LUXE Bidet NEO 110 review (2026)

- Entry-level, non-electric attachment — single nozzle, rear wash, cold water only
- Better-than-budget internals: metal-ceramic valves and steel braided hoses
- Installs in about 15-20 minutes on any standard two-piece toilet, no tools needed beyond what's included
- Best for trying the bidet concept cheaply; step up a model for warm water or extra wash modes
The cheapest honest way to try a bidet: a no-frills, cold-water rear-wash attachment with surprisingly solid metal-ceramic valves and steel hoses for the money.
Bidet-curious shoppers and renters who want to test the idea for the least money possible, and anyone who just wants a simple, reliable rear wash without warm water, extra dials, or an electrical outlet.
Features & performance
Metal-ceramic valves and steel hoses
Unlike many sub-$40 attachments built entirely from plastic, the 110 uses high-pressure valves with metal-ceramic cores and a braided stainless-steel water hose. That hardware is the main reason owners and review aggregators consistently call out its build quality as above its price class.
Single adjustable-pressure rear nozzle
One control dial sets the water pressure for a rear wash, from a gentle rinse up to a strong stream. There's no separate feminine wash and no warm-water option — it's deliberately a one-job tool, which keeps it cheap and simple to use.
Guard gate with retractable nozzle
A protective guard gate shields the nozzle when it's not in use, and the nozzle retracts behind it automatically after each wash to stay clean from splashback. You can flip the gate open by hand to wipe the nozzle down.
Tool-light, non-electric installation
The box includes a metal T-adapter, a 15-inch braided cold-water hose, two mounting plates with rubber gaskets, a plastic wrench, plumber's tape and the manual. It mounts under your existing seat on a standard two-piece toilet with no electricity and no plumber required.
Pros
- One of the lowest-cost ways to get into bidets, usually well under $45
- Metal-ceramic valve cores and steel hoses are a step up from the all-plastic budget competition
- Easy DIY install on any standard two-piece toilet with everything in the box
- Guard gate keeps the single nozzle clean between uses
Cons
- Cold water only — the spray can be a shock, especially in winter
- Single nozzle and rear wash only; no feminine wash or self-cleaning mode
- A recurring owner complaint is leaking at the hose/supply-line connection over time
- No frills at all — for warm water or extra modes you must step up to a pricier model

What owners say
Owners praise
- Owners repeatedly call install quick and genuinely DIY — many report having it running in well under 20 minutes
- The metal-ceramic valves and steel hose make it feel sturdier and higher-quality than its rock-bottom price suggests
- Pressure control via the single dial is praised as easy and effective for a basic attachment
Common complaints
- The most common complaint is leaking at the hose or supply-line connection, sometimes developing after weeks or months of use
- Cold-water-only spray is a real adjustment, with some owners noting it's bracing in winter
- A few buyers report a unit that leaked out of the box or whose replacement also leaked, and there has even been a class-action investigation into Luxe bidet leak reports
Who it's for
Buy it if: Buy it if you're bidet-curious and want the cheapest legitimate way in, if you rent and want something fully reversible, or if you simply want a no-electricity, no-fuss rear wash and don't care about warm water or extra modes. The strong build for the price makes it a low-risk experiment.
Skip it if: Skip it if cold water is a dealbreaker — buy a warm-water model like the NEO 320 instead. Also skip if you want a feminine wash, a self-cleaning nozzle, or dual nozzles (look at the NEO 185/185 Plus). And if you're nervous about plumbing connections, be prepared to snug the fittings down carefully, since leaks are the one weak spot.
Alternatives to consider
- LUXE Bidet NEO 120. Nearly identical price and feel, but adds a self-cleaning nozzle mode that rinses the nozzle in fresh water after each use — the small upgrade most people wish the 110 had.
- LUXE Bidet NEO 320 / 320 Plus. The step up for warm water. It connects to your sink or water heater line for temperature control plus dual nozzles and feminine wash, for shoppers who find cold water a dealbreaker.

Our verdict
Frequently asked questions
Does the LUXE Bidet NEO 110 have warm water?
No. The NEO 110 is cold water only — it taps your toilet's existing cold supply line and has no heater or temperature dial. If you want warm water, you'll need to step up to a model like the NEO 320, which connects to a warm-water source.
Is the NEO 110 hard to install?
No. It's a non-electric attachment that mounts under your existing seat on a standard two-piece toilet. The box includes the T-adapter, braided hose, plastic wrench and plumber's tape, and most owners finish in about 15-20 minutes. The key is to tighten every connection firmly, since loose fittings are the main cause of the leaks some owners report.
What's the difference between the NEO 110 and the NEO 120?
They're priced almost the same, but the 120 adds a self-cleaning nozzle mode that rinses the nozzle with fresh water after each use. The 110 has just the single rear-wash function. Both are cold-water, single-nozzle, non-electric attachments with the same metal-ceramic valves and steel hoses.