Brondell CleanSpa Luxury review (2026)

- All-metal handheld bidet sprayer — stainless head, brass shut-off valve
- Squeeze-trigger pressure control, runs on water pressure (no power needed)
- Installs in about 15 minutes on a standard 7/8-inch toilet supply line
- Cold-water only unless paired with an optional hot-water valve
An all-metal handheld bidet sprayer with a squeeze trigger and a brass shut-off valve, built to outlast the plastic sprayers it competes with.
Owners who want a handheld sprayer that feels and lasts like a fixture, not a gadget — people upgrading from a leaky plastic shattaf, or buyers who simply want metal parts instead of plastic in a spot that sees daily use and constant water pressure.
Features & performance
All-Metal Build
A stainless steel spray head and a brass-core T-valve replace the plastic parts that fail first on budget sprayers — the reason Brondell positions this as the durable choice.
Spring-Loaded Trigger
Squeeze harder for more pressure, ease off for a gentle rinse. One-handed control makes it easy to aim and avoid overspray.
47-Inch Woven-Core Hose
An extra-long spiral-metal hose with a patented woven inner core resists kinking and bursting, giving you plenty of reach without sacrificing flexibility.
Adjustable Brass T-Valve
The included T-valve taps your toilet's fill line, lets you set baseline pressure, and fully shuts off water at the source for easy maintenance — no electricity or batteries required.
Pros
- All-metal construction (stainless head, brass T-valve) outlasts plastic rivals
- Squeeze trigger gives easy one-handed pressure control
- T-valve lets you dial in and fully shut off water at the source
- Long 47-inch metal hose with woven core resists kinks and bursts
Cons
- Sprays cold tap water only unless you add a separate hot-water valve
- Costs more than basic plastic sprayers ($60–$80 vs. $20–$30)
- Some units arrive with QC defects (loose screws, faulty heads)
- No interchangeable spray heads or dual pressure dials like premium rivals

What owners say
Owners praise
- Powerful, direct, precise spray that's easy to control from the handle
- Straightforward install — multiple owners report finishing in about 15 minutes with no leaks
Common complaints
- Quality-control misses on some units — loose or ill-fitting screws and the occasional faulty sprayer head
- A few buyers reported leaks from a defective unit and friction getting a fast warranty replacement
Who it's for
Buy it if: Buyers who want a long-lasting, all-metal handheld sprayer and are willing to pay $60–$80 for stainless and brass parts instead of plastic. Ideal for anyone replacing a worn-out cheap sprayer or who values a solid brass shut-off valve and a burst-resistant metal hose.
Skip it if: Skip it if you only want the cheapest option (a $20–$30 plastic sprayer does the basic job) or if warm-water spray is a must-have out of the box — this one is cold-water only unless you add a separate hot-water valve. Renters wanting a faucet-connected, no-plumbing setup should look elsewhere.
Alternatives to consider
- RinseWorks Aquaus 360. The category's top pick — dual pressure controls, NSF-certified for legal US install, and easy hot/cold setup. Costs more but adds features the CleanSpa Luxury lacks.
- SmarterFresh Warm Water Bidet Sprayer. Connects to your sink faucet instead of the toilet line, so you get adjustable warm water with no under-tank plumbing — the better fit for renters.

Our verdict
Frequently asked questions
Does the Brondell CleanSpa Luxury spray warm water?
No, not on its own. Out of the box it sprays cold tap water like nearly all handheld sprayers. You can route it to warm water by installing a separate hot-water mixing valve, which is sold separately.
Is it hard to install?
No. It connects to your toilet's existing 7/8-inch water supply line using the included brass T-valve, with no electricity or batteries. Most owners finish in 10 to 15 minutes with basic tools, and one reviewer noted a 72-year-old installed it solo.
What makes the Luxury different from cheaper handheld bidet sprayers?
Construction. It uses a stainless steel spray head, a brass-core shut-off valve, and a woven-core metal hose, where most budget sprayers rely on plastic. Those metal parts are the ones that usually fail first, so the Luxury is built to last longer.