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How to Target Homeowners Planning a Bathroom Renovation

By Jack Adams | 8 April 2026 | 7 min read | Targeting

Last updated: April 2026.

The biggest waste we see in bathroom ad accounts is not bad creative or low budgets - it is targeting. Companies showing ads to everyone in a 30-mile radius, including renters, students, and people who just moved into a brand new build. They target too broadly, pick a single interest, and wonder why their cost per lead keeps climbing. The fix is not spending more - it is targeting smarter.

This guide covers every targeting method available to bathroom companies on Facebook and Instagram, from basic interest targeting through to advanced lookalike and retargeting strategies. By the end, you will know exactly how to build audiences that reach homeowners who are actively planning a bathroom renovation - and how to avoid the common mistakes that drain budgets.

This is part of our complete guide to Facebook ads for bathroom companies.

In this guide

  1. Interest-based targeting
  2. Demographic targeting
  3. Life event targeting
  4. The kitchen renovation signal
  5. Lookalike audiences
  6. Retargeting
  7. Getting your audience size right
  8. Geographic targeting for showrooms

Interest-based targeting

Interest targeting is where most bathroom companies start, and it works well when you do it properly. The key is layering multiple interests together rather than relying on a single broad interest.

Here are the specific Facebook interests that work best for bathroom companies:

How to layer interests effectively

Do not just dump all seven interests into one ad set with an "or" condition - that creates an audience that is far too broad. Instead, use interest layering (sometimes called "interest stacking") to narrow your audience.

For example, you might target people who are interested in "Bathroom design" AND "Home renovation". This gives you people who are interested in both topics, which is a much stronger signal than either one alone. Facebook's Ads Manager lets you do this by clicking "Narrow Audience" and adding interests in the second box.

A good starting combination for bathroom companies:

Recommended interest stack:

Box 1: "Bathroom design" OR "Wetroom" OR "Freestanding bath" OR "Underfloor heating"

Box 2 (Narrow): "Home renovation" OR "Interior design" OR "Ideal Home"

This targets people who are interested in bathrooms specifically AND are actively engaged with home improvement content.

Demographic targeting

Layering demographics on top of your interest targeting helps you reach the right type of homeowner. Here is what works for bathroom companies:

Age: 35 to 65. This is the sweet spot for bathroom renovations. People under 35 rarely have the budget or the homeownership status for a full bathroom refit. People over 65 do renovate, but at lower rates. If you specialise in luxury bathrooms - walk-in showers, freestanding baths, heated floors - consider narrowing to 40 to 60, where household incomes peak.

Income level. Facebook does not let you target by income directly in the UK, but you can use postcode-level targeting as a proxy. Target areas with higher average house prices, and you will naturally reach higher-income households. We will cover this more in the geographic section below.

Homeowners. Facebook has a "Homeowners" demographic option under Detailed Targeting. Use it. Renters are almost never going to renovate a bathroom, so excluding them immediately improves your audience quality. This single filter can reduce wasted spend by 20 to 30 per cent.

Household composition. Families with children are more likely to be renovating - a growing family often triggers the need for a second bathroom or an upgrade to the family bathroom. You can target parents with children of specific ages if your bathrooms are positioned as practical, family-friendly spaces.

Life event targeting

Life events are one of the most underused targeting options for bathroom companies, but they are incredibly powerful because they catch people at moments when they are most likely to renovate.

Recently moved. People who have just bought a new house are prime bathroom customers. The bathroom is often one of the first rooms new homeowners want to change - it is personal, it is used every day, and the previous owner's taste rarely matches their own. Facebook lets you target people who have recently moved, and this audience consistently delivers some of the lowest cost-per-lead figures we see across bathroom campaigns.

New build completions. Homeowners moving into new-build properties frequently want to upgrade the builder-grade bathroom that comes as standard. These bathrooms are functional but generic, and many new-build buyers budget separately for a bathroom upgrade. Targeting people who have recently moved into new-build developments can be extremely effective, particularly for companies offering premium finishes.

Recently engaged or newly married. Couples who are settling down together often want to put their stamp on their home, and the bathroom is a popular early project. Targeting people who have changed their relationship status to "engaged" or "married" in the last six to twelve months works particularly well for mid-range bathroom companies.

