Twitter

2022-11-15 17:03:54 By : Mr. Yohan Ying

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Looking for the perfect credit card?

Narrow your search with CardMatch™

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

Get insider access to our best financial tools and content

We are an independent, advertising-supported comparison service. Our goal is to help you make smarter financial decisions by providing you with interactive tools and financial calculators, publishing original and objective content, by enabling you to conduct research and compare information for free - so that you can make financial decisions with confidence. Bankrate has partnerships with issuers including, but not limited to, American Express, Bank of America, Capital One, Chase, Citi and Discover.

The offers that appear on this site are from companies that compensate us. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site, including, for example, the order in which they may appear within the listing categories. But this compensation does not influence the information we publish, or the reviews that you see on this site. We do not include the universe of companies or financial offers that may be available to you.

At Bankrate we strive to help you make smarter financial decisions. While we adhere to strict editorial integrity, this post may contain references to products from our partners. Here's an explanation for how we make money.

Founded in 1976, Bankrate has a long track record of helping people make smart financial choices. We’ve maintained this reputation for over four decades by demystifying the financial decision-making process and giving people confidence in which actions to take next.

Bankrate follows a strict editorial policy, so you can trust that we’re putting your interests first. All of our content is authored by highly qualified professionals and edited by subject matter experts, who ensure everything we publish is objective, accurate and trustworthy.

Our banking reporters and editors focus on the points consumers care about most — the best banks, latest rates, different types of accounts, money-saving tips and more — so you can feel confident as you’re managing your money.

Bankrate follows a strict editorial policy, so you can trust that we’re putting your interests first. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions.

We value your trust. Our mission is to provide readers with accurate and unbiased information, and we have editorial standards in place to ensure that happens. Our editors and reporters thoroughly fact-check editorial content to ensure the information you’re reading is accurate. We maintain a firewall between our advertisers and our editorial team. Our editorial team does not receive direct compensation from our advertisers.

Bankrate’s editorial team writes on behalf of YOU – the reader. Our goal is to give you the best advice to help you make smart personal finance decisions. We follow strict guidelines to ensure that our editorial content is not influenced by advertisers. Our editorial team receives no direct compensation from advertisers, and our content is thoroughly fact-checked to ensure accuracy. So, whether you’re reading an article or a review, you can trust that you’re getting credible and dependable information.

You have money questions. Bankrate has answers. Our experts have been helping you master your money for over four decades. We continually strive to provide consumers with the expert advice and tools needed to succeed throughout life’s financial journey.

Bankrate follows a strict editorial policy, so you can trust that our content is honest and accurate. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions. The content created by our editorial staff is objective, factual, and not influenced by our advertisers.

We’re transparent about how we are able to bring quality content, competitive rates, and useful tools to you by explaining how we make money.

Bankrate.com is an independent, advertising-supported publisher and comparison service. We are compensated in exchange for placement of sponsored products and, services, or by you clicking on certain links posted on our site. Therefore, this compensation may impact how, where and in what order products appear within listing categories. Other factors, such as our own proprietary website rules and whether a product is offered in your area or at your self-selected credit score range can also impact how and where products appear on this site. While we strive to provide a wide range offers, Bankrate does not include information about every financial or credit product or service.

Picture a glass and marble jewel box, plunged in light, billowing with steam. It’s furnished with a leafy hanging fern and a comfy teak bench, all drenched in a warm, pulsing summer rain.

With a setup like this, you’d sing in the shower, too.

It’s easy to upgrade any shower, and no need to rob a bank (or the nearest bath showroom). HomeAdvisor, which connects homeowners and pros, says the cost of shower remodels generally ranges from $2,300 to $8,600, adding that they can sometimes be done for less with shower kits (prefab parts that arrive separately but are designed to come together quickly, with the help of a plumber) and one-piece prefab shower stalls or liners, consisting of a single three-wall unit, typically made from acrylic or fiberglass.

Of course, you can spend much more to remodel a shower if you want to: up to $15,000, according to Angi, another contractor-client matchmaker. Now we’re talking luxe materials, customized liners with niches for soap and shampoos, grab bars, and maybe even a waterproof sound system.

Bath upgrades — including new showers — are particularly popular at a time when spending on home improvement is robust, according to Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies: Last year homeowners spent nearly $19 billion on bath remodels. In a 2021 survey by Axiom, a Minneapolis marketing firm, some 31 percent of respondents said they planned to redo a bathroom.

And when it comes to significant upgrades, renovating the shower often tops the list.

Trends reflect a desire for a more sensuous wash-and-dry experience, coupled with what could be called lame-fixtures-and-finishes fatigue and spa-bath aspirations.

What do consumers want most? Let’s start with replacing the classic hot-and-cold-water mixing valve encased in a circular or lever-handle trim kit: Calibrating the water temp with one of these things is like cracking a safe, as British comedian Eddie Izzard once put it. A thermostatic mixer, in contrast, allows you to set and hold temperature and volume, making it one of most popular bath upgrades, says Houzz, the home-improvement site.

