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Why the Space Around Your Hot Tub Matters More Than Most People Expect

Most people spend a lot of time choosing the hot tub itself.

Far fewer think carefully about the space around it.

But after years of visiting customer gardens and seeing how people actually use their hot tubs day-to-day, it’s often the surrounding setup that makes the biggest difference long term.

Privacy, shelter, lighting, access from the house, and whether the space feels inviting on a cold February evening all play a surprisingly big role in how often a hot tub genuinely becomes part of everyday life.

A well-designed hot tub area doesn’t necessarily need to be extravagant. In many cases, a few thoughtful additions completely change how the space feels and functions.

Start With How You Want the Space to Feel

One of the most common mistakes people make is focusing entirely on the hot tub itself while treating the surrounding area almost as an afterthought.

In reality, the atmosphere around the spa is often what determines whether it becomes somewhere you naturally gravitate towards or something that only gets used occasionally.

Some people want an open, sociable garden space for entertaining friends and family. Others want something quieter and more private that feels separated from the rest of the garden.

Neither approach is right or wrong, but it’s worth thinking about early because it affects everything from positioning and lighting to the type of shelter that works best.

“The customers who end up using their hot tub the most are usually the ones who’ve thought carefully about the overall space, not just the spa itself.”

- Carla, Managing Director

Privacy Changes Everything

Privacy is probably the biggest factor people underestimate.

A hot tub can technically fit almost anywhere, but that doesn’t mean every position feels comfortable to use regularly. Even a beautiful setup can end up feeling exposed if neighbouring windows overlook the area or if the tub sits too openly within the garden.

That doesn’t always mean building something enclosed. Sometimes relatively simple additions make a huge difference:

  • slatted screening
  • planting
  • pergolas with curtains
  • clever positioning
  • changes in lighting

Often, it’s more about softening sightlines than completely blocking everything off.

The goal is usually to make the space feel relaxed and natural rather than boxed in.

Shelter Extends the Season

Most people imagine using a hot tub in summer.

The reality is many owners end up loving it even more in colder weather, particularly during autumn and winter. That’s where some form of overhead shelter can make a dramatic difference to comfort and usability.

Pergolas

Pergolas remain one of the most popular options because they add structure without making the space feel enclosed.

They work particularly well for customers who still want an open-air feel while adding some definition to the area. They also create opportunities for lighting, planting, outdoor speakers, or privacy screens without overwhelming the garden.

A pergola tends to suit:

  • contemporary gardens
  • social spaces
  • customers wanting partial shelter rather than full enclosure

Gazebos

Gazebos offer more substantial protection from rain and direct sun while still keeping the outdoor atmosphere.

These can work especially well in gardens where the hot tub area needs to feel more intentional or self-contained. Timber gazebos often soften larger spaces nicely, while more modern aluminium designs suit cleaner architectural gardens.

The key is scale. A structure that’s too dominant can quickly make the garden feel smaller or overly busy.

Covana Automatic Covers

Covana automatic covers sit in a category of their own because they combine security cover and shelter in one system.

When closed, the structure protects the spa and locks securely. At the touch of a button, it lifts to create a sleek roof above the hot tub.

For many customers, the biggest benefit is convenience. There’s no heavy manual cover handling, and the setup naturally encourages more frequent use because opening and closing the spa becomes effortless.

They also work particularly well in more exposed gardens where wind and weather would otherwise discourage regular use.

Garden Rooms Create a Different Type of Experience

At the more substantial end of the scale, garden rooms can completely transform how a hot tub integrates into the home.

Rather than simply covering the spa, they create a dedicated wellness space that can be used throughout the year regardless of weather conditions.

Some customers incorporate:

Done well, it feels less like “a hot tub in the garden” and more like an extension of the house itself.

That said, enclosed spaces need careful planning around ventilation, drainage, and access. A good installer or designer should help guide those decisions early in the process.

The Small Practical Details Matter More Than People Expect

In real ownership, it’s often the smaller practical details that affect how frequently a hot tub gets used.

