Here's the quick answer: true frameless shower enclosures use 3/8″ or 1/2″ tempered glass, while semi-frameless and framed doors use thinner 3/16″ or 1/4″ glass supported by a metal frame. The thicker the glass, the more rigid and substantial the door feels — and the more it costs.
Thickness matters because in a frameless enclosure there's no metal frame to hold things rigid; the glass has to do that job by itself. That's why you can't build a frameless shower from thin glass. Below, we walk through each common thickness and where it's used.
Shower glass thickness at a glance
| Thickness | Typical use | Feel / notes |
|---|---|---|
| 3/16″ | Framed doors, sliding tub enclosures | Lightest; relies on a full metal frame for rigidity |
| 1/4″ | Semi-frameless doors & panels | Sturdier than 3/16″; works with a slim perimeter frame |
| 3/8″ | Frameless enclosures (most common) | Solid and rigid; the popular all-rounder for frameless |
| 1/2″ | Large/tall frameless, wide doors, premium builds | Heaviest and most substantial; the high-end choice |
Why glass thickness matters
Three things change with thickness:
- Rigidity. Thicker glass flexes less. In a frameless door, that rigidity is what keeps the panel stable and the door swinging true — there's no frame to provide it.
- Feel. A 1/2″ door has an unmistakable heft when you open and close it. Many homeowners describe thinner framed doors as feeling lighter or more "rattly" by comparison.
- Cost. More glass means more material, heavier hardware to carry it, and more careful handling and installation — so thicker glass costs more. See our shower door cost guide for how this plays into the total.
3/8″ glass — the popular frameless choice
For the majority of frameless enclosures, 3/8″ is the sweet spot. It's rigid enough to carry itself with hinges and clips, it has a genuinely solid feel, and it costs less than 1/2″. Unless your enclosure is unusually large or tall, 3/8″ glass will look and perform beautifully. It's the thickness we recommend most often for standard frameless showers.
1/2″ glass — the premium option
Stepping up to 1/2″ glass makes the most sense when the panels are large or tall, when a swinging door is especially wide, or when you simply want the most substantial, luxurious feel possible. The extra rigidity keeps big panels stable, and the added weight gives the door a vault-like solidity. It's the premium pick — a noticeable upgrade in feel, at a higher price.
Thinner glass (3/16″ & 1/4″)
Thinner glass isn't lesser glass — it's simply designed to work with a frame. 1/4″ is the standard for semi-frameless doors, where a slim perimeter frame provides the rigidity the glass doesn't need to supply on its own. 3/16″ is common in fully framed doors and sliding tub enclosures, where a full metal frame surrounds and supports every edge. Both are excellent, code-compliant choices that keep costs down — and they're why semi-frameless and framed doors are more affordable than frameless. (For the full comparison, see frameless vs. semi-frameless.)
All our glass is tempered safety glass
No matter the thickness, every piece of shower glass we fabricate is tempered safety glass. Tempering heats and rapidly cools the glass to make it far stronger than ordinary glass — and, critically, if it ever does break, it crumbles into small, relatively blunt pieces instead of dangerous shards. This is required by building code for shower and bath glazing, and it's the standard on every enclosure we build.
Good to know: Tempered safety glass is required by code for showers and tubs — and we use it on every job, in every thickness. Thicker glass feels more solid, but a properly framed thinner door is just as safe.
Not sure which thickness suits your space? Browse our shower door styles and glass options, or have us recommend the right glass at your free in-home measure.
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