Small Bathroom Smart Toilet Ideas (Miami Condo Edition)

Why size matters more than you think
In a 30-square-foot Miami condo bathroom, the toilet typically eats 6–8 square feet. A traditional two-piece toilet visually eats much more because the tank silhouette breaks up the wall. Switching to a one-piece or wall-hung smart toilet can make the same bathroom feel 20% larger before you change a single tile.
Wall-hung is the dramatic option
The FlowLux Lunar floats off the wall — the tank lives inside a carrier system behind the drywall. You free up roughly 9 inches of floor space, the bowl appears to hover, and cleaning underneath becomes effortless. Best for powder rooms, half-baths, and small primary bathrooms where every visual inch matters.
One-piece is the smart middle ground
If wall-hung is too much surgery, a one-piece smart toilet like the FlowLux Halo or Pulsar gives you most of the visual lift without opening a wall. The tank is integrated into the bowl, so the silhouette is short and sculptural — no rectangular tank breaking the line.
Skip the bulky lever handle
Smart toilets flush by foot sensor, auto-sense, or remote. That eliminates the lever and chrome plate cluttering the side — a small detail that quietly cleans up the entire profile.
Hidden controls > visible controls
The FlowLux Halo and Eclipse use a slim, top-mounted control strip instead of a side panel — keeps the side profile minimal in tight spaces where a panel could feel cluttered.
Mirror & lighting still matter
A smart toilet pulls weight, but pair it with a frameless mirror, recessed lighting, and a wall-mounted faucet to compound the effect. Miami condo bathrooms with all four feel genuinely larger than their square footage.
Our small-bathroom picks
Wall-hung first — FlowLux Lunar. One-piece second — FlowLux Halo. Tightest budget — FlowLux Pulsar. If you can't replace the bowl at all, the FlowLux Arc bidet attachment ($99) at least gives you smart-toilet hygiene without changing the silhouette.
