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Working with a smaller or non-standard opening? 40 inch shower doors suit compact bathrooms, corner showers, and tighter alcoves where a full-size 60 inch door is simply too wide.
Explore pivot, hinged, and sliding designs in framed, semi-frameless, and frameless configurations, each with tempered safety glass. At this narrower width, hinged and pivot doors are a practical choice, opening fully without the track of a sliding doorโthough sliding options remain useful where floor clearance is tight.
Because 40 inches falls between common sizes, fit ranges matter most hereโcheck each product's exact range below to match your opening.
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40 Inch Shower Doors: FAQ
A 40 inch shower door is designed for openings around 40 inches wide, with the exact fit depending on the door type. Sliding models are often adjustable up to 4 inches, while hinged and pivot doors fit a narrower, more fixed opening. Measure your opening at the top, middle, and bottom, then match the smallest figure to each product's stated fit range.
40 inches falls between the most common standard sizes, so the selection is more specialized than at popular widths like 36 or 60 inches. It's a useful size for corner enclosures, compact alcoves, and bathrooms where space is limited, so checking the exact fit range on each product is especially important.
Both are available, but hinged and pivot doors are common at this width because the narrower opening doesn't always suit a two-panel sliding track. Hinged and pivot doors open fully for easier access, while sliding options are useful where there isn't room for a door to swing outward.
It depends on the door type. Sliding models adjustable up to 4 inches may accommodate a 38 inch opening, but hinged and pivot doors typically fit a tighter, more specific range. Always confirm the product's minimum fit dimension before buying.
Yes. Their narrower footprint makes them well suited to compact bathrooms, corner showers, and en-suites where a wider door won't fit. A pivot or hinged door can be especially space-efficient when there's limited room for a sliding track.
Measure the width of your opening at three pointsโtop, middle, and bottomโand use the smallest measurement, since openings are rarely perfectly even. Match that figure to the product's fit range, and note whether you're choosing a sliding door (more adjustable) or a hinged or pivot door (more fixed).