Fin Home Contracting · Flower Mound, TX
Flower Mound Bathroom Remodeling
We're the general contractor Flower Mound homeowners call when they want a bathroom done right — local crews, transparent pricing, and a process built around the way this city actually works.
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WHY FIN HOME
Why Hire Fin Home for Bathroom Remodeling in Flower Mound
Flower Mound bathroom remodels tend to be less about fixing bad layouts and more about replacing finishes that never had much personality to begin with. In Bridlewood, Wellington, and Canyon Falls, we often walk into large primary baths with plenty of square footage but stock cabinets, basic counters, and shower setups that do not match the rest of the house. We manage the project ourselves rather than selling it and disappearing.
Bathroom remodels in Flower Mound start at $18k. In the 18,000–28,000 range, a meaningful refresh usually gets you a new vanity package, counters, flooring, fixtures, lighting, paint, and a substantial shower or tub upgrade. We send a written, itemized quote so the price is tied to specific work, not vague allowances.
Some Flower Mound properties fall under additional design or district review requirements before permits are released. That matters most when exterior scope, structural changes, or related work touches a regulated area, and it is something we check early so the remodel schedule is grounded in the actual approval path.
A local project manager will get back to you within 24 business hours.
Responds within 24 business hours
Neighborhoods we've worked in
Bridlewood · Wellington · Canyon Falls · Flower Mound Farms · Timber Creek · Lake Forest · Creekwood · River Walk · The Peninsula · Tour 18
Bathroom remodels across DFW – including Flower Mound.
$18k
Starting price for a meaningful Flower Mound bathroom refresh.
Response time from a Flower Mound-based project manager.
Years serving the Flower Mound residential market.
What's Unique About Flower Mound
Growth pressure in Flower Mound is real — the town reported an estimated 2025 population of 82,197. That kind of expansion affects scheduling, trade demand, and project timing, so we build realistic lead times into the plan.
RECENT PROJECT
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NEAR IRVING CLIENT TESTIMONIALS
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Irving · Arlington
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NEIGHBORHOODS WE KNOW
Common Bathroom Remodeling Patterns Across Flower Mound
In Wellington and other established Flower Mound subdivisions, bathroom remodeling often starts with large primary suites that were built with the right square footage but the wrong priorities. Homes from the 1990s and early 2000s frequently have oversized garden tubs, smaller framed showers, long vanities, and tile that immediately dates the room. The remodel scope usually moves unused tub space into a larger shower, adds better waterproofing, replaces framed glass, and reworks the vanity so the room has drawers, better electrical planning, and lighting that supports daily routines instead of only filling the ceiling.
In Bridlewood, Flower Mound Farms, and larger custom or semi-custom homes, bathrooms often need a more polished finish level because the rest of the home carries higher expectations. The issue is not always failure; it is that the bath no longer matches the property. Heavy stone, dark cabinetry, dated fixtures, and old shower glass can make a large room feel tired. These remodels often include custom vanities, larger walk-in showers, better tile transitions, updated tubs or tub removal, and storage that keeps the room calm. Ventilation still matters, especially when the original fan was undersized for a large enclosed bath.
Near Grapevine Lake and in wooded or lake-adjacent pockets, bathroom remodels often account for humidity, guests, and outdoor use. Secondary baths may serve pool traffic, visiting family, or weekend entertaining, so the finish choices need to be tougher than they look. Slip-resistant floor tile, easy-clean shower walls, stronger fans, hooks, linen storage, and durable vanity materials all become more important. A guest bath in this setting may not be large, but it has to dry out quickly and handle repeated use without grout or painted trim breaking down.
In newer areas like Canyon Falls and the northwestern growth edges, bathrooms may be younger but still feel builder-standard. The layout often works, yet the tile, mirror, hardware, and shower enclosure do not feel personal or substantial. Homeowners typically keep the footprint but upgrade the shower, vanities, lighting, and storage to make the room feel less like a model-home package. In primary suites, accessibility planning is increasingly added quietly through low curbs, wider openings, and blocking behind the walls. Flower Mound remodels tend to succeed when they respect the scale of the home while making the bathroom easier to live in every day. The common thread is that a Flower Mound bath usually has to feel elevated, but it still needs the construction discipline to survive everyday family use.
