Hi Nick,
Rather than just jumping straight to a technical solution and without being flippant I am wondering what the problem is that needs fixing here i.e. why do you want to automate the fans in the first place?
If you are using decentralised ventilation (i.e not doing MVHR etc) there is very little benefit and a lot of cost in trying to control several individual fans via Loxone in my opinion.
By far the simplest approach for ventilation would be something like the Envirovent ECO dMEV+HT-LC Centrifugal Extractor Fan with Humidistat & Timer (assuming UK based) - it will sit there completely happily and almost silently doing its own thing - easy to set up and just works - just supply it permanent mains via T&E and thats it. Retail is about £100 inc vat,
Slightly more complicated would be to use completely dumb fans wired back to a Loxone relay and control via simple logic such that if bathroom lights (could be triggered via light switch or presence sensor) go on for longer than x time the fan will run on for y - you can also then add things like not running the fan with house in night mode etc - drawback is that simple fans tend to be noisy as they are cheap. Vent Axia do some very quiet dumb fans but they were about £80 a throw.
I have done this in the past mainly for downstairs WC's in customer's houses where the WC is in the middle of the house and they don't necessrily want the noise of a fan intruding. £30 for Fan, £40 for a relay channel assuming using Loxone Relay Extension, plus sparks time to run in a cable to Loxone panel from each fan plus programming, plus panel space etc, I suspect about £200+ all in? But on the upside you can also run the mirror demister pad in parallel.
Also bare in mind that you will still need to fit local isolation of each fan on the outside of bathrooms for maintainance even if you go for a fancy control mechanism via Loxone.
Sensing waterflow in pipework or using humidity sensors to me is a last resort as the solution cost massively outweighs the gains - without further insight into your use case, maybe you live near the sea with a prevailing onshore breeze?, I would say there is unlikely to be any need to go further than the above apart from the "because I can" approach
Personally we have designed MVHR into our new build and that will be controlled to a degree via Loxone but only so far as a boost mode override to allow purge ventilation on a schedule, if the house overheats, or if the Radon sensors trigger - it will also cut out if the smoke alarms or misting system (fancy low water usage sprinkler system as house is a timber frame) are triggered - otherwise it will just carry on doing what it does without any other input.
Paul