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304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
My own bathroom remodel stalled because I could not find a vanity that did the basics well without inventing new problems. A single-sink unit, decent storage, and a mirror that did not fog up the minute I turned on the shower proved surprisingly difficult to source from the usual big-box offerings. A friend in construction mentioned the LUTHXAY vanity review and rating he had seen cross his desk, specifically the 52-inch freestanding model with the LED smart mirror. I was wary — integrated electronics in wet zones and marble-look countertops from an online-only brand usually end in regret or another return trip. But the specs read better than most, and the price sat in that uncomfortable zone where it could be a genuine value or a painful lesson. I ordered one to find out which.
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I have tested dozens of bathroom vanities in this price range for Home & Garden by Prime, and most fail on assembly complexity, storage layout, or the quality of the included mirror. Before diving into the tests, you can check current pricing on the LUTHXAY vanity if you want to compare as you read.
LUTHXAY positions this vanity as a modern, space-saving solution that combines a solid wood cabinet with a marble slate countertop and a smart LED mirror. The manufacturer, based on its product copy, expects you to believe the unit offers luxury materials, clever engineering, and thoughtful technology at a price that undercuts traditional bathroom cabinetry. I looked at the brand’s official Amazon storefront to verify the specific claims before testing.
The claims about the mirror and the countertop were the ones I approached with the most skepticism. Integrated electronics in a bathroom vanity are notorious for failing after a few months, and the “marble slate” description often describes printed particleboard rather than actual stone. I needed to see if the evidence supported the marketing or contradicted it.

The vanity arrived in three separate boxes, as the product description warns. The main cabinet box weighed about 85 pounds and was double-walled cardboard with foam corner inserts. The countertop and mirror each came in their own boxes with similar protection. Nothing was cracked or dented, which surprised me given the shipping distance and the fact that the marble slate top is heavy and brittle.
Contents included the cabinet body, the solid wood doors and drawer front, the marble slate countertop with an integrated sink, the smart LED mirror, a faucet, supply lines, a pop-up drain assembly, and a hardware bag. The faucet felt light — zinc alloy, not brass — which was the first sign of a corner cut. The missing item was the electrical socket that the product description explicitly says you must pre-run. No power cord, no plug; the mirror and cabinet lights terminate in bare wires. Plan for an electrician.
One pleasant surprise: the cabinet construction uses actual plywood, not MDF or particleboard. The drawer box slides on full-extension ball-bearing rails, which is unusual at this price. One less pleasant discovery: the “assembly required” is not minor. You mount the countertop, attach the mirror, hang the doors, and wire the lights. Budget three hours minimum if you have basic tools and are handy. If you are not handy, double it.

I evaluated five performance dimensions over three weeks of daily use in a primary bathroom with a family of four: storage capacity and accessibility, countertop durability and waterproofness, mirror defogging effectiveness, sensor lighting reliability, and overall installation difficulty. I also compared it side-by-side with a 48-inch Kohler vanity I installed last year and a 54-inch Home Decorators Collection model in a rental property. These comparisons helped isolate what was genuinely good about the LUTHXAY from what was merely average for the price bracket.
Normal use included two showers per day with the bathroom door closed and the ventilation fan running, morning and evening grooming sessions with a hair dryer and curling iron, and weekly wipe-downs with standard bathroom cleaner. For stress testing, I intentionally let the mirror run for 20 minutes after a hot shower without touching the defogger, then activated it. I also splashed water directly onto the countertop seam where the slate meets the sink and left it for four hours to check for seepage.
A pass meant the product performed acceptably for its price point. Genuinely impressive meant it matched or exceeded options costing 30% more. Disappointing meant a $1,900 vanity should have done better — either the material quality, the fit, or the function fell short of what you could get from a similarly priced competitor. I did not grade on a curve for “good for the money” because the product is not cheap. The standard was whether I would recommend it to someone spending real dollars on their home.

Claim: The floating suspended design frees floor space and facilitates cleaning.
What we found: The vanity is designed for wall-mounting, and the floating profile does create an open floor area underneath. Cleaning with a mop or a dust mop is straightforward, and the height adjustment works as advertised. However, mounting it securely requires hitting studs or using heavy-duty toggle bolts. The provided brackets are adequate but not overengineered. The floor clearance is about six inches at its lowest setting and up to ten inches at the highest.
