48 Inch Double Sink Vanity
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48" Double Sink Vanity: When It Works and When It Doesn't
48 is the narrowest width that fits two sinks, and we need to be honest about the tradeoff. At 48 with two bowls centered, you get roughly 13 of bowl width each and 4 of counter between. It's a layout that looks great in photos and is tight in daily use. If your room is truly 48 wide and you're determined to have two sinks, this section covers how to make it work. But if you have even a few extra inches of wall space, stepping up to a 60 double sink vanity transforms the experience entirely.
When 48" Double Sink Is the Right Call
You have a fixed 48 wall opening and two people who share the bathroom every morning on the same schedule. A single sink at 48 means someone's always waiting. In that scenario, two small sinks beat one large sink because both people can brush teeth, wash hands, and run their routine simultaneously. It also works in a kids' bathroom or a guest suite where the sinks see light, occasional use and the counter demand is minimal. Families with young children often find that two small basins reduce morning bottlenecks more than any other bathroom upgrade.
When to Skip It
If you have room for 60 or wider, skip the 48 double and size up. At 60, each sink gets a proper 18 to 20 of width with usable counter between. The difference in daily comfort is significant. Also skip it if either user keeps a lot of products on the counter, since a 48 double leaves almost no staging surface. A 48 vanity with top in a single-sink layout gives you 17 of counter per side, which most couples find more livable than two cramped bowls with nowhere to set anything down.
Bowl Size and Faucet Spacing
At 48 double, you're working with undermount or integrated bowls no wider than 14. Vessel sinks technically fit but raise the faucet height and eat into the mirror zone, so undermount is the better bet. Each faucet is typically a single-hole or 4 centerset mount. Widespread 8 faucets won't fit at this width because the handles from adjacent sinks would nearly overlap. When selecting faucets, stick with single-handle designs or compact centerset models that keep the footprint tight. This also makes daily cleaning easier since there are fewer crevices around the faucet base.
Storage Layout
Most 48 double vanities use two door bays (one under each sink) with a small center drawer or open shelf. The doors typically have a single adjustable shelf inside and a U-shaped drain cutout in the base panel. Some models add a false drawer front across the top for a finished look while maintaining plumbing access. Don't expect the deep drawer stacks you get in single-sink vanities; the dual plumbing simply takes up too much internal space. To compensate, consider adding a wall-mounted medicine cabinet or recessed niche above the vanity. Two mirrored medicine cabinets (one per sink) reclaim the storage you lose inside the cabinet.
Top Options
Integrated tops with two molded bowls are the simplest path. They ship as one piece, pre-drilled, and eliminate sink-to-counter seams where water collects. Marble vanity tops with undermount sinks are the premium choice but require a fabricator to cut and finish the two sink openings, adding cost and lead time. Quartz tops with undermount basins offer the look of natural stone with zero sealing maintenance. Cultured marble (not to be confused with natural marble) is the budget-friendly option and ships ready to install with bowls already integrated.
Plumbing Rough-In
Confirm your wall has two drain lines spaced roughly 30 apart (center to center) and two pairs of hot/cold supply lines. If you're converting from a single-sink setup, a plumber needs to add a second drain and supply pair, which usually involves opening the wall. Budget $400 to $800 for the rough-in conversion depending on your region and wall access. Each drain should sit at 18 to 20 from the finished floor, centered under its respective bowl. Supply lines should be 4 apart, directly below the faucet position.
Install Notes
A 48 double vanity with top weighs 200 to 300 lbs. Two-person minimum for moving it into the bathroom. Set the cabinet first, shim level in both directions, and secure to wall studs through the back rail. Place the top dry (no adhesive) to check alignment, then apply a bead of silicone along the cabinet perimeter before setting the top permanently. Connect both drains to their respective P-traps and both supply pairs to their shutoff valves. Run both faucets simultaneously for five minutes to check for leaks at every connection point before declaring the job done.
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