Things like:

  • how far the walk is from the house
  • whether there’s shelter between the back door and the spa
  • where towels and robes are stored
  • whether there’s somewhere nearby to sit with a drink
  • whether lighting feels calm or harsh
  • whether the space feels usable on dark evenings

These aren’t particularly glamorous decisions, but they’re often the details that separate a setup that looks good from one that genuinely works well day-to-day.

“You can usually tell quite quickly which installations people are going to use all year round. It’s nearly always the ones where the practical side has been thought through properly.”

- Kenny, Operations Director

Creating a Space People Naturally Use

The best hot tub spaces rarely happen by accident.

They don’t necessarily need huge budgets or elaborate outdoor buildings, but they do benefit from thoughtful planning. A simple pergola, better lighting, improved privacy, or a more sheltered position can completely change how the area feels to use.

And ultimately, that’s what matters most.

Because the gardens people enjoy the most usually aren’t the ones that look the most impressive in photographs. They’re the ones that quietly become part of everyday life.

Why You Should Wet Test a Hot Tub Before You Buy (And What to Expect at Hot Tubs Oxfordshire)

Buying a hot tub is a significant investment. And like anything at this level, the more confident you feel before making a decision, the better the outcome.

One of the simplest ways to make the right choice is something many people overlook:

Actually getting in and trying one properly.

In this guide, we will walk you through:

  • Why a wet test is so important
  • What you will learn from it
  • What to expect during a wet test with us

Why Wet Testing Matters More Than You Think

Looking at a hot tub in a showroom can only tell you so much.

You can see the design, the size, and the features, but you cannot feel how it actually performs.

A wet test answers the questions most people have but cannot fully resolve just by looking.

Comfort and Seating

Every hot tub feels different once you are in it.

  • Seat depth varies
  • Lounge seats suit some people but not others
  • Jet positioning changes the experience entirely

What feels right for one person may not feel right for another. A wet test helps you find what actually works for you.

Jet Pressure and Massage Experience

This is one of the biggest differences between models.

Some tubs focus on gentle relaxation, while others offer a more powerful hydrotherapy experience.

Until you sit in the water and feel it for yourself, it is very difficult to judge what you will prefer.

Space and Layout

A hot tub might say it seats five or six people, but how that space is arranged matters.

During a wet test, you can:

  • Move between seats
  • Understand how much room you really have
  • See how it would feel with family or guests

Confidence in Your Decision

Most importantly, a wet test removes uncertainty.

We often see people arrive unsure and leave with a much clearer sense of what is right for them. It turns a maybe into something far more definite.

A good example is jet pressure. Someone might assume they want the most powerful jets available, only to realise after a few minutes that a more balanced, comfortable pressure is actually what they would enjoy using regularly.

That is exactly why trying before you buy matters.

If you are still narrowing down options, our guide on how to choose the right hot tub is a useful companion piece.

What to Expect During a Wet Test with Us

We have designed our wet test experience to be relaxed, private, and genuinely helpful, without any pressure.

A Private, Comfortable Setup

When you arrive, you will have access to a private changing room and dedicated wet test area.

No distractions, no feeling rushed. Just time to focus on how the hot tub actually feels.

Up to an Hour to Take Your Time

We allow up to an hour for your wet test.

This gives you time to:

  • Try different seats
  • Adjust jet settings
  • Get in and out as many times as you like
  • Compare different models if needed

Most importantly, it gives you time to settle into it. The first few minutes can feel very different from how it feels once you properly relax into it.

Everything You Need, Even If You Forget

We recommend bringing:

  • Swimwear
  • A towel

If you forget, it is not a problem. We have new swimwear and towels ready for you to use.

Refreshments During Your Visit

We offer refreshments while you are here, so you can relax and take your time.

The aim is to make the experience feel as close as possible to how you would actually use a hot tub at home.

Time to Talk It Through Afterwards

After your wet test, you can sit down with a coffee and go through everything.

We will talk through:

  • What you liked
  • What did not feel quite right
  • Which models are most likely to suit you

You will be speaking with someone experienced who can guide you honestly and help you make sense of the differences.