WHAT TO EXPECT TO PAY
Bathroom Remodeling Pricing in Flower Mound
These are real ranges drawn from projects we've completed in Flower Mound. Material costs, permit fees, and labor are reflected here.
Essential
Cosmetic refresh for bathrooms with good bones. No layout changes.-
Stock or semi-custom vanity
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Laminate or entry-level quartz vanity top
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New sink, faucet, and hardware
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Basic tub or shower surround update
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Flooring or wall tile refresh
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Lighting and mirror update
Mid-Range
The most common scope for Flower Mound homeowners. Full replacement with quality finishes.-
Semi-custom vanity with soft-close
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Quartz or granite vanity countertop
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Custom tile shower or tub surround
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New flooring throughout
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Updated fixtures, lighting, and mirror
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Permit-required plumbing and electrical updates
Full Renovation
Layout changes, premium materials, and fully upgraded wet areas.-
Custom or full-custom vanity
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Freestanding tub or large walk-in shower
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Premium tile and stone surfaces
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Luxury fixtures and glass enclosure
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Custom lighting and ventilation upgrades
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Layout reconfiguration and structural changes if needed
Flower Mound vs Nearby Cities
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Flower Mound $32,000–50,000
WHAT DRIVES COST UP
Bathroom costs in Flower Mound usually move with tile scope, which can swing $2,500–$9,000, shower build at $3,500–$12,000, and vanity tier, which can shift another $1,500–$8,000. We itemize those in every written quote so nothing is hidden.
Why Flower Mound Pricing Works This Way
What Shapes Bathroom Remodeling Costs in Flower Mound
In Wellington, Bridlewood, and Flower Mound Farms, bathroom remodeling costs are usually shaped first by the way Flower Mound homes from the 1990s, 2000s, and newer master-planned communities were originally planned. Many primary baths have the familiar builder pattern: a large deck-mounted tub, a smaller framed shower, a long vanity with limited drawer storage, and tile that has aged more visibly than the rest of the house. Keeping the plumbing in place and replacing finishes is one level of scope; rebuilding the shower, removing the tub deck, adding a low-threshold entry, and reframing the wet area is a different cost category. The expensive part is rarely just the new tile. It is the waterproofing system behind it, the drain work, the glass sizing, the wall repairs, and the time required to make an older bath layout feel intentional instead of simply newer.
In Canyon Falls, Grapevine Lake area, and Wellington, secondary bathrooms and hall baths usually price around durability rather than luxury. These rooms often serve children, guests, and daily traffic, so the budget gets affected by tub replacement, tile height, vanity construction, fan upgrades, and whether the subfloor or drywall shows moisture damage around the tub apron. A basic surface refresh can stay relatively controlled when the tub, toilet, and vanity locations remain fixed. The scope climbs when the old tub becomes a tiled shower, when the shower valve has to move, when the room needs new electrical for better lighting, or when the vanity layout changes from a single sink to a wider storage-focused setup. Ventilation is also a real cost driver in Flower Mound, because many older bath fans were undersized or vented poorly.
In larger Canyon Falls and newer growth areas, the cost conversation often shifts from repair to finish level and layout correction. A frameless glass shower, large-format porcelain, custom niches, upgraded fixtures, stone counters, recessed medicine storage, and heated or specialty flooring can create a meaningful swing even when the footprint stays the same. Accessibility planning adds another layer: blocking for grab bars, wider shower entries, handheld sprays, bench framing, and lower curbs are not cosmetic details, but they are easier and cheaper to build during a remodel than after the room is finished. The bathroom footprint is often generous, so price is driven by shower build-out, tile, glass, and finish expectations. The most predictable bathroom budgets in Flower Mound come from deciding early whether the project is a finish update, a wet-area rebuild, or a full layout change with plumbing, electrical, glass, and waterproofing all moving together. That is why a bathroom in Wellington may not price the same as one in Canyon Falls, even when both rooms are similar in size; the age of the layout, the condition of the wet area, and the finish expectation change the real scope.
Ready to Remodel Your Flower Mound Bathroom?
Get a written estimate from a local project manager — within 48 hours, on-site.
Flower Mound Cost Guide
How Much Does It Cost to Remodel a Bathroom in Flower Mound?
