The 60-inch vanity is the sweet spot of bathroom design. Wide enough for a generous single-sink configuration with real counter space, just barely wide enough for a double sink if you're willing to keep faucets compact, and the size that fits the largest share of primary bathrooms in American homes. If you've been measuring and 60 keeps coming up as the right number, you're in good company. The Vanderloc 60-inch vanity options span six collections — and choosing between them comes down to whether you want single or double, wood grain or painted finish, and how much vertical drawer storage you need.
The Vanderloc 60-inch vanity is offered across the Rift White Oak, Ventura, Avalon, Gilded, and LeCrieu collections, in single or double-sink configurations, custom-built in 21 days at their American facility. Yala Vanity carries the full Vanderloc lineup including matching Silestone® quartz tops and faucet programs. Free shipping on every order across the USA.
Why 60 Inches Is the Right Vanity Width
Sixty inches is the dimension that works in two very different bathrooms. In a generous primary suite, it's a single-sink setup with a wide makeup counter on one side — the configuration interior designers reach for when the room can support it because nothing makes a vanity feel more upscale than usable counter space beyond the sink. In a tighter primary bath, 60 inches is the minimum width that supports two sinks without the faucets feeling crowded and the counter looking divided.
The decision between single and double at 60 inches comes down to how many people use the bathroom in the morning. Two adults sharing a primary bath generally want two sinks — and 60 inches works if you're willing to use compact faucets and accept that there's not much counter between them. One adult, or two who don't share morning routines, often prefer a single sink with the extra counter for hair products, makeup brushes, or just visual breathing room.
60 inches is also the size that converts cleanly from existing 60-inch plumbing rough-ins, which means you can usually replace an old 60-inch vanity with a new one without paying a plumber to relocate drains.
The Vanderloc 60-Inch Lineup, Collection by Collection
Rift White Oak
The natural-grain choice. Rift White Oak comes in single 36-inch and double 60-inch standard sizes, with the rift-cut grain running vertically across drawer fronts and door panels. The double 60-inch (model RWD6-60) is the headline configuration — six drawers across the front, paired sinks, and the kind of warm wood tone that pairs well with primary baths leaning into spa or Japandi aesthetics. If your room has a lot of cool stone or tile, the rift oak is the move that warms it back up.
Ventura
The most flexible 60-inch option. Ventura comes in both freestanding and floating configurations, with single and double-sink layouts, and an integrated countertop variant for a more sculptural look. The Four-Drawer Double Bath Vanity in 60-inch is the workhorse — symmetrical, available in the full painted finish palette, and the right answer if your design language is transitional rather than fully traditional or fully modern. The floating Ventura is what you specify if the bathroom design needs the visual lightness of seeing the floor continue under the cabinet.
Avalon
Built around the four-tall-storage program, Avalon is the answer when your 60-inch width needs to coordinate with floor-to-ceiling storage on either side. The 60-inch Avalon double vanity (AVD6-60) pairs cleanly with Avalon Tall Storage Models 1 through 4, giving you a built-in look without the cabinet-shop price.
Gilded
The detail-forward collection. Gilded brings a more layered cabinet face — multiple-drawer stacks, exposed-grain panels, and a finish program that reads more "interior design firm" than catalog. The 60-inch double Gilded works in primary suites where the cabinetry is meant to be the first thing you notice walking in.
LeCrieu
The classical option. LeCrieu sits in the more traditional end of the Vanderloc range, with raised-panel doors and proportions drawn from a more formal design vocabulary. The 60-inch double works in master suites with paneling, wainscoting, or other traditional millwork already in place.
Single vs Double at 60 Inches
The case for single-sink at 60 inches is wider counter space. With one sink centered (or offset to one side), you get 30-plus inches of usable counter beside it — real estate for makeup, electric toothbrush charging, the small stack of jewelry trays that always lives next to a sink. For a primary bath used mostly by one person, this is almost always the right call.
The case for double-sink at 60 inches is morning-routine logistics. Two people brushing teeth at the same time, two getting ready at the same time, no waiting. The tradeoff is counter width — you'll have maybe 6 to 8 inches between the two sinks plus a few inches outside each, which is enough for the essentials but not for spread-out grooming setups.
