This week I wrapped up my first bathroom renovation. (Well, almost.) Having never done a bathroom renovation I didn’t really know what I was getting into. I remember thinking, how much could it really cost? This room is tiny! For today’s post I am going to outline all of my costs from start to finish. I realize that each bathroom comes with its own challenges and issues and this is simply one experience.
Like most people, I wanted to maximize what was already there to keep costs down. I kept the tub and tile surround and had it professionally epoxy coated in bright, shiny white which is only recommended for older, quality tubs not made from plastic. I also kept the double vanity, the overhead cabinets, and the newer white toilet.
Let it be noted that I am located in New Hampshire (I am not paying big city prices) and that I did not make a "budget." I did however do a ton of price comparison research. For the spraying of my tub for example, I had 3-5 different companies give quotes, and as a general rule, I tend to go with the least expensive. (Even though people say not to.)
THE PROCESS
Demo: My father, brother and I tore up the brown moldy tile that was on the floor and walls. For this, you only need a crow bar, a hammer, and some gusto. We also removed the subfloor since it was sinking in by the toilet and smelled of urine. I removed the rusty lighting fixtures, the built in storage that covered the mirror over the vanity, the human-sized, built in medicine cabinet (opposite the vanity) which had double mirrors, all cabinet hardware, main door hinges (yes these were also rusty), door knob, and the shower head.
COST: Free
Drywall & Cement Board: The toilet was removed by a plumber, and the sub-floor was rebuilt using a layer of plywood topped with a layer of DUROCK. The drywall used in the bathroom was blueboard which has a better moisture barrier. After the drywall is hung, next comes taping, mudding, sanding and priming.
COST: Less than $100 for materials. Dad is a drywaller.
Tile: I chose basic white tile I found for .99 cents a piece at a Tent Sale and hired a professional to install it. It took him a lot longer than I expected due to the unevenness of the floor.
COST: $30 for tile and $375 flat charge for leveling and installation.
Tub & Surround: I opted to paint this area rather than rip it out. It's less mess and less expensive. The downfall is that the walls may be moldy behind the old tile and I can not update the shower system.
COST: $575 flat charge for tub and surround.
Plumbing: Included removal and re-setting of toilet with new wax ring, two new traps for sinks, hot and cold water plumbing for vanity sinks, installing a new plug system for shower, and installing new faucets.
COST: $450 (at $50 per hour plus materials)
Electrical: I wanted a really powerful vent and light system for this bathroom since I had witnessed how musty and damp it was before the renovation. The least offensive one I could find was from Hunter. I also chose very inexpensive vanity lights in chrome. I didn’t have much choice here since I needed to mount the lights hanging face down and not on the wall.
COST: $155 for fixtures plus $200 for labor (at $60 per hour)
Cabinets: I enlisted the help of friends and sanded, bin sealed, re-sanded, and painted all cabinets. They took three coats! Later in the process I hired a painter to paint the two small walls and caulk and paint the new trim white. I searched for months for hinges that fit these cabinets and have a classic feel and finally found these. The knobs are from Anthropologie.
COST: Hardware: $150 Painting supplies and labor: $300 (at $20 per hour)
Carpentry: Included installing sub-floor, removing life size medicine cabinet, re-trimming door, adding molding to the top of mirror, removing old counter top, and rebuilding existing vanity for new top.
COST: $280 (at $35 per hour plus materials)
Vanity: I have always wanted a Carerra marble counter top so I went for it. From picking out the stone, template and install, it was a two month process. This space is incredibly tight and awkwardly shaped, and as a result the sinks and counter top were not installed properly the first time. Thankfully, they got it right the second time. Under-mount sinks should be centered within the cut outs and there should not be more than a quarter inch overhang/ gap from sink to counter top.
COST: $1,374 with sinks and faucets.
Miscellaneous: I had to replace the brass doorknob and the door hinges too!
COST: $130
GRAND TOTAL: $4,119
Images: Tanya Lacourse
Post Originally Published: 3.18.2010 - JL













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this bathroom is beautiful!!!!
It looks great! The tub surround looks really good painted white, I love the shape of the tiles. Thanks so much for getting into detail about your process and costs, it's really helpful for people like me with no reno experience!
I LOVE those colors. beautiful job, and it's very good to read the real-life details of a reno.
