Toilet Spray vs Bathroom Spray: What’s the Difference?
Bathroom spray and toilet spray sound like they do the same thing.
They do not.
Bathroom spray is aftercare. Toilet spray is prevention. One tries to fix the air. One helps stop the problem getting there.
That difference matters when someone is waiting outside the bathroom.

What Is Bathroom Spray?
Bathroom spray is late to the problem.
It is used after a smell is already in the room. You spray the air. The fragrance spreads. Sometimes it works. Sometimes the room just smells like the original issue plus a cover-up.
Bathroom spray is useful for general room freshness. But for toilet smells, it is damage control.
What Is Toilet Spray?
Toilet spray gets there first.
You spray it into the toilet bowl before use, then flush after. The goal is to help stop odour before it spreads into the bathroom.
Less room cloud. Less cover-up. Less evidence.

The Main Difference
One apologises. One prevents.
Bathroom spray is used after smells are in the air. Toilet spray is used before smells spread. That is the entire advantage.
For toilet smells, prevention is quieter, cleaner, and far less obvious.
Choose the Right Tool
One is for the space. One is for social safety.
Bathroom spray still has a place. Use it for the background: bins, damp towels, or quick room resets.
Toilet spray is for the moment. It is for shared bathrooms, guests, thin walls, and anywhere the next person might walk in too soon.
Basically, most real-life bathrooms.
Why Gleamier Works for This
Built for the moment before it gets awkward.
Gleamier London’s Before You Go Toilet Spray does not blast the room into pretending nothing happened. It gets there first and handles the problem early.
Spray before. Flush after. Leave normally.

The Point
The point is not more fragrance. The point is less evidence.
If you want general freshness, bathroom spray can help. If you want to stop toilet smells before they spread, use a toilet spray before you go.
Smells happen. It’s handled.