The beauty of life event targeting is that you are reaching people based on what is happening in their life right now, not just what they have browsed online. This makes the audience smaller but significantly higher quality.

The kitchen renovation signal

This is one of the most powerful bathroom-specific targeting strategies, and very few companies use it.

People who recently renovated their kitchen are some of your best prospects. Kitchen and bathroom renovations almost always happen in sequence. A homeowner who has just spent £15,000 on a new kitchen is not going to live with an outdated bathroom for long. The contrast between their shiny new kitchen and their tired old bathroom becomes impossible to ignore.

Here is how to target them:

Bathroom-specific interest stack using the kitchen signal:

Box 1: "Kitchen design" OR "Wren Kitchens" OR "Howdens"

Box 2 (Narrow): "Bathroom design" OR "Wetroom" OR "Interior design"

This targets people who have shown interest in kitchen renovation AND are now engaging with bathroom content - a strong buying signal.

Lookalike audiences

Lookalike audiences are where things get really interesting. Instead of telling Facebook who to target, you give Facebook a list of your best customers and let the algorithm find more people like them.

How to build a lookalike audience

  1. Upload a list of your past customers (name, email, phone number, postcode) to Facebook as a Custom Audience.
  2. Select "Create Lookalike" from that audience.
  3. Choose your target country (United Kingdom) and the audience percentage (start with 1%, which finds the closest matches).

Minimum data needed

Facebook requires a minimum of 100 source records to create a lookalike, but the quality improves dramatically as you add more data. Here is a rough guide:

Source size Lookalike quality Recommendation
100-250 Basic Usable, but expect inconsistency
250-500 Good Reliable enough for most campaigns
500-1,000 Strong Consistent, lower CPL
1,000+ Excellent Best possible match quality

Which source audiences work best

Not all customer lists produce equally good lookalikes. In order of effectiveness:

  1. Customers who purchased - your absolute best source. These are people who actually spent money with you, so the lookalike will find people with similar spending behaviour.
  2. Showroom visitors who booked an appointment - high intent, even if they did not all convert. These people took a meaningful action.
  3. Qualified leads - people who enquired and passed your qualification criteria (right budget, right area, right timeframe).
  4. All leads - better than nothing, but includes tyre-kickers, so the lookalike will be less precise.
  5. Website visitors - avoid using this as a lookalike source. Too broad, too many casual browsers, and the resulting lookalike will be low quality.

If you have enough data, create separate lookalikes for different project values. A lookalike based on customers who spent over £10,000 on a bathroom will find very different people than one based on customers who spent £3,000. This lets you match your ad creative and offer to the right audience.

Retargeting

Retargeting means showing ads to people who have already interacted with your business in some way. These are warm audiences - they know who you are - and they convert at significantly higher rates than cold audiences.

Website visitors

Install the Meta Pixel on your website (this is a small piece of code that tracks visitors) and you can retarget anyone who has visited your site in the last 180 days. For bathroom companies, the most valuable segments are:

Video viewers

If you run video ads (and you should - bathroom transformations are perfect for video), you can retarget people who watched 25%, 50%, 75%, or 95% of your video. Someone who watched 75% or more of a bathroom transformation video is a hot prospect. Create a separate ad set just for these people with a direct call to action like "Book your free bathroom design consultation."

Lead form openers

Some people open your Facebook lead form but do not submit it. They got distracted, or they were not quite ready. You can retarget these people specifically - and because they already showed strong intent, the conversion rate on this audience is often two to three times higher than cold traffic.

Instagram and Facebook engagers

Anyone who has liked, commented on, shared, or saved one of your posts or ads in the last 365 days can be retargeted. This is a warm audience that already finds your content interesting. A well-timed ad - perhaps featuring a stunning before-and-after transformation or a seasonal offer - can push them from admirer to enquirer.

Getting your audience size right

One of the most common questions bathroom companies ask is "how big should my audience be?" It depends on your budget and your geography, but here are some guidelines.

Audience size guide for bathroom companies:

Check your audience size in Ads Manager when building your ad set. Facebook shows you an estimated audience size on the right-hand side. If your interest stacking and demographic filters bring you into the 50,000 to 300,000 range for your target geography, you are in good shape.

One exception: retargeting audiences will always be smaller, often just a few thousand people. That is fine - these are warm audiences, and a smaller, highly targeted group is exactly what you want.

