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Mid Brass Heated Towel Rails
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View all productsMid brass heated towel rails sit between a soft light brass and a fuller polished brass, giving a richer, warmer gold tone without tipping into high-shine vintage brass territory. If you want a brass finish with more visual weight than light brass but less than a full polished gold, mid brass is the finish to look at, and each rail below combines that tone with genuine heat output for towel drying and bathroom warmth.
What mid brass looks like next to other brass tones
Mid brass reads as a deeper, warmer gold than light brass, with more colour saturation but still short of the bright yellow shine of a traditional polished brass finish. Where light brass is soft and muted, almost champagne in some lighting, mid brass has a fuller warmth that holds its own as a feature finish rather than a background tone. Compared with a full polished brass, mid brass is typically a shade more brushed or satin in appearance, so it avoids looking overly formal or dated in a modern bathroom.
The easiest way to tell the three tones apart when comparing finishes is to line up samples: light brass looks the palest and coolest of the three, mid brass sits in the middle with a noticeably warmer gold cast, and standard polished brass is the boldest and shiniest. Lighting changes how each reads, so if you already have brass tapware installed, check a physical swatch or product photo in your own bathroom lighting before ordering a rail to match.
Matching mid brass to an existing brass suite
If your tapware, mixer, or shower fittings are already a mid brass finish, matching the towel rail to the same tone keeps the room looking coordinated rather than mismatched. Brass finishes from different ranges can vary slightly even within the same named tone, so where possible, check the rail and tapware are from ranges the retailer lists as colour-matched, or order a sample of each before installing both in the same space. Mixing a mid brass rail with a lighter or fuller brass tapware set can still work as an intentional layered look, but it's worth deciding that upfront rather than by accident.
Heat output and wattage
Wattage determines how warm a rail gets and how fast. Smaller rails suited to an ensuite or powder room generally sit in the 20 to 50 watt range, enough for one or two towels and a light touch of ambient warmth. Larger ladder rails for a main bathroom typically run 60 to 150 watts, which dries multiple full-sized towels and noticeably warms the room in cooler months. Choose based on the number of towels the household actually hangs day to day, since a larger rail than needed mostly adds to running costs rather than comfort.
Timer functionality
A number of mid brass rails in this range include a built-in timer, letting you set a fixed run time, commonly 1 to 4 hours, after which the rail switches off on its own. This is worth prioritising over a basic on/off switch if you want to manage energy use, since it stops the rail running unattended for hours after towels are already dry.
Hardwired vs plug-in
Rails can be hardwired into the electrical circuit for a completely cord-free finish, which needs a licensed electrician and is best planned during a renovation before walls and tiling are finished. Plug-in models connect via a nearby power point and suit a bathroom upgrade where adding a new hardwired circuit isn't practical. Both options deliver the same heat output, the difference is purely about installation timing and how the finished rail looks on the wall.
Choosing the right rail
Start with the wattage and size that suits your towel load, then confirm the mid brass tone against any existing tapware or fittings in the room. Every rail ships with wall-mounting fixings included, and orders are shipped AU-wide.