They're not actually secrets. The glass shops know. The showrooms know. The manufacturers know. They're just pieces of information that don't tend to surface until after the door is installed — when it's too late to change the specification, negotiate the price, or ask the follow-up question that would have made all the difference.
Here are ten things that experienced buyers know before they order, and first-time buyers typically discover after.
"Frameless" Doesn't Always Mean Frameless
The term is used loosely. A genuinely frameless door has no aluminum channel on any edge — the panel mounts via hinges or rollers directly to the wall. "Semi-frameless" uses frame hardware on some edges but not others. Some manufacturers describe semi-frameless doors as "frameless" in product listings.

The Glass Thickness Number Almost Never Appears in the Product Name
Search "frameless shower door" on any major retail platform. Read ten product listings. Count how many display glass thickness in the product name or first paragraph. Almost none.
The reason is commercial: 6mm glass costs significantly less, and the difference isn't visible until you push against the installed panel. The thickness is buried in footnotes — or omitted entirely.
The Showroom Price Includes Four Layers of Markup You're Not Getting Anything For
The same door that costs $650 factory-direct costs $950–$1,200 at a showroom. The extra $300–$550 doesn't buy thicker glass, better hardware, or a longer warranty.
"Free Shipping" on Glass Is Not Always Free
A 60-inch frameless door panel weighs 80–180 lbs. Real shipping requires LTL freight routing, custom wood crating, and liftgate service — approximately $150–$350 in actual cost. Some retailers advertise "free shipping" then add a $35–$75 liftgate fee at delivery.
Sales Tax Can Add $50–$100 to the Price Depending on Where You Buy
US nexus rules require an online seller to collect sales tax only in states where the seller has a physical presence. Local glass shops collect your state's rate — typically 6–10%. That's $45–$90 on a $720 door.
You Need to Measure After Tile, Not Before
The single most common cause of shower door returns: measuring before tile is complete. Tile adds 3/8–1/2 inch per tiled wall. A 60-inch rough opening produces a 58.25–59.75 inch finished opening after tile on both sides.
The Coating Is the Difference Between 5 Minutes of Weekly Cleaning and 20
Uncoated glass accumulates soap scum within 4–8 weeks. A permanent factory-applied hydrophobic coating fills those pores — water contact angle rises to 100°+, water beads off, deposits don't bond.
The Hardware Grade Is More Important Than the Hardware Finish
Chrome, brushed nickel, matte black — the finish is what buyers choose. The grade determines whether that finish still looks the same in year five.
| Material | Year 1 | Year 3–5 | Year 10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zinc alloy + chrome | Identical to SS | Plating worn | Corroding |
| 304 stainless | Clean | Clean | Clean |
| 316 SS (Unikoo) | Clean | Clean | Clean |
The Opening Width After Tile Is Almost Never the Nominal Size
Nobody has a 60-inch shower opening. They have a 60-inch rough framing dimension that, after tile on both walls, produces a finished opening somewhere between 58.25 and 59.75 inches. Measure three times at three heights. Use the smallest reading. Order to that dimension — not the nominal size.

The Door Height Should Match the Ceiling Height, Not Just the Tile Surround
In bathrooms with 9-foot or 10-foot ceilings, a standard 72-inch door leaves a gap that reads as a proportion mismatch — not as intentional clearance. An 84-inch door in a 9-foot bathroom achieves the same 24-inch gap ratio as a 72-inch door in an 8-foot bathroom.
The UKS04 at 84-inch height is the same price as the 76 and 80-inch configurations. The proportion decision costs nothing extra at factory-direct pricing.
None of these are secrets in any meaningful sense. They're information that experienced buyers accumulate over time — sometimes through a return shipment, sometimes through hardware that starts corroding in year four, sometimes through a bathroom that doesn't look quite right and takes eighteen months to figure out why.
You now have all ten before you order.
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