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Mark Tivey · Licensed CGC1511598 · Veteran-Owned Since 1988(904) 850-6070

Bathroom Remodel Cost in Jacksonville, FL: 2026 Pricing by Tier

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Modern Jacksonville bathroom remodel

A Jacksonville bathroom remodel sits in one of three pricing tiers in 2026. Which one applies to your project depends almost entirely on what you're doing with the tub and shower, not on the size of the room.

The three tiers

Refresh — $8,000 to $18,000. New vanity and faucet, new toilet, paint, light fixtures, fixture trim, possibly a new tile floor. The tub and shower stay. This is the cheapest version of a bathroom remodel that includes a licensed general contractor and a permit. Timeline: 2 to 3 weeks.

Standard — $20,000 to $45,000. New vanity, new tile floor, full shower or tub surround replacement, new fixtures, vent fan upgrade, tile backsplash. Layout stays. This is where the median Jacksonville bathroom lands. Timeline: 4 to 7 weeks.

Premium — $50,000 to $130,000+. Full gut, layout change, custom vanity, large-format porcelain or natural stone, freestanding tub or steam shower, premium fixtures (PVD or solid brass), heated floor. This is the primary-bath project where Mandarin or San Marco or Riverside homeowners are turning the bathroom into the room they want it to be. Timeline: 8 to 14 weeks.

What's not in those numbers

Three line items show up in most Jacksonville bathroom remodels that the initial budget didn't capture.

Cast-iron drain conversion. Pre-1980 Jacksonville homes — Riverside, Avondale, Springfield, Murray Hill, Mandarin — commonly have cast-iron drain stacks that have corroded internally over 40+ years. Code requires PVC conversion at any junction touched during the remodel. Adds $500 to $2,000.

Subfloor damage from old leaks. A slow leak under the tub or behind the toilet flange that nobody noticed often discovers itself during demo. Subfloor repair plus possible joist sistering adds $800 to $3,000.

Aluminum branch wiring. Common in Jacksonville builds 1965 to 1975. Code requires copper-aluminum connections to be brought up to current standard at any junction box opened during the remodel. Adds $500 to $2,500.

Mark's Day-1 walkthrough flags all three. They're surprises only if no one was looking.

Where the time goes

For a standard 5-week Jacksonville bathroom:

  • Week 1: Demo, rough plumbing relocation, slab cuts if needed
  • Week 2: Rough electrical, vent fan rough-in, mechanical inspection
  • Week 3: Insulation, drywall, drywall finish, waterproofing system installation (Schluter Kerdi or RedGard)
  • Week 4: Tile (floor and shower or tub surround), grout
  • Week 5: Vanity, plumbing trim, electrical trim, punch list, final inspection

Layout changes add a week for plumbing reroute. Custom vanities add 4 to 6 weeks at the cabinet shop. Premium stone counters add 2 to 3 weeks at the fabricator.

The vent fan you're probably planning to skip

Florida code minimum for a bathroom vent fan is 50 CFM. That's fine for a powder room. For a Jacksonville master bath in NE Florida humidity, it's a mold complaint waiting to happen.

Mark spec's 110 CFM minimum on any new master bath, with a humidistat (not a timer), vented to the exterior — not into the soffit, not into the attic. The cost difference between a builder-grade 50 CFM fan and a 110 CFM humidistat-controlled unit is roughly $200. The mold remediation cost on a 5-year-old undersized installation is roughly $4,000.

This is the cheapest insurance line item in a Jacksonville bathroom project.

Why the directory averages don't apply

National directory sites quote NE Florida bathroom remodels in the $5,000 to $15,000 range. That's real, and it represents the bottom of the market — handyman-led vanity swaps, no permit, no code-compliant waterproofing, no warranty. If that's your project, the directory pricing is roughly right.

If your project is what most Jacksonville homeowners actually mean when they say "bathroom remodel" — new tile shower with proper waterproofing, new vent fan that actually moves moisture out, new electrical brought to current code, and a contractor whose name appears on a Florida license — the floor is roughly $20,000 for a standard rebuild.

Permit reality

Most Jacksonville bathroom remodels require a permit because most include enough plumbing, electrical, or vent work to trigger one. The City of Jacksonville Building Inspection Division at the Edward Ball Building processes residential bathroom permits in 3 to 6 weeks. Tivey handles all of it in-house.

A pure cosmetic refresh — paint and a vanity swap that uses the existing supply lines — technically doesn't need one. In practice, almost no remodel stays that pure.

What to decide before scope

Three decisions drive everything else and are worth making before the first contractor walkthrough:

  1. Tub stays or tub goes. Keeping the existing tub is one of the cleanest cost savings — it's a $1,500 to $4,000 line item including the surround tile work. Tub-to-walk-in-shower conversion is the most common premium upgrade.

  2. Layout change or layout stays. Moving the toilet or shower drain involves slab cutting, plumbing reroute, and an extra inspection. Layout change adds $3,000 to $8,000 and 1 to 2 weeks.

  3. Aging-in-place planning. Even if you don't need it now, blocking for grab bars, a curbless shower entry, and a comfort-height toilet cost almost nothing during demo. Retrofitting them later costs 5 to 10 times more.

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