Do You Have to Wet Test Before Buying?

No, but we would strongly recommend it.

Some people feel confident without it, but many find that a wet test:

  • Confirms they are making the right choice
  • Helps them avoid choosing the wrong model
  • Makes the whole process much clearer

If you want to avoid the most common errors buyers make, our guide to hot tub buying mistakes is worth reading too.

Why Trying It Changes Everything

If you are considering a hot tub, the goal is not just to buy one. It is to choose the right one for you.

A wet test is the closest thing to experiencing ownership before making a decision.

That is what makes it so valuable.

Book Your Wet Test

If you would like to arrange a wet test, you can get in touch and we will book a time that suits you.

Alternatively, you can book directly here:

Book your wet test

We will make sure everything is ready so you can relax, take your time, and make the right decision with confidence.

Winterising Your Hot Tub: A Practical, No-Nonsense Guide

Some owners love winter soaks; others prefer to close the spa until spring. Either way, the goal is the same: avoid freeze damage, avoid stagnant water problems, and make reopening simple. This guide explains when to keep your tub running, when to use a low-temperature economy mode, when to fully winterise, and how to do each safely.

First decision: keep it running, low-temp economy, or shut it down?

Option A - Keep it running (most common in the UK)

Modern spas are efficient, have freeze-protection modes, and can be enjoyed year-round with a good cover. If you’ll use the tub, or the property won’t be empty for long stretches, this is usually simpler. See BISHTA’s winter usage advice for UK owners: bishta.co.uk.

Option B - Keep it running on a low setpoint or in economy mode (a great middle way)

If you don’t plan to use the spa often but don’t want the faff of a full shutdown (followed by recommissioning come spring), set the temperature to the lowest allowable setpoint or enable your spa’s Economy/Rest/Auto-heat mode (naming varies by brand).

  • Why it helps: circulating, lightly heated water protects pumps, seals, unions, and heaters by preventing long periods of stagnation and reducing start-stop thermal stress.
  • Freeze risk drops: most modern control systems will circulate and apply heat automatically if sensors detect low temperatures; keeping water in motion also makes pipe freezing far less likely than in a drained-but-damp system.
  • Running costs stay sensible: a tight, well-insulated cover (and an optional floating thermal blanket) plus a low setpoint trims energy use while keeping the system “alive”.
  • What to check: confirm your model’s freeze-protection behaviour, filtration schedule, and how Economy/Rest modes heat (some only heat during filter cycles). See your owner’s manual: Hot Spring owners’ resources.

Option C - Fully winterise

Best if the tub will sit idle for weeks in freezing weather or the power may be off. This means draining completely, clearing water from plumbing, and protecting the shell and equipment until spring. Always follow your model’s owner’s manual for specifics: Hot Spring manuals hub.

Health note: Never leave warm standing water untreated in a dormant spa. Stagnant, under-chlorinated water can support Legionella. If you are not actively circulating and sanitising, drain it. See CDC guidance: cdc.gov.

If you’re keeping the tub running

  • Use the cover religiously. A well-fitting, insulated cover reduces heat loss and keeps debris out. Locking straps are a safety essential, and ensure that the cover is in no danger of being blown open. See BISHTA safety tips: bishta.co.uk.
  • Check chemistry weekly. Cold air, holiday bather loads, and wet weather can nudge water balance.
  • Watch the weather. Your spa’s control system should circulate and heat automatically if temperatures drop, but verify freeze-protection in your owner’s manual: Hot Spring owners’ resources.

If you’re fully winterising: a step-by-step

Work on a day above freezing. If water freezes as you drain, you can trap ice in lines and pumps.
  1. Power down safely
    Trip the spa’s RCD/GFCI and isolate power before you drain so no pump can run dry. Your manual shows the correct breaker. Example walkthrough: Hot Spring’s guide hotspring.com.

  2. Deep clean while it’s full
    Add a line-flush product and run pumps per instructions to lift biofilm, then drain. This makes spring start-up easier and reduces risk from residues.