Then there’s the whole concept of a separate shower stall. Traditional bath-and-tub combo, out; a cubicle with doors or enclosures that separate the shower from the rest of the bathroom, in.

The cost of shower remodels depends primarily on how extensive a renovation you want. HomeGuide, a service that connects homeowners and pros, gives a range of $400 to $3,000 for a partial remodel of an existing shower, while replacing an existing stall would run from $1,000 to $8,000, and a total remodel — replacing the tile and fixtures and possibly reconfiguring the space — could be as little as $3,500 or as much as $15,000. Or, of course, more.

More specifically, the biggest factors are the size of the space, the cost of labor in your area, and choices in the number and quality of fixtures, such as hand showers and shower heads, and finishes, such as tile. Extras like radiant floor heat, steam showers and “body tiles” (wall tiles that spray water) also inflate the bottom line.

When it comes to shower upgrades, most homeowners opt for a general contractor who specializes in baths and has a solid network of subcontractors (licensed and insured, please), or a bath design-build firm that can take care of every detail, from the building permit to the height of the hand shower. GCs have different ways of calculating their costs, which include not only hiring and coordinating subs but also covering infrastructure items, like framing, subflooring, preparing walls for grab bars, waterproofing and drains; unexpected screwups, like leaks; insurance — to cover the cost of the screwups; and incidentals, like parking a dumpster.

The pros can be pricey, but they’re often a necessity, as shower upgrades can be complicated. Let’s say you want to tear out a 3-by-5-foot alcove tub and replace it with a same-size shower area, plus new tile and fixtures. Removing a tub can be an undertaking, and not only because it’s a drag to break up and carry out all that debris. The tub previously functioned as a basin. Without it, the contractor will need to frame and install a shower pan and other waterproofing elements before preparing the floor for tile.

Or let’s say you are determined to have a curb-free walk-in shower. Curbs serve a purpose: They can ward off water overflows. To eliminate one, and have a shower floor sit flush with the rest of the space, the contractor must lower the framing under the shower pan or raise the floor outside the shower.

Here’s how your shower remodel budget might break down, based on the major factors of the renovation.

Design and space planning: A pro can take care of headaches like getting a building permit and meeting code, fixture placement, and jigsaw-puzzle-style measuring and fitting. Bath designers are also helpful in choosing products. They typically command about $125 to $150 an hour, Houzz says. And, yes, they do charge for all the back-and-forth. But they can also save you money, designing a shower so that your existing drain and pipes can stay where they are (moving them really catapults a project’s costs).

Labor: In general, labor averages 50 percent of the total bathroom project prices, HomeAdvisor says. The percentage of the bottom line that reflects labor costs will change along with the scope and location of the remodel.

For example, a plumber may be able to slide a prefab shower into an existing stall in one day, while a gut remodel of a shower area, including demolition, all new fixtures, waterproofing, possible floor reframing, lighting, vent fan and so forth could take three subcontractors — pricey in certain areas of the U.S. — and several weeks.

Even if you go for a pre-made shower kit, the contractor’s bill to install it can run to $1,000, according to Angi. But don’t forget that a contractor’s services often include demolition and dumping fees, which alone can run $1,000 to $2,300, HomeAdvisor says.

Tilework (including preparing the wall, tile and grout and labor): $2 to $17 a square foot, according to HomeAdvisor, which also notes that if the walls are being waterproofed for the first time the cost of materials and installation will rise to an average $25 a square foot. Labor costs often reflect the difficulty of installing certain types of tile, such as small mosaics.

Fixtures: Count on $600 to $1,600 per plumbing fixture, including labor, HomeAdvisor says. Of course, there’s a big variety — both in terms of the types of fixtures, and the level of luxe within a fixture.

Shower upgrades are what make a bathroom remodel major — coinciding with a threefold increase in the overall renovation cost of $15,000 compared to $5,000 for a minor remodel, according to the Houzz survey. Angi says shower upgrades constitute 5 to 25 percent of a total bath renovation’s costs.

Of course, state-of-the-art bathrooms have a big wow factor, ranking among the top five projects that appeal to buyers, according to a 2019 remodeling-impact report by the National Association of Realtors. The NAR says new baths also are likely to add value to the home for resale. But don’t count on getting all your money back: According to Remodeling magazine, the rate of return on bath remodels in general is only about 56 to 62 percent (interestingly, the more expensive the remodel, the lower the return).

Still, there’s nothing like showering in a spacious, well-lighted place, ideally one tailored to your tastes and style. Hello, stone-lined, spiffy, sliding-door spa shower. Where have you been all my life?

Bankrate.com is an independent, advertising-supported publisher and comparison service. Bankrate is compensated in exchange for featured placement of sponsored products and services, or your clicking on links posted on this website. This compensation may impact how, where and in what order products appear. Bankrate.com does not include all companies or all available products.

Bankrate, LLC NMLS ID# 1427381 | NMLS Consumer Access BR Tech Services, Inc. NMLS ID #1743443 | NMLS Consumer Access

© 2022 Bankrate, LLC. A Red Ventures company. All Rights Reserved.