Verdict:
Confirmed
Claim: The marble rock plate countertop is waterproof, scratch-resistant, and durable.
What we found: The countertop is a composite slate product — it looks and feels like stone but is lighter and less cold to the touch. It resisted scratches from normal use (toothbrush holders, soap dishes). Water beaded on the surface and wiped clean without residue. The integrated sink bowl is the same material and does not stain after three weeks of use. I would not drop a heavy cast-iron object on it, but for daily bathroom use, it held up.
Verdict:
Confirmed
Claim: The smart LED fog removal mirror instantly clears fog and provides soft lighting.
What we found: The defogger works, but “instant” is optimistic. After a hot shower with the bathroom door closed and no fan, the mirror took about 90 seconds to clear fully when the defogger was activated. That is acceptable. The LED lighting around the mirror is warm white (approximately 3000K) and provides even illumination for shaving and makeup application. The mirror is hardwired, not plug-in, so an electrician is necessary unless you are comfortable with wiring.
Verdict:
Partially Confirmed
Claim: The smart sensor lighting system automatically lights up when you approach.
What we found: The motion sensor on the bottom of the cabinet activates the under-cabinet LED strip with about a one-second delay. It works reliably in a dark bathroom but is less sensitive in bright daylight. The sensor range is roughly six feet. Once triggered, the light stays on for about two minutes after the last movement. This is functional and adds to the bathroom’s convenience, though the sensor’s placement near the floor means it can be triggered by pets or children walking past.
Verdict:
Confirmed
Claim: Ample storage space combines spacious drawers with closet door storage.
What we found: The single drawer is large — approximately 24 inches wide, 12 inches deep, and 6 inches tall — and holds toiletries, hair tools, and small items. The cabinet door opens to a compartment with an adjustable shelf. The total storage volume is about 5.5 cubic feet, which is good for a 52-inch vanity but not exceptional. The soft-close drawer glides worked smoothly throughout testing. The door also has a soft-close hinge that prevented slamming.
Verdict:
Confirmed
Overall, the testing broadly confirmed the marketing claims. The vanity does what it says, and the materials are genuinely better than what most online-only brands use at this price. The mirror defogger is the only area where the claim oversells the reality. If you want a vanity that looks custom but costs less than local millwork, the LUTHXAY vanity review and rating points toward a buy for most people.
Mounting the vanity takes more than an hour because you have to level it, secure it to the wall, then attach the countertop, faucet, and mirror. The manual is printed on thin paper with small diagrams. It assumes you know how to install a wall-mount vanity. If you have not done one before, watch a video first. Wiring the mirror and cabinet lights requires a junction box and a switch, or you can connect them to the sink’s outlet if your local code allows it. Plan for an electrician visit unless you are confident around live wires.
After three weeks, the drawer glides and door hinges showed no signs of loosening. The wood surface needs periodic treatment with a water-resistant wood conditioner, especially around the sink area. The LED strips are rated for thousands of hours, but if one fails, it is not a simple swap — the strips are integrated into the mirror frame and the cabinet. Over six to twelve months, the combination of steam and direct water splashes will test the seal where the countertop meets the sink. I suspect that is where failures will occur first. For maintenance advice, check our guide on bathroom sealant care.
Of the $1,887.66 price, roughly 40% goes to the solid wood cabinet with soft-close hardware and plywood construction. About 30% covers the marble slate countertop and integrated sink. The smart LED mirror and sensor lighting account for another 20%. The remainder is the included faucet, packaging, and shipping. The cabinet construction and the countertop are where the value lies. The electronics are acceptable but not premium. Compared to a 52-inch vanity from a major retailer like Kohler or American Standard, which can cost $1,200 to $1,800 without a smart mirror, the LUTHXAY offers more features for a similar base price. But the installation complexity and the wiring requirement mean total cost of ownership is higher if you hire an electrician.