  3. Drain completely
    Open the primary drain and any auxiliary drains. A small submersible pump speeds this up.

  4. Remove standing water from the pipes and jets
    Remove filters. Use a wet/dry vacuum on each jet, suction fitting, filter well, and the drain to remove standing water from the pipes and jets. If you can access the equipment bay, briefly loosen the pump unions and vacuum there too, then refit hand-tight. This step is the real protection against freeze damage. Independent technique detail: swimuniversity.com.

  5. Open pump drain plugs if fitted
    Many wet ends have small drain plugs on the face plate. Remove to let residual water out, then refit after everything is dry. Example walkthrough: spacare.com.

  6. Antifreeze? Only if your manufacturer approves
    Some manufacturers suggest non-toxic propylene glycol as extra insurance in hard-to-purge lines. Others caution it can void warranties or be difficult to clean out. If you use it, it must be propylene glycol only (never automotive ethylene glycol), and you must flush thoroughly before refilling in spring. Check your manual and dealer advice for your model.
    - Example allowing propylene glycol: Hot Spring guide hotspring.com.
    - Example UK retailer caution: Penguin Spas note penguinspas.com.

  7. Dry the shell and fittings
    Towel the shell, headrest recesses, and footwell.

  8. Cover and secure
    Fit the main cover, strap it down, and consider a protective cap or bag in exposed locations to keep wind-driven rain and snow off the seam. Example UK cover caps: happyhottubs.co.uk.

  9. Occasional visual checks
    After heavy snow or storms, brush off the cover, confirm straps are sound, and check the cabinet for damage.

What about standards and safety?

For domestic spas in the UK, BS EN 17125:2018 is the relevant product safety standard. It’s the UK adoption of the European EN 17125 - same text, UK cover. You can’t read the full document for free, but these open summaries explain the scope and exclusions clearly:

  • EN 17125 scope summary (portable/inflatable hot tubs, exercise/spa pools, Scandinavian tubs, associated equipment): standards.iteh.ai
  • EN 17125 overview with “not applicable to” list (e.g., public pools, mini-pools EN 16927, paddling pools EN 71-8, bathtubs, flotation tanks): genorma.com

Why this matters for UK readers: BSI adopts European Standards as British Standards, so EN 17125 is BS EN 17125 in the UK. Use these summaries for a shareable explanation of what the standard covers, then follow your manufacturer’s UK manual for model-specific steps.

Quick FAQs

Do I really need to winterise in the UK?
Not if you’ll keep using the spa and you can maintain power and water care. Many UK owners run tubs all winter with no issues when covered and maintained: bishta.co.uk.

Is antifreeze mandatory?
No. The key is removing water from the plumbing. Antifreeze may be recommended by some brands as extra insurance, but others discourage it. Check your owner’s manual and warranty terms before adding anything. Hot Spring example: hotspring.com.

Why all the fuss about leaving water in the tub?
Warm, under-sanitised water can allow bacteria like Legionella to grow. If you’re not circulating and chlorinating, drain it. CDC guidance: cdc.gov.

Handy links

  • BISHTA winter usage advice — staying safe and comfortable through winter: bishta.co.uk
  • Hot Spring UK manuals hub — model-specific do’s and don’ts: hotspringhottubs.co.uk
  • Hot Spring winterising walkthrough — one manufacturer’s process, including propylene glycol notes: hotspring.com
  • CDC: preventing Legionella from hot tubs — why stagnant water is a risk: cdc.gov
  • EN 17125 scope summaries (free to read):
    iTeh Standards: standards.iteh.ai
    Genorma overview: genorma.com

Bottom line
If you’ll use your spa and can maintain power, keeping it running with a good cover is simple and safe. If you’ll use it rarely, the low-setpoint/economy route keeps systems protected and energy use sensible while dramatically reducing freeze risk by keeping water in motion. If you’ll not use it for weeks in freezing weather or power may be cut, fully winterise: drain, remove standing water from the pipes and jets, dry, and secure. Above all, follow your owner’s manual for model-specific steps, and don’t leave warm water sitting untreated.