RinseWorks Aquaus 360 review (2026)

- Made in the USA; the only handheld bidet NSF/cUPC certified for legal install in the US & Canada
- Patented dual thumb-pressure triggers — squeeze from either side for one-handed control
- All-brass valve core with ceramic seals, 54" stainless hose, 5-year warranty
- Tool-free toilet-supply install in minutes; cold water only
The only US-made handheld bidet sprayer NSF-certified for legal install, built around a patented dual-thumb trigger and an all-brass valve core that owners run daily for years without leaks.
Buyers who want a buy-it-once, US-made handheld sprayer that's actually code-legal to install, and don't mind paying a premium over a generic shattaf for brass internals, dual backflow protection, and a multi-year warranty.
Features & performance
Patented dual-pressure trigger
Thumb controls on both sides let you start with a fine, low-pressure stream to locate the spot, then squeeze harder for anything from a gentle rinse to a full jet — all one-handed, from either hand.
All-brass valve core, ceramic seals
The brass model uses a brass valve core with ceramic disc seals (the same wear surface as a quality faucet), which is why owners report years of daily use without drips. It carries a 5-year warranty vs. 3 years on the ABS polymer version.
Code-legal, certified install
It's the only handheld bidet NSF-tested and cUPC certified for legal installation in the US and Canada, shipping with two certified backflow preventers so it won't siphon water back into your supply.
54-inch stainless hose with 3"–11" reach
A braided stainless StayFlex hose rated to 270 PSI plus two interchangeable spray heads (1/2" and 1") and a 5" extension give you an adjustable 3" to 11" spray reach.
Pros
- Genuinely made in the USA with NSF-certified brass internals and dual backflow protection
- Dual-trigger design lets you find the target at low pressure, then ramp up one-handed
- Tool-free install most owners finish in minutes, no plumber needed
- Long, durable stainless hose and replaceable parts back a real multi-year warranty
Cons
- Cold water only when tapped into the toilet supply line
- Costs 2–3x a generic shattaf from Amazon
- The spray wand body is plastic, so it can feel less premium than the brass billing suggests
- The tank-mount bracket relies on a single small screw and can feel flimsy

What owners say
Owners praise
- "Easy to install even for a non-DIY-er" — install simplicity is the single most repeated point, scoring near 99% positive in aggregated reviews
- Owners report leak-free, reliable performance after a year or more of daily use, crediting the brass and ceramic valve
- The adjustable dual-pressure control is widely praised for letting users dial in exactly the spray they want
Common complaints
- Cold-water-only off the toilet line bothers some owners in winter, though many say it's less jarring than expected
- A minority report a plastic-feeling wand or a flimsy single-screw mounting bracket, and a few got parts damaged in shipping
Who it's for
Buy it if: Buy it if you want a US-made, code-legal handheld bidet you can install yourself in minutes and trust for years — and you value brass internals, dual backflow protection, and a real warranty over rock-bottom price.
Skip it if: Skip it if you specifically want warm water at the seat (you'd want a hot/cold T-valve faucet model or an electric bidet seat instead), or if you just want the cheapest possible sprayer and don't care about certification or country of origin.
Alternatives to consider
- Brondell CleanSpa Luxury Handheld Bidet. A popular brass-bodied handheld sprayer at a similar premium price; good pick if you want an all-metal wand feel, but it isn't NSF/cUPC certified for legal install like the Aquaus 360.
- SmarterFresh / generic shattaf handheld sprayer. Roughly half the price and widely sold, making it the value choice; you give up the US manufacturing, the patented dual trigger, the certified backflow protection, and the multi-year warranty.

Our verdict
Frequently asked questions
Does the Aquaus 360 spray warm water?
Not when it's connected to your toilet's supply line — that line is cold water only, so this toilet model sprays cold. RinseWorks makes a separate faucet-connected Aquaus 360 model that draws warm water from your sink, but the toilet sprayer reviewed here is cold-only.
Is it hard to install?
No. It connects to your toilet's existing water supply line and most owners finish in a few minutes with no tools or plumber. The one catch: if your supply line is a rigid metal tube rather than a flexible braided line, you'll need a flexible replacement line (about $10) for the included T-valve to attach.
Why does it cost more than other handheld bidet sprayers?
It's genuinely made in the USA, uses a brass valve core with ceramic seals, ships with two certified backflow preventers, and is the only handheld bidet NSF/cUPC certified for legal installation in the US and Canada. You're paying for certification, durability, and a 5-year warranty rather than a disposable price.
Will it leak over time?
Aggregated owner reviews put leak complaints near zero when it's installed correctly, and durability runs about 91% positive with many users reporting a year or more of daily use. The brass valve and ceramic seals on the all-brass version are the reason it holds up; the polymer version costs less and carries a shorter 3-year warranty.