| Product | Price | Key Strength | Key Weakness | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LUTHXAY 52-inch | $1,887.66 | Smart mirror + motion sensor lighting in solid wood cabinet | Installation complexity, wiring required, basic faucet | Tech-forward buyers who want integrated lighting and mirror defogger |
| Kohler 48-inch Caxton | $1,550 | Superior faucet hardware, simpler installation, brand warranty | No smart mirror, no sensor lighting, particleboard cabinet | Traditionalists who prioritize reliability over features |
| Home Decorators Collection 54-inch | $1,320 | Largest storage, solid wood frame, easy plug-in installation | Standard mirror, no defogger, less stylish design | Budget-focused diyers who want maximum storage per dollar |
At $1,887.66, the LUTHXAY vanity is fairly priced for what it delivers. The solid wood construction and the integrated electronics would cost more if bought separately. But the total cost of ownership includes an electrician for the wiring, a better faucet, and the time spent on a complex installation. If you value the smart mirror, the sensor lighting, and the clean floating look, the price is justified. If those features do not matter to you, you can save $500 to $800 on a simpler unit from a name brand.
Price verified at time of writing. Check for current deals.
If you have the budget for an electrician and you want a vanity that looks and feels like it cost $2,500 without actually spending that much, this is a solid buy. The solid wood cabinet and the marble slate countertop are the real strengths. The included faucet and the complexity of the wiring are the downsides. If you are handy and willing to spend a day on installation, you will end up with a bathroom centerpiece that functions well and looks good. If you just want something that works out of the box, go with a simpler model from a local showroom.
Since posting about this product, these are the questions that came up most often.
Yes, if you value the integrated smart mirror and sensor lighting. The solid wood construction alone would cost $1,200 to $1,500 from a name brand. Add the mirror and lighting, and the price makes sense. But if you do not need those features, you can find a comparable 52-inch vanity for $1,300 that will serve you just as well.
After three weeks of daily use, no issues. The drawer glides remain smooth, the soft-close hinges still work, and the countertop shows no scratches or stains. The long-term concern is the seal around the sink. If water works its way under the countertop edge over time, the composite material could delaminate. Apply a good silicone seal during installation and check it annually.
Yes, and I would not call it difficult, just time-consuming and requiring specific tools. You need a drill, a level, a stud finder, and a silicone caulk gun. The manual is minimal. If you have installed a wall-mount vanity before, you will figure it out. If you have not, plan for a full Saturday.
That the vanity requires hardwiring. The product description mentions it, but I did not fully grasp the implication. I had to call an electrician to run a new line from the breaker panel because my bathroom lacked a junction box near the desired mount location. That added $250 to the total cost.
The Kohler is easier to install, has a better faucet, and is backed by a more established warranty. But it lacks the smart mirror, the sensor lighting, and the floating design. The Kohler cabinet is particleboard, not solid wood. For the same price range, the LUTHXAY offers better materials and more features, but the Kohler is simpler and more reliable day one.
You will need a better faucet — plan on $80 to $150 for a brushed nickel or matte black option that feels more substantial than the included one. You also need silicone caulk, toggle bolts if your studs are not aligned, and a junction box with a cover plate. No additional accessories are necessary for the mirror or cabinet lighting to function.
After checking several retailers, this is where I would buy it — Amazon provides the best return policy and authenticity guarantee, and the price is the same across their storefront. The manufacturer also offers a 30-day return window if the product arrives damaged or is not as described. Avoid third-party marketplaces with less clear return policies.
If you shower in a steamy bathroom and value a clear mirror immediately, yes. The defogger works in about 90 seconds. The LED lighting is also a convenient feature if your bathroom lacks good task lighting. But if you already have a separate ventilation fan that clears steam quickly, a standard mirror with a plug-in defogger may be more cost-effective.
The testing established three things clearly. First, the LUTHXAY vanity uses better materials than most of its online competitors — solid plywood and a genuine composite slate countertop justify the price. Second, the smart mirror and motion sensor lighting work as intended, though the sensor placement and the defogger speed leave room for improvement. Third, the installation complexity and the need for an electrician mean the total cost of ownership is higher than the sticker price. If you factor in professional installation and a better faucet, you are looking at approximately $2,200 to $2,300 all in. For that, you get a vanity that looks custom and functions well. For someone willing to handle the wiring or pay for it, the recommendation is a conditional buy. If you are not comfortable with a full-day install and an electrician call, pass.
The one upgrade I would want in a future version is a simpler, plug-and-play electrical connection for the mirror and lights. That alone would remove the biggest barrier to buying this vanity. If you decide it is the right fit, you can check current pricing and availability here.
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