Buying Guide
Fibreglass vs Acrylic Showers
Architects, builders and developers often face this question at the specification stage. We compare fibreglass and acrylic showers across durability, weight, cost, and suitability for different project types to help you make the right call.

It's one of the most common questions that comes up at specification stage — fibreglass or acrylic? Both are widely used, both have their advocates, and on the surface they can look almost identical. But the differences in how they're made and how they perform over time are significant enough to affect your project outcomes.
How they're made
Acrylic showers start as a thin sheet of acrylic that is vacuum-formed into shape, then typically backed with a fibreglass reinforcement layer for structural support. Fibreglass showers are constructed from the ground up using layers of fibreglass matting and resin, creating a solid, uniform structure throughout the entire unit.
How they compare
Fibreglass | Acrylic | |
|---|---|---|
Durability | High — solid laminate resists cracking and flexing | Moderate — thin surface layer more susceptible to impact |
Weight | Lightweight | Lightweight |
Repairability | Easily repaired with fibreglass filler | Surface scratches and cracks harder to repair invisibly |
Heat resistance | Excellent | Can warp under prolonged heat exposure |
Cost | Competitive long-term value | Lower upfront, higher replacement frequency |
Best suited for | High-use, commercial, industrial, remote | Residential, lower-use environments |
The verdict
For residential projects with standard use, acrylic can be a perfectly adequate choice. But for anything involving high frequency use, harsh environments, remote locations, or long-term cost efficiency — fibreglass is the clear specification. It's why NCF showers are the product of choice across mining, construction, modular and accommodation sectors where performance isn't optional.

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