1200mm Ceramic Vanity Tops with Moulded Basins
A one-piece ceramic top with the basin moulded straight into it removes every join between bowl and bench — nothing to seal, nothing to catch grime. At 1200mm it sits on a base cabinet to make a complete vanity. This guide explains how integrated ceramic tops work and what to check.
How an integrated ceramic top works
Instead of dropping a separate basin into a benchtop, the bowl and the surrounding bench are fired as a single ceramic piece. The result is one continuous, glazed surface that runs from the splashback down into the bowl with no rim or silicone line. That’s the main appeal — there’s no join to discolour and the whole top wipes down in one go. It also gives a crisp, seamless look that suits a clean modern bathroom.
Pairing the top with a base cabinet
The ceramic top is designed to sit on a matching base unit, so the two are bought as a pair sized to each other. A 1200mm top gives generous bench either side of the bowl, or room for a wider basin, on a cabinet with real storage below. Confirm the top and base are made to match, because the tap hole position, the overhang and the cabinet width all need to line up.
Practical points before you buy
Ceramic is hard-wearing and easy to clean, but it’s heavier than a board top and can chip on a sharp knock, so handle it carefully during install. Check whether the top comes pre-drilled for one tap or three, and match your tapware to that. A single moulded overflow is usually built in, which keeps the bowl tidy.
Compare tops in person
Renovating on the NSW South Coast? A seamless ceramic top is worth seeing up close — you can view a range of bathroom vanities at Just Bathrooms, a local showroom, to compare top styles.