Towel rail installation in Exeter

Professional towel rail installation services in Exeter and surrounding areas. Local, reliable handyman - no job too small.

Price Guide

£110-£160

Typical Duration

2-3 hrs

Location

Exeter, Devon

I'll fit a heated towel rail to your central heating - warm towels every day, extra heat for the bathroom. Properly connected, bled, and tested.

Warm Towels Are One Of Life's Small Luxuries

You step out of the shower into a proper warm towel. Not damp and cold from yesterday - actually warm. It's the bathroom upgrade you didn't know you needed until you've got it.

💡 Pro tip: A heated towel rail also helps dry the bathroom faster (less condensation and mould) and gives you extra background heat in winter without running a separate radiator.


Why Professional Installation Matters

Towel rails look simple but getting them right needs plumbing knowledge:

✅ Done Properly❌ Bodged In
Balanced with rest of heating systemOther radiators go cold
Bled properly, heats evenlyAir trapped, cold patches
Level fitting, secure bracketsWonky, pulls away from wall
Right size for roomToo small (cold bathroom) or oversized (boiling)

What You Get

🔧 The Full Service

StageWhat Happens
PlanWork out best pipe route, check your heating system
PrepDrain down if needed, run new pipe or tee into existing
FitMount brackets level, hang rail, connect valves
Fill & testBleed air out, check for leaks, confirm it heats properly

📦 You're Left With

  • Heated towel rail fitted and working
  • Valves for control and future maintenance
  • System balanced properly
  • No leaks, no mess

Pricing Guide

Job TypeEstimated TimeYou'll Pay
Replace existing rad1.5-2 hrs£110-£135
Add new rail (short pipe run)2-2.5 hrs£135-£160
Add new rail (long pipe run)3-4 hrs£160-£210

Based on £60 minimum (first hour) + £50/hr after. Assumes standard towel rail supplied by you. Extended pipe runs or electric rails may take longer.


Perfect For...

Bathroom upgrade - replace old radiator with towel rail

En-suite - add a heated rail where there wasn't one

Guest bathroom - make it actually usable in winter

Utility room - dry coats and towels

Why Choose Us for Towel rail installation in Exeter?

Warm towels ready when you need them

Extra heating for the bathroom

Connected to your central heating

Level fitting, proper bleeding, tested

What to Expect

Step 1: Check Your System

I'll look at your heating setup - where the nearest pipes are, what size towel rail will work, whether the system can handle another radiator (pressure and boiler output).

Step 2: Fit The Brackets

Mark up level, drill and plug the wall, fit brackets securely. Towel rails are heavy when full of water and even heavier with wet towels on.

Step 3: Connect The Pipes

Either tee into the nearest radiator circuit or connect to existing pipe tails (if you're replacing a radiator). Fit isolating valves so you can work on it later without draining the whole system.

Step 4: Fill, Bleed, Test

Refill the system, bleed air out of the towel rail, check all joints for leaks. Run the heating and make sure it gets hot evenly.

🔧 DIY Tips

This is a bigger job than it looks - definitely not beginner-level DIY:

🔧 Tools you'll need

  • Spirit level
  • Drill, plugs, screws
  • Pipe cutter or hacksaw
  • Spanners (various sizes)
  • PTFE tape
  • Radiator bleed key
  • Probably a pipe bender if running new pipework

⚠️ Why this is tricky

  • You're working with a pressurised heating system
  • Needs draining down (or at least isolating)
  • Pipe connections must be watertight
  • Fitting must be level (wonky towel rail looks awful)
  • System needs balancing after to maintain even heating
  • If you get it wrong, you flood the house or ruin your heating

💡 If you insist on DIY:

  1. Turn off heating and let it cool completely
  2. Drain down the system (or at least isolate the circuit)
  3. Fit brackets dead level
  4. Connect pipes with compression fittings (easier than soldering)
  5. Fit TRV and lockshield valves
  6. Refill slowly, bleed air out carefully
  7. Check every joint for leaks
  8. Balance the system (close lockshield valves on other rads slightly until heat distributes evenly)

Common DIY disasters:

  • Brackets not level (towel rail slopes)
  • Leaking joints (wet ceiling below)
  • Air trapped (cold spots, noisy heating)
  • System unbalanced (some radiators go cold)
  • Wrong valve types (can't isolate for future work)

Rather leave it to a pro? No problem - that's what I'm here for. Give me a call.

Good to Know

🔧 Electric vs plumbed-in? Plumbed-in is usually better if you've got central heating nearby. Electric is simpler if there's no heating pipework close, or for en-suites where you want warmth in summer when heating's off.

Dual-fuel towel rails have both central heating and an electric element. Best of both worlds - heating in winter, electric in summer. Bit more expensive but very flexible.

Size matters - too small and it won't heat the bathroom or dry your towels. Too big and you're wasting money heating a rail you don't need. I can advise on the right BTU output for your space.

Old system with microbore pipes? Thin 8mm or 10mm pipes common in 1980s houses. They can struggle with the flow rates towel rails need. Might be worth upgrading the pipe run at the same time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you connect a towel rail to my existing heating system?

Usually, yes. I'll tee into the nearest radiator circuit - could be the bathroom radiator you're replacing, or the nearest one in another room. Needs decent pipe runs and enough pressure in your system, but most setups can handle an extra towel rail.

Electric or plumbed-in - which is better?

Plumbed-in (connected to central heating) is cheaper to run and heats up when your heating's on. Electric is easier to install if there's no heating pipe nearby, and you can use it in summer when heating's off. Most people go plumbed-in if they can.

Will it replace my bathroom radiator?

Depends on the size. A big towel rail can put out enough heat for a small bathroom. Larger bathrooms might need the towel rail plus another radiator, or you could get a dual-fuel rail (heating plus electric element for summer).

Do I need to buy the towel rail first?

Either way works. If you've already got one, great. If not, I can advise on what size and output you need for your bathroom, and what'll fit your pipe spacing. Measure twice, buy once.

How long does it take?

Usually 2-3 hours for a straightforward replacement (where pipes are already in the right place). Longer if I'm adding a new rail where there wasn't one before, or if pipe runs need extending.

Get a Free Quote in Exeter

Call us today for a free, no-obligation quote for your towel rail installation job in Exeter.

01392 964094Request Online Quote

Our Rates

Minimum charge£60
Includes callout + first hour
Additional time£50/hr
This Job£110-£160

Got multiple jobs?

Make the most of your first hour - I can often tackle several small tasks in one visit. List everything you need done when you call!

Why Trust Us

Fully Insured
Local Exeter Business
30 Mile Coverage
No Hidden Costs

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