In recent years, the smart toilet market is quietly splitting, with customized solutions gaining attention. Users and installers now value practical use and maintenance convenience over feature-packed designs.

In the past few years, smart toilets were often sold as fully loaded products, with the idea that more features meant better value. However, in real installation projects, this did not always hold true. Many distributors noticed that in residential projects, users usually remember only a few functions after installation, while the rest remain unused. This is where customized smart toilets began to attract attention—not for being more advanced, but for being more practical. In real bathroom upgrades, especially in apartments and renovations, space and user habits matter more than a long list of functions.

A common misconception is that a smart toilet should do everything, but real-world usage often shows the opposite. In older buildings with unstable water pressure, advanced flushing systems can become more of a complication than an improvement, whereas simplified, customizable models perform more reliably. Hotels also adjust configurations by room type; standard rooms typically avoid complex control systems because guests prefer simplicity. In many projects, the question is less about “what can it do” and more about “what should it not include.”

Based on real order data, only a few functions are repeatedly selected for customized smart toilets, such as heated seats, basic bidet wash, soft-close lids, simple auto-flush, and night lights. Advanced modules like voice control or complex LCD interfaces are often removed in the final configuration—not because they are bad, but because daily usage is low. Installation realities, including water pressure, building conditions, and maintenance considerations, often drive these choices. Simpler systems reduce wiring, sensor calibration, and maintenance time, which is especially important in rental and residential properties.

Overall, the market is moving toward controlled simplicity. Buyers are no longer asking “how many features are included” but rather “which features are necessary for this project.” This shift explains the steady growth of customized smart toilets in both residential and commercial segments. It is not about less technology but about applying it more precisely, making simplification a deliberate design choice rather than a compromise.