That is awesome! I love the cabinets that are up high. Please come to my house and give me ideas on what to do with my bathroom
Good job on keeping costs down. With a double bathroom renovation underway, we are already about about $12000... I'm impressed with all you did yourself.
Great job with a very challenging space! I'm glad you broke down the budget since I'll be doing a bathroom facelift very soon and I hope to do it inexpensively (when I'm feeling optimistic, under $3K, but likely $4-5K).
Oh my stars and garters. Your before is... [speechless]. And your after looks wonderful. That vanity top is gorgeous. Thank you for all the details (including pricing).
Great job!! I really like when people take what they have and give it a complete facelift by selectively replacing items, and you've done it wonderfully.
And thank you for the breakdown, complete with notes/explanations - very, very helpful!
my fiance and i remodeled our hall bath top to bottom for 3k, and our master bath for 3.5k. kohler toilets & pedestal sinks, price pfister faucets, shower heads & trim, daltile white subway tile & glass liner accents, american olean hex tile flooring, american standard tub, and in stock medicine cabinets, vanity lights, paint, crown & base molding from lowes. biggest single expense was the neo angle glass shower doors for the master bath, around $700. we had a skilled laborer lay all of the tile, redo the shower pan (it wasn't done properly originally, and caused leakage), and replace the water damaged drywall with greenboard. we did a lot of the labor, with the help of my dad, who is quite a handy guy. he and my fiance put in the toilets, sinks, faucets, lighting, and exhaust fans. we also did the demo, paint, and crown molding. the best decision was to remodel both baths at the same time.
I kind of love the hexagonal tiles now that you've expoxied them white. Nice job.
And thank you for posting all the costs. My boyfriend and I are supposed to be taking on our master bath sometime soon (We already bought the vanity and the counter), but I think we're dilly dallying because we're afraid of all the other costs, and we're afraid of tiling--which we plan to do on our own. Jeesh, it makes me nervous just thinking about it.
Nicely done.
The bathroom looks great! My wife and I decided to remodel our main bathroom in the house starting in April of last year. After about 9 months of work (we have a 2nd bath) everything was finally completed, here's a breakdown of our bath costs.
Plumbing (Tub installation) - $300
Electrical (Wiring of tub) - $200
Tub - $500
Tile for Tub Surround - $120
Tile for floor - $100
Materials (concrete board, adhesive, screws, etc etc) $400
Plumbing Hardware (shower/tub and vanity) - $380
Vanity (top and cabinet) - $1100
Approximately 4190 for everything in our bathroom.
My mom recently redid her bath with white marble floor tiles, and it does always look dirty! One stray dog hair, and the whole effect is ruined. No shiny white floors ever again!
You've done a beautiful job. Thank you so much for such a helpful post; it's wonderful to see the specifics and cost break-downs.
i think you did such an amazing job and i'm literally wiping my drool because of the countertop...FANCY and awesome! i love the purple you chose and the cabinetry rocks too! great job...well done! cheers
anning - I had my bathtub redone about 5 years ago - white > white. The post-redo finish wasn't flawlessly smooth, but it was fine. Last year it started to rust very slightly around the drain.
I don't know how a color change would work - and the smell when they sand down the old finish is awful - ask the professionals and, if you can't find them, ask on a good blog - I'd try Terry Love's.
Thank you for this post. It's so helpful to get the break-down of expenses on a project like this so those of us planning a reno for the first time will know what to expect.
Lovin' the curved countertop.
this is gorgeous! I LOVE that carrera marble countertop. totally drool-worthy.
http://mylittleapartment.blogspot.com/
Nice job. Thank you for all the details... I am starting to plan my bathroom renos, too, and all of the cost breakdown is VERY helpful! Congrats!
great job!! and bravo on the purple wall color. i tried to paint our guest bedroom purple before and it was not pretty. purple is a really hard color to get right!
anning- you can paint over any existing color. the drawback of painting is that it can chip and scratch but having it white is a gazillion times better than moldy brown, even with a few nicks. having workers in the bathroom after it's been sprayed is not a good thing (someone put a sharp tool on the side of my tub and gauged the side. ugh.) you want to spray your tub as the last step so no one can go in and mess it up! you also have to clean it with non abrasive cleaners. the person who did mine also messed up a bit when he taped off the drain hole so that when i removed the tape, some paint flaked off a bit. painting has a shorter life span. i am thinking it may last up to 5 years or so. also, the potent smell of the epoxy paint lingers in your house for a few days. if you can, do it when the weather is nice so you can keep windows open!
