When people ask for a "no-step" or "curbless" shower, they usually mean one thing: they are tired of climbing over a tall tub wall, and they want the safest possible entry. That is the right instinct. The bathroom is the most common place an older adult falls, and a 14 to 18 inch tub wall is the single worst part of it.
But "low-threshold" and "true curbless" are not the same build, and the difference matters for cost, for which bathrooms qualify, and for how the shower drains. This guide explains exactly how low a shower step can go, why a standard pan cannot reach zero, and when a genuine curbless shower is worth doing.
The three kinds of shower entry
Almost every walk-in shower falls into one of three categories. The number that matters is the curb height: how far you have to lift your foot to step in.
| Entry type | Curb height | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Standard curbed pan | About 4 to 6 inches | Budget replacements where step height is not a concern |
| Low-threshold (our standard) | About 1.5 to 3 inches | Most homeowners, and anyone planning to age in place |
| True curbless | 0 inches, flush with the floor | Walkers, wheelchairs, and the maximum-safety build |
For context, the tub you are replacing is a wall about 14 to 18 inches tall. Dropping that to a 1.5 to 3 inch step removes the great majority of the fall risk on its own. Going from a low step to a flat floor is a smaller safety gain than going from a tub wall to a low step, which is why low-threshold is the right standard for most people and curbless is the upgrade for those who need it.
Why a drop-in pan cannot be zero
This is the part most ads skip. A shower floor has to move water to the drain, which means it has to slope. Plumbing practice is roughly a quarter inch of fall per foot of run. On a typical 60 inch base, the run from the far wall to the drain is long enough that the slope alone adds real height.
On top of the slope, the pan itself has structural thickness: the material has to be strong enough to stand on and rigid enough not to flex. Add the slope to the thickness and a prefabricated drop-in pan bottoms out around 1.5 to 3 inches at the curb. That is not a sales limit, it is physics. Anyone promising a flat, zero-step shower with a standard drop-in pan is glossing over how the water gets out.
How a true curbless shower is built
To get a flush, zero-step entry, the shower floor has to sit lower so its sloped surface still finishes level with the bathroom floor. There are two ways to do that.
Recess the pan into the floor
We lower the drain and pitch a pan down into the floor structure so the top edge lands flush with the surrounding tile. A low-profile stone-resin tray is ideal here: it is thinner and stronger than a standard acrylic pan, so it reaches a flush finish without needing as much depth.
Build the floor up around it
When we cannot drop the drain, we raise the bathroom floor to meet the top of the pan instead. This is more involved and changes the transition at the doorway, so it is a case-by-case decision.
Either way, a curbless shower usually uses a linear trench drain along one edge rather than a center drain. A linear drain lets the whole floor pitch in a single direction, which keeps the slope gentle and the entry flush, and it looks clean.
Your floor decides how hard curbless is
Whether curbless is a modest upgrade or a major project comes down to what is under your bathroom.
Wood-joist floor
- We can usually recess the drain between joists
- Pitching the pan is straightforward
- Curbless is often an affordable upgrade
- Common in older Seattle homes with crawl spaces or basements
Concrete slab floor
- The drain sits in the slab, so lowering it means cutting concrete
- Saw-cutting and re-pouring is real labor
- Building the floor up is sometimes the better path
- We price it honestly after we see the slab
This is exactly why we do not put a dollar figure on curbless online. The right number depends on your floor, and we will not pretend otherwise. We measure, we tell you what your structure allows, and we quote it in writing.
See your shower, then get the lowest threshold your floor allows
Design the look in ShowerPreview AI™, then book a free in-home measure. We confirm whether your bathroom takes a low-threshold step or a true curbless entry, and put the price in writing. No pressure.
The base matters as much as the curb
A low step does not help if the floor is slick. Every SteadyStep™ shower includes a textured, slip-resistant base as standard. The texture grips bare feet without feeling rough or looking institutional, and it does the quiet work of preventing the slip that the low entry cannot.
Pair the slip-resistant base with a fold-down bench, an ADA-rated grab bar, and a handheld shower on a slide bar, and the low entry becomes one part of a complete safety package rather than a single feature doing all the work. For the full list, see shower safety features explained.
So which one is right for you?
For most Seattle homeowners who want to stay in the house they love, a low-threshold shower at 1.5 to 3 inches is the sweet spot: it removes nearly all of the tub-wall risk, fits most bathrooms without structural work, and comes in at our published price. Choose true curbless when a walker or wheelchair is in the picture, when a household member already has significant mobility limits, or when you simply want the maximum-safety build and your floor supports it.
If you are planning for the long term, read aging-in-place bathroom safety for the bigger picture, and see the SteadyStep pricing and safety package to compare your options.