayer that holds fragments; toughened breaks into small cubes. For most shower doors, toughened is standard — learn the basics on tempered glass.
Not sure about hinges or seals? Ask Glass Helper for quick advice or professional installation.