Anyone know the wall color of the first room? I wanted to paint my living room this color but it's hard to find.
cafegurl19- it's french violet by benjamin moore.
I noticed you use hooks for the towels. It looks great!
Is it just me or does $4,000 not seem like a "budget" remodel?
I love the overhead cabinets! What a great way to get some extra storage space when you have a tall ceiling in the bathroom.
$4k for almost complete overhaul is "budget" remodel. Not sure about the show vs real-life comparison, but I used to watch bath re-dos on HGTV and small budgets were typically around $20k.
Tanya could probably go with some cheaper options - like standard size vanity top, and do some more work herself, or with her dad/brother (caulk, paint, tile, refinish the cabinets, do some of the plumbing, electrical). This could bring the total down by about $500 to $800?
That's a great budget summary, tho. Shows what to expect if you're not doing all the work yourself.
If she had done a lot of the work herself, she would have saved a thousand or so in labor costs. However, 4k to have someone else do the majority of the work is pretty cheap.
I guess I just find it hard to imagine having a spare $4,000, let alone owning my own place. Maybe in my next life.
I'm sorry, I don't mean to criticize. It's a lovely bathroom. Especially that purple wall.
i could have also saved if i chose a different counter top material. but for the record, i never said it was "budget" in fact i said i didn't have a budget. i just paid for things as i needed them throughout the 6 months. with any type of expense like this, you compromise and prioritize. i haven't traveled since last year.
$4,000 is definitely a low-budget remodel.
We're about to start a bathroom project in our basement, expanding what is basically a toilet in a closet into a full bath, and we hope to keep it under $5,000.
Given that it's in the basement, we don't feel a lot of pressure to use high-end materials, but I think the infrastructure costs (plumbing, new walls, etc.) will make up the bulk of the budget.
This is amazing! We are doing our bathroom too, from a closet to a tiny (4x8) FULL bath with shower, and it is extremely challenging. You'res looks great! We are not nearly at that cost, sadly, but spending more than we'd hoped. The contractors have just begun...
My blog talks about my new place, and all the work to be done!!
http://lalasapt.blogspot.com/
Beautiful! The marble was totally worth the splurge. It's really nice to see the associated costs--thanks for sharing. It had the unexpected effect of making me appreciate my super handy spouse, too. Great that your dad could help! Nothing makes you feel cleaner than getting rid of previous owners bathroom juju.
Gorgeous!
And such a timely post! We recently started a bath remodel because a pipe burst. So far we've spent $350 on the fixtures (sink, toilet, shower head, faucets) and have begun demo. We're hoping to do it all ourselves with the help of a friend who was in plumbing and remodeling. This is what we're aiming for (though we ended up with a different sink and toilet).
Where did you get a gray bath rug? I have been looking everywhere for that shade of gray.
Great job! I'm in the middle of one of these myself. We're just wrapping up the self-demo stage. It's a lot of work but you've inspired me! Thanks for sharing.
This is a huge bargain--I paid 10K for mine. I love it.
We just turned a closet into a half bath in our front hallway. We did a lot of the work ourselves, including tiling and drywall. Total cost for finishes was $1,657. We hired a plumber to bring plumbing to the room, and an electrician, which raised the cost significantly (by another $5,500-ish).
http://projectnest.squarespace.com/project-nest-blog/2011/5/3/tick-up-the-bathroom-count-to-15.html
It's a great looking remodel, but was there any additional waterproofing on the walls, either with roof felt underneath the boards or redguard / Kerdi over it?
Kvetchtion: You did such a nice job. I understand you gained a more open space by doing away w/ the man-sized medicine cabinet, but you still have drawers. Why display ugly toothpaste, etc. ? personal peeve. Thanks for closing the toilet seat though.
I would love to epoxy paint the tiles in my shower. Does anyone here know how well the paint holds up? Can it withstand daily showers and (semi-) regular cleanings?
This is a fantastic piece - I would love to see more like this on AT. Step by step reno--what you did, what it cost, decisions you made. Perfect. It looks wonderful and good for you for going for the carerra marble you wanted.
I want to redo my bathroom at some point, so I'm saving this link.
The best part of small bathrooms is you often can splurge a bit on the floor tile since you won't have to use a lot of it. I think this is particularly important for a homeowner. Nothing screams cheap worse than stock tile and light fixtures from Lowes or Home Depot. Spending just a little more can really help with resale potential.