One useful middle ground: an offset single sink. The Vanderloc 73" Silestone® Quartz Vanity Top Double Rectangle Offset Sink isn't a 60, but the same offset thinking applies if you have a custom-width 60-inch top cut with one sink positioned to one side. You get a 36-plus-inch usable counter zone on the other side without giving up the option to add a second sink later if needed.
Finish, Top, and Faucet Choices
The Vanderloc cabinet finish palette includes matte black, chalky blue, deep forest green, warm white, soft greige, and smoky charcoal as standards. Custom paint extends to any Sherwin-Williams or Benjamin Moore color, which is the route to take if you're matching adjacent millwork or specifying for a designer's mood board. The Rift White Oak collection ships with the natural rift-cut grain visible — a stainable option rather than painted.
The Silestone® quartz top decision for a 60-inch vanity is mostly about sink shape: rectangle (modern, more usable depth) versus Vigo (subtly curved, more traditional). For a single sink at 60 inches, centered is the conventional placement; for an offset single, decide which side gets the extra counter based on how the bathroom is laid out (typically the side opposite the door so the counter zone doesn't feel like a hallway).
Faucet programs include single-handle wall mount, two-handle wall mount, single-hole, 8-inch widespread, and vessel options. Match the drilling pattern on your top to the faucet you're planning — Yala Vanity coordinates this so you don't end up with the wrong configuration.
Lead Time and Ordering
Vanderloc builds and ships your custom 60-inch vanity in 21 days from order confirmation — start to finish, including the painted finish curing time. That's substantially faster than the 8-to-12-week lead times typical of comparable cabinet shops. For a renovation it means you can finalize specifications after demolition and still have the vanity on site within a month.
The vanity ships fully assembled in a protective wooden crate via curbside delivery with liftgate. You'll want professional installation lined up — a 60-inch vanity is heavy enough that two people with a hand truck are the minimum setup.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Vanderloc 60-inch vanity is right for a primary suite?
It depends on your design language. Rift White Oak for warm natural-grain primary baths, Ventura for transitional designs (and the only collection offering both freestanding and floating), Gilded for detail-forward cabinet-as-feature designs, LeCrieu for traditional or paneled rooms. The Yala Vanity team can help match a collection to your bathroom's existing aesthetic.
Can I get a single sink in a 60-inch Vanderloc vanity?
Yes. Most Vanderloc collections offer single-sink configurations at 60 inches alongside the double-sink option. Pair with a custom-cut Silestone® quartz top with the sink centered or offset — offset gives you a wider counter zone on one side, which is useful for makeup or styling setups.
How much does a Vanderloc 60-inch vanity cost?
Pricing varies meaningfully across collections — the Rift White Oak natural-grain finish, Ventura's painted palette, and the more detail-heavy Gilded all sit at different price points. Configuration matters too: single vs double sink, freestanding vs floating, finish selection. The Yala Vanity team can build a real quote for your exact specification.
How long does a 60-inch Vanderloc vanity take to deliver?
Vanderloc's production lead time is 21 days from order confirmation, including any custom width or finish customization. Add a few days for transit. That's roughly half the lead time you'd see from comparable cabinet shops, because Vanderloc's facility is built around custom production rather than treating it as a one-off.
Can the 60-inch vanity be customized to a different width?
Yes. If your wall opening is closer to 58 or 62 inches, Vanderloc will build the cabinet to your exact dimension in 1-inch increments using the same collection silhouette and finish program. The matching Silestone® quartz top is sized to fit. Lead time stays at 21 days.
The Bottom Line on a 60-Inch Vanderloc Vanity
Sixty inches is the most versatile vanity width in residential bathrooms — wide enough for a single-sink layout with real counter space, narrow enough to fit primary suites that aren't oversized, and the dimension where Vanderloc offers the broadest collection range. Whether the right answer is a Rift White Oak natural-grain single, a transitional Ventura double, a detail-forward Gilded, or a traditional LeCrieu, the 21-day American build means you don't trade speed for craftsmanship.
For more on what makes Vanderloc different, read our Vanderloc bathroom vanity review. Browse current 60-inch options in the Vanderloc collection at Yala Vanity, or compare across other premium brands in our luxury bathroom vanities collection.
Written by the Yala Vanity team — curators of luxury bathroom fixtures for discerning homeowners and design professionals. Trying to choose between Rift White Oak and Ventura for your 60-inch primary? Our team offers personalized guidance for your renovation.