
If you have a smooth-surface rectangular bathtub, choose the Gorilla Grip non-slip mat for the safest grip. However, if your bathtub has a textured, tiled, or refinished surface where suction cups won’t stick, then choose the Asvin non-slip mat for safest grip. #ad
With a non-slip bath mat, the goal is safety, comfort, and to prevent slip and falls in the shower. An anti-slip bath mat is a daily hygiene helper to aging adults and the elderly, while entire families of all ages and abilities can enjoy extra grip. These are 2025's best non-slip mats for people who want more grip while showering:
A non-slip bath mat grips prevents falls when showering because it adds traction between your feet and the wet shower floor.
You place a bath mat directly into the bathtub or shower. The bath mat allows water to pass down the drain, and keeps your feet planted firmly while entering, exiting, and switching positions to cleanse your body while inside the shower.
The safest bath mat available today is made from non-slip materials with inherent grip such as rubber, vinyl, silicone, and plastic, and also features suction cups on the bottom to keep the unit in place.
Measure the size of your bathtub or shower space before purchasing a non-slip mat. A mat that fits your shower or bath perfectly when it lays completely flat and covers the entire floor area, without obstructive excess folding up walls.
Safety Warning: Please stay safe in the bath and shower.
Graycare is NOT a doctor.
Soap scrub and shower debris is unavoidable when showering on a bath mat, so be warned, you should rinse away unwanted build-up and let your bath mat dry completely between showers.
When you’re done showering, use the shower head to rinse away soap and shower debris, and shake the bath mat to encourage quicker drying. Prop it on the side of the bathtub, or hang it up on the shower curtain rack.
Most people give their bath mat a deeper clean about once per week. The Gorilla Grip, Asvin, and SlipX mats reviewed today are all machine washable. People who prefer to hand wash have had good luck preventing mildew and long-term build-up by scrubbing their non-slip bath mat with vinegar-water solution.
If you try one and you like it, then consider getting two bathmats for the same bathroom. Rotating between two mats every two days is one way to make sure each mat dries completely between uses.


The Gorilla Grip non-slip bathtub mat is made of soft, hygienic, heat-resistant rubber material. It’s BPA-free and phthalate-free and so safe for families to use in the heat of the shower (despite the strong rubber odor when brand new out the package). It dries quickly and can wash in the laundry when needed.
About 200 drain holes allow water to flow through to the floor and down the drain quickly. It’s comfortable under your feet, almost like a light massage.
About 300 suction cups on the bottom side keep the mat firmly in one place. Having both non-slip materials you stand on and grippy suction cups on the bottom provides the best overall safety while standing to shower inside the bathtub. Most American household bathtubs have a smooth floor surface, and so suction cups on the bottom of a bath mat stay in place while showering. (Remember, the suction cups won’t work on textured or tiled surfaces, you’ll need a “soft bath mat” for that.)
Gorilla Grip bath mats last a long time! One can last for five years with proper care, drying between uses and deep cleaning periodically. Gorilla Grip is machine washable when dirt, soap scum, and excess hair build up on the suction cups and between its perforations, and it needs a deep, thorough cleaning.
Place your Gorilla Grip bathtub mat away from the drain. Alternatives to Gorilla Grip include a curved area to prevent obstructing the drain.


Suction cups don’t work on every surface! When the surface of your bathtub floor is porous or textured, then suction cups don’t stick.
It’s true that non-slip mat with suction cups grip the floor more securely than non-slip mats without suction cups. However, when the floor of your bathtub is rough, a soft loofa-style bath mat without suction cups has the best grip.
This type of soft PVC materials is BPA-free and phthalate-free, so it’s safe for your family to use in a hot shower. It's almost 1 inch thick, providing excellent grip for feet, and a loofah texture that cushions and feels comfy under your toes, almost like a gentle scrub skin massage.
The water runs through the spongy loofah loops — not as well as the Gorilla Grip’s drainage holes, but Asvin is as high-flow as it gets for loofah-style bathtub mats grippy on rough surfaces.
Although designed for porous surface bathtubs, you could get thrifty and since it’s also suitable for firm standing on kitchen floors, laundry room floors, or as a doormat in wet areas.
You still need to let it dry between uses, to prevent stagnant water pooling and to reduce the risk of mold and mildew build-up. Before you let it dry, remember to hose it down with the shower head to rinse away soap suds and other shower debris.
When water pools inside the bathtub, be careful not to let a loofah-style bath mat float. Keep the drain open when showering to prevent water getting between the mat and the floor to cause unsafe floating.
Choosing a loofah-style mat ensures safety, comfort, and durability for textured, tiled, or refinished bathtub floors. To avoid “hanging chad” corners, you can safely and carefully use household scissors to cut this material into a specific shape or size to fit your bathroom.


A square shower mat offers excellent slip resistance inside standard square showers. When your shower space is small and square, with the drain in the center, then a square-shape shower mat fits best. For smooth surface shower floors, choose a shower mat with suction cups on the bottom for best grip. For textured surface shower floors, choose a soft shower mat without suction cups on the bottom.
Stand-up showers that are square shaped commonly have a drain in the very center of the shower. Square shaped accommodate the shower drain’s position, by featuring larger drainage holes in the center of the square, or even circular cutouts in the center to avoid obstructing the drain altogether.