Storage That Makes Sense
A tip-out tray, full drawers, and a door cabinet split your toiletries into zones, instead of one shelved box that jams shut by month six.
The Bathroom-First Brand Built for the Studio Renter and the Saturday DIYer
You've read 'engineered wood' and 'soft-close' on a hundred listings, so start with the number you can verify: Virubi holds a 4.2-star average across 485 buyer reviews, 271 of them on the 30-inch freestanding alone. The bathroom line covers floating and freestanding vanities with sink plus 35-inch mirrored medicine cabinets, built on MDF panels over a solid-wood frame. That frame and the waterproof painted finish were picked for a humid bathroom, not borrowed from dry-room furniture that swells at the first shower.
You bring only a faucet; the sink hole arrives pre-drilled, cutting one step off install day. Finishes run from white and grey through walnut, rattan, and antique natural wood, so the cabinet matches your tile instead of fighting it.
No warranty is printed on any listing, so don't assume one. What you get is the retailer return window and a seller who, in documented cases, shipped replacement parts free. One detail still limits you: on the 30-inch vanity the drain must enter from the right, and below we show why.
Four build decisions behind the bathroom line, each one aimed at a problem cheap vanities leave you to solve.
A tip-out tray, full drawers, and a door cabinet split your toiletries into zones, instead of one shelved box that jams shut by month six.
Solid-wood frames, MDF panels, and a waterproof painted finish handle shower steam, rather than dry-room specs that warp the first wet season.
Labeled boards and numbered screws kill the wrong-piece panic, so the 30-inch model stands in an owner-typical 2 to 3 hours.
Widths at 30, 36, and 60 inches, freestanding or floating, fit the cabinet to your bathroom instead of forcing the room to fit the cabinet.