Geographic targeting for bathroom showrooms

Geography is arguably the most important targeting variable for bathroom companies. Unlike an online retailer, you have a physical showroom and a team of fitters who can only travel so far. Getting your radius right directly impacts lead quality and close rates.

Choosing your radius

Bathroom companies tend to draw customers from a wider radius than kitchen companies. A bathroom installation takes less time than a full kitchen fit-out, which means fitters are willing to travel further. Here are the recommended ranges:

Location type Recommended radius Why
Dense urban (London, Manchester, Birmingham) 15-20 miles High population density means plenty of prospects within a small area
Suburban / large town 20-30 miles Balanced reach vs. travel time for installations
Rural 30-40 miles Wider net needed, but watch for audience dilution

Pin drop vs. postcode targeting

Facebook gives you two main options: drop a pin on your showroom and set a radius, or target specific postcodes. For most bathroom companies, the pin-drop radius is simpler and works well. However, if you know certain postcodes have higher average property values (and therefore more potential for premium bathroom sales), postcode targeting lets you cherry-pick those areas.

A good strategy for premium bathroom companies: create two ad sets with different radii. One targeting affluent postcodes within 15 miles of your showroom with premium messaging, and another covering a wider 35-mile radius with more general messaging. This lets you tailor your creative to the audience without overspending on either.

Exclude areas you cannot service

If there are areas within your radius that you cannot or do not want to service - perhaps they are across a river with no bridge, or the travel time makes installations unprofitable - use Facebook's exclusion zones to remove them. Every pound you do not spend reaching unserviceable areas is a pound better spent on genuine prospects.

Putting it all together

The best bathroom company campaigns combine multiple targeting methods across different ad sets. Here is how we typically structure a campaign:

  1. Ad set 1: Interest stack - layered bathroom interests with demographic filters, targeting your showroom radius. This is your prospecting engine.
  2. Ad set 2: Lookalike audience - based on your best customers, again within your showroom radius. Often delivers the lowest cost per lead after the first month.
  3. Ad set 3: Life events + kitchen signal - recently moved homeowners and people who recently engaged with kitchen content. Small but high-converting.
  4. Ad set 4: Retargeting - website visitors, video viewers, and lead form openers. Lowest cost per lead, highest conversion rate.

Each ad set gets its own budget allocation. We typically put 40 to 50 per cent of the budget into prospecting (ad sets 1 and 2), 20 per cent into life events and the kitchen signal, and 30 to 40 per cent into retargeting. The exact split depends on how much warm data you have to work with.

Targeting is not a set-and-forget exercise. We review audience performance weekly, shift budget towards the ad sets that are delivering, and test new interest combinations and lookalike sources every month. This is one of the reasons working with a specialist makes a difference - you get someone watching the data daily and making adjustments.

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Sources

Industry benchmarks from WordStream and LocaliQ. Market data from IBISWorld and Companies House. Cost guides from Checkatrade. All figures as of early 2026.

Jack Adams

Content lead at Adhouse. Writes about Facebook advertising strategy for UK home services companies.

Frequently asked questions

What Facebook interests should I target for bathroom renovations?

Start with interests like "Bathroom design", "Interior design", "Home renovation", "Ideal Home", and niche interests such as "Wetroom", "Underfloor heating", and "Freestanding bath". Layer two or three of these together rather than using them individually - this narrows your audience to people who are genuinely planning a bathroom project, not just casual browsers.

What is the ideal audience size for bathroom company Facebook ads?

For most bathroom companies targeting a showroom radius, aim for an audience between 50,000 and 300,000 people. Anything below 20,000 is too narrow for the algorithm to optimise properly. Anything above 500,000 means your targeting is too broad and you will waste budget reaching people who will never renovate a bathroom.

How far should a bathroom company target around their showroom?

Most bathroom companies find their sweet spot is a 25 to 40 mile radius around their showroom. In dense urban areas like London or Manchester, 15 to 20 miles is enough. In rural areas, you may need to extend further. The key is matching your radius to where your fitters are willing to travel for installations.

Should I target people who recently renovated their kitchen?

Yes. Kitchen and bathroom renovations often happen in sequence. Homeowners who have just finished a kitchen project frequently move on to the bathroom within six to twelve months. Targeting people who have recently engaged with kitchen renovation content is one of the most effective bathroom-specific targeting strategies available.

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