Great reno for a great price. We had our master bath redone - total gut job and it's around 80 sq ft. It was down to bare studs. The ONLY thing we did ourselves was to sand and re-stain the large double vanity so we could re-use it. *Everything* else (walls, floor tile, counters, sink, tub, tile surround, toilet, plumbing and light fixtures) was new, and it came in just under 10K.
We had a great contractor, I basically had to just get materials onsite (or he'd go anywhere in town with his truck to pick up stuff for me) and he did the rest.
Thanks for sharing all these details; very helpful!
My bathroom renovation was done for AUD $10,000. A total gut job, the space is 2.3m by 2.4m.
I kept the fixtures in their original position and bought a new soaker bath, glass screen, taps etc, full back to wall toilet made from Vitreous china and a wallhung vanity unit with a acrylic top, one shallow basin. Two walls were tiled to 2100mm (joinery height) with skirting tiles on the remaining walls. Mosaic tiles were used on the bath surround. We installed 2 new windows and repositioned the door into the centre of the wall, used a sliding door.
Working in the industry, I was able to purchase high quality brands at a discount, the fixtures and fittings came to $5000, and using contractors for installation, waterproofing, tiling and plumbing cost $5000. They did it in 2 days. Overall, a great price considering the quality of the finish.
Very chic. I am hoping to have my (purple!) bathroom redone in a couple of years. This is a great inspiration.
can we get measurements of your bathroom?
thanks
Luckily I have a father who is a handy man and skilled plumber. As long as I feed him and pay for materials he does all my work for free! :)
Planning a bathroom remodel right now, and it's priced out around 500.
Our small (the original bathroom in the house--5 x 6) downstairs bath had the works (except for keeping the original tub and hex tile floor, both still in very good condition for 80 years old).
New cement board around the tub, raised the showerhead, fixed some problems with the plumbing lines to the sink and toilet, new toilet (Kohler Cimarron--if you are worried about functionality of low water toilets, this one really WORKS), new pedestal sink and faucet, new showerhead and faucet, subway tiles to 8 feet around shower, to five around the rest of the bathroom. We hired all the work but coordinated it ourselves. Total was around $4,000. For us it was totally worth it.
Still need to do the upstairs bathroom (added in the 1970s and is also pretty small 6 x 7). It will be a total gut job and we expect it to cost a bit more, due in part to some more plumbing issues that we will deal with once the floor is out, but we have already replaced the sink/vanity and the toilet, so those things are staying. We do hire people for the work though--no time and not very handy.
you did very well on cost. my small bathroom renovation was about twice that amount
Please keep everyone posted on how the epoxy painted shower tile thing works out. I think it looks much better, but I also suspect it could become an issue again sooner vs. later.
Considering one could DIY a surround with an inexpensive tile for that cost or less, it would be nice to know how it works out, longer term.
Also, I second PCG's concern over waterproofing--the floor in particular should have been redguarded or kerdi'd around the tub at the very least.
For those wondering about epoxy painting durability, I can definitely tell you that it does need redoing after a few (maybe 5ish) years.
I've lived in two apartments (in Montreal) where I had the landlord do this for me before moving in.
If the painters do a clean job and you take good care not to chip it or peel the paint around the drain, then it will stay decent for 3 or 4 years before you start having the urge to redo it.
Any chinks in the paint however are the kiss of death. It will bubble up and peel before you know it.
Cleaning with gentle, non-abrasive cleaners is a must.
Really, really nice, and great to see a reno that's controlled and not over the top.
My main bath has epoxy paint on the tub that the POs did at some point. We've been here 4 years and it's showing signs of needing re-epoxying again. I'd like to have a new fresh tub but this is the original 1956 tub and it is SOLID.
You were able to save money by not installing a new fancy shower door. I just had one put in and that alone was $1,200.
This bathroom measures 5' x 8' and I have to say that the epoxy paint is not holding up well in year 2. I would love to gut the tub and surround and re-tile. There were issues with the original epoxy as the drain was not properly covered and un-taped which caused immediate chipping.
Nice job on the renovation!
The average cost is anywhere from $16,000 - $50,000. You can find some bathroom ideas at http://homerepairexpert.com/how-much-does-it-cost-to-remodel-a-bathroom%3f.
The demo was free of costs? So you didn't get a Bagster or similar to get rid of the debris? If not-how did you get rid of the debris? I live in a condo and I'm trying to find a way to handle this problem.