Bathroom Remodel Cost 2026: What You’ll Actually Pay (Complete Breakdown)

A bathroom remodel is one of the most impactful home improvements you can make — and one of the most expensive if you go in without a plan. Here’s what homeowners actually pay in 2026, broken down so you can budget correctly before a single tile is pulled.

The short version: most bathroom remodels run $6,000 to $25,000, with the national average sitting around $12,000 for a mid-range update. A full gut renovation of a primary bath can hit $30,000–$70,000. A cosmetic refresh of a half-bath starts under $2,500.

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Bathroom Remodel Cost by Scope (2026)

Project Scope Description Average Cost
Cosmetic refresh New fixtures, paint, hardware, mirror $1,500–$4,000
Partial remodel New vanity, toilet, flooring, lighting $5,000–$12,000
Full remodel (mid-range) Gut and replace everything, same layout $10,000–$25,000
Full remodel (upscale) Custom tile, steam shower, heated floors $25,000–$60,000+
Master bath addition New bathroom added to existing home $35,000–$100,000+

What Drives Bathroom Remodel Costs?

1. Bathroom Size

Tile, materials, and labor all scale with square footage. A 5×8 full bath (40 sq ft) is half the labor of a 10×12 primary suite (120 sq ft). Expect to pay $150–$400 per square foot for a full remodel depending on finish level.

2. Plumbing Changes

This is where budgets blow up. Moving plumbing fixtures costs $500–$3,500 each — the drain line and supply lines have to be rerouted through walls and subfloor. If you can keep the toilet, shower, and vanity in the same locations, you save thousands. If you want the shower on the opposite wall from the drain, you’re looking at significant plumbing rough-in work.

Common plumbing costs in a bathroom remodel:

Plumbing Task Cost Range
Shower valve replacement $200–$600
Toilet relocation $500–$1,500
Vanity supply/drain rough-in $300–$800
Add new shower $1,000–$4,000
Add soaking tub with jets $1,500–$6,000
Bathtub-to-shower conversion $1,200–$4,000

3. Tile and Flooring

Tile is the single biggest material cost in most bathroom remodels. Budget tile runs $2–$8/sq ft installed. Mid-range ceramic or porcelain runs $8–$20/sq ft installed. High-end stone or large-format tile can hit $30–$60/sq ft installed including substrate prep. For a standard 8×8 shower surround (about 120 sq ft of tile), that’s $240–$7,200 in tile work alone depending on your choice.

4. Labor Rates

Labor accounts for 40–65% of most bathroom remodel costs. A general contractor managing a full remodel typically charges a 15–25% markup on subcontractor work, plus their hourly rate for project management. In high cost-of-living markets like New York, San Francisco, or Seattle, total labor will be 30–50% higher than the national average.

Bathroom Remodel Cost by Component

Component Budget Mid-Range Upscale
Vanity + sink $300–$600 $700–$2,000 $2,500–$8,000+
Toilet $150–$300 $350–$700 $800–$2,500+
Shower/tub $500–$1,500 $2,000–$6,000 $8,000–$25,000+
Flooring (tile install) $300–$800 $800–$2,500 $3,000–$8,000
Lighting $100–$300 $400–$1,200 $1,500–$5,000
Faucets/fixtures $100–$300 $400–$1,000 $1,200–$5,000
Labor (plumber) $500–$1,500 $1,500–$4,000 $4,000–$12,000
Labor (tile setter) $400–$1,200 $1,200–$3,500 $3,500–$10,000
Permits $100–$300 $300–$800 $800–$2,000

Hidden Costs That Blow Bathroom Budgets

  • Subfloor rot: Very common behind old tubs and showers. Replacing a rotted subfloor adds $400–$1,500 to the job.
  • Mold remediation: If mold is found behind walls or under the floor, remediation runs $500–$3,000 depending on extent.
  • Outdated wiring: A bathroom remodel often triggers an electrical inspection. Upgrading to GFCI outlets and proper exhaust fan wiring adds $300–$800.
  • Structural surprises: Moving walls, especially in older homes, can hit unexpected structural elements. Budget a 15–20% contingency on any full gut renovation.
  • Lead paint and asbestos: In homes built before 1980, testing is required before demolition. Abatement runs $1,000–$5,000 if found.

DIY vs. Hiring a Contractor

You can reduce bathroom remodel costs by 30–50% by doing some work yourself. Here’s what’s DIY-friendly vs. what requires a licensed professional:

Task DIY Feasible? Notes
Painting ✅ Yes Easy win — saves $300–$600 in labor
Vanity swap (same location) ✅ Yes Requires basic plumbing skills
Toilet replacement ✅ Yes 30-minute job for most homeowners
Tile installation ⚠️ Maybe Shower tile is unforgiving — hire a pro
Plumbing rough-in ❌ No Requires licensed plumber in most states
Electrical work ❌ No GFCI, vent fan — hire a licensed electrician
Shower pan installation ❌ No Waterproofing failures cause $20K+ damage

Does a Bathroom Remodel Add Home Value?

Yes — but not dollar for dollar. Remodeling Magazine’s 2026 Cost vs. Value report shows a mid-range bathroom remodel recoups about 66–72% of cost at resale. An upscale remodel recoups closer to 55–65%. That means a $15,000 mid-range bath remodel adds roughly $10,000–$11,000 in resale value.

The return is better if the bathroom was genuinely dated (avocado green tub, pink tile from 1975) or if the home lacks a second full bath and adding one fills a buyer need. Cosmetic updates in already-modern bathrooms have lower ROI.

How to Get Accurate Quotes

A bathroom remodel quote should be itemized. Ask any contractor to break out: demo labor, plumbing labor, tile/flooring labor, fixture costs, permit fees, and their project management fee separately. Any contractor who gives you a single round number without a breakdown is a red flag.

Get a minimum of 3 quotes. Variance of 30–40% between bids is normal for bathroom work — the lowest bid is not always the best choice when waterproofing and plumbing are involved.

Ready to get free quotes from licensed bathroom remodeling contractors in your area? Use the form below — it connects you with vetted pros in about two minutes.

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Ryan L

Ryan L. is a Dallas‑based home services authority with over a decade of hands‑on experience collaborating with plumbers, electricians, HVAC technicians, and other trades professionals nationwide. Though not a licensed technician himself, Ryan has spent thousands of hours learning directly from contractors mastering how plumbing systems work, pinpointing common failures, and uncovering the most reliable repair techniques. Leveraging his background in scaling home service businesses, Ryan bridges the gap between complex technical know‑how and homeowner concerns. From burst pipes and leaky faucets to clogged drains and water heater failures, he distills expert insights into clear, step‑by‑step guides no fluff, no fear tactics. Through Plumbing Sniper, Ryan’s mission is to empower everyday homeowners with the knowledge and confidence to tackle DIY repairs when they can and to know exactly when it’s time to call in a professional.

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