How to Choose a Laundry Room Sink

What Is a Laundry Sink?
Often called a utility sink, a laundry sink is a rugged, large-capacity sink used primarily for cleaning or soaking clothing. A laundry sink is also used for washing items unrelated to clothing such as paintbrushes. Laundry sinks are usually located in a laundry room or another peripheral area such as a basement or garage.

Extremely dirty clothing can be washed out in a laundry sink before putting it in the clothes washer. Even if your washer has a pre-soak function, you may still want to soak some articles of clothing in a laundry sink.

Types of Laundry Sinks
Freestanding or Floor-Mounted Laundry Sinks
A freestanding or floor-mounted laundry sink is a large single- or double-basin that comes with its own legs. Either the legs are already attached to the basin or they come separately.

If you want the most basic, inexpensive laundry sink possible, the freestanding laundry sink may be what you need. Most freestanding sinks are in the $80 to $200 price range, with basins as deep as 24 inches. Installation is easy since this type of sink only needs to be secured to the back wall and the plumbing lines attached.

Wall-Mounted Laundry Sinks
Wall-mounted laundry sinks attach directly to the wall of the laundry room. Due to weight restrictions, wall-mounted laundry sinks much be attached directly to wall studs located behind the drywall.

Wall-mount laundry sinks are best if space is limited because they are raised above the floor: storage below is available.

Base Cabinet-Mounted Laundry Sinks
Combine a bathroom vanity cabinet with a laundry sink, and you essentially get a base cabinet-mounted laundry sink. This type of sink has a simple, utilitarian cabinet on the bottom with doors, plus the sink on top.

These sinks are best if you want to maintain the appearance of your laundry room. These streamlined units hide the lower plumbing and they provide limited storage, usually for cleaning items. These sinks have less capacity than other sinks: 10 to 15 gallons is a typical capacity, as opposed to 20 gallons for freestanding or wall-mounted laundry sinks.

Drop-In or Undermount Laundry Sinks
Drop-in or under-mount laundry sinks attach to existing countertops mounted on base cabinets. Drop-in (also called self-rimming) sinks are inserted, from the top, in large holes cut in the countertop. Undermount sinks attach to the bottom of the countertop, under similarly sized holes.

These types of laundry sinks work well if you want to help the sink aesthetically blend into the laundry room. They are also good if you expect to use the laundry sink frequently since the countertop runs directly against the sink, providing you with a nearby, same-level workspace. Like base cabinet-mounted laundry sinks, these sinks tend to be large in width and length but shallow.

Scroll to Top