Get a detailed breakdown of bathroom remodeling costs in Flower Mound including price per square foot, labor vs materials, and real budget ranges for 2026. Browse online or download the full guide.
WHEN TO REMODEL
Signs Your Flower Mound Bathroom Is Ready for a Remodel
A Flower Mound bathroom is ready for a remodel when the problems are structural, moisture-related, or use-related rather than just dated. Across Bridlewood, Wellington, Timber Creek, Lakeside, Canyon Falls, and neighborhoods near Lake Grapevine, that often shows up in 1980s and 1990s family homes, large two-story houses from the 2000s, lake-adjacent properties, and newer planned-community homes. Old tile color by itself is not the issue. The real warning signs are cracked grout at wet corners, loose or hollow-sounding tile, a shower that smells damp even after cleaning, a vanity cabinet that has swollen at the toe kick, or flooring that flexes near the tub. Those details matter because they point to water movement, aging materials, or fixture failure. Once a bathroom starts needing the same repairs again and again, the homeowner is no longer maintaining a stable room. They are managing symptoms that will keep returning until the wet areas, ventilation, and layout are rebuilt correctly.
The ventilation pattern is often what separates an old bathroom from a bathroom that is actually failing. In Flower Mound, the concern may involve upstairs bathrooms, enclosed showers, baths near exterior walls, lake-area humidity, and heavy-use secondary bathrooms shared by kids. If the mirror stays fogged for a long time, the ceiling paint peels, the fan is noisy but ineffective, or mildew keeps showing up where the wall meets the ceiling, the room is holding more humidity than it should. That becomes a bigger issue around showers with older waterproofing, tub surrounds with cracked caulk, and vanities made from materials that do not tolerate long-term moisture. A remodel gives you the chance to correct the fan, lighting, waterproofing, shower slope, glass, and fixture placement together. Doing only one piece can leave the room looking better while the same moisture cycle continues behind the surfaces.
The practical signs are just as clear. Bathrooms in Flower Mound are often ready when they still rely on primary suites with large unused tubs, small shower footprints, low double vanities, dated framed glass, and hall baths that no longer match how the household lives. A vanity with poor storage can make the room feel messy even when it is clean. A high-sided tub can become a daily obstacle. A narrow shower entry may be fine for a few years and then become a long-term accessibility problem. Bad lighting can make the room feel older than it is, especially when there is no task lighting at the mirror. Hall baths can also become remodel candidates when they no longer handle children, guests, or shared routines without constant clutter. Flower Mound homes often have strong overall floor plans, so the bathroom becomes a remodel candidate when the finishes and safety details lag behind the home's value. When safety, storage, water control, and daily frustration all point the same way, the bathroom has passed the point where small updates are enough.
LOCAL PROJECT PLANNING
What to Plan For Before a Bathroom Remodel in Flower Mound
Planning a bathroom remodel in Flower Mound starts with separating wants from construction decisions. In Bridlewood, Wellington, Lakeside, and neighborhoods near Grapevine Lake, the common homes are larger suburban homes with primary baths that often include unused garden tubs, framed showers, long vanities, and builder-grade ventilation, many of them built in the 1980s through the 2010s. A homeowner may know they want a cleaner shower, better storage, or a more current look, but the project plan needs to answer harder questions first: is the drain moving, is the shower pan being rebuilt, is the tub being removed, is the vanity width changing, and is the electrical layout adequate for better lighting and ventilation. Those are the decisions that affect cost, timing, and inspections. Wet-area work should never be treated like simple finish work, because the waterproofing, backing board, pan slope, valve depth, and glass measurements all depend on what is approved before tile begins. HOA review, tile and glass decisions that affect high-value interiors, slab plumbing, and keeping a busy family home functional during construction should be reviewed early so the remodel is not forced into emergency decision-making once the bathroom is unusable.
The second planning item is the order of selections. Bathroom materials are smaller than kitchen materials, but they are less forgiving because everything has to land in tight space. Tile size affects drain placement, curb height, niche dimensions, and whether the wall layout looks intentional. Shower glass cannot be measured accurately until tile is installed, so the schedule needs room for final measurement, fabrication, and installation. Vanities should be chosen by actual cabinet width, counter height, drawer clearance, plumbing location, and door swing, not just by a photo. In many homes, moving from a 30-inch or 36-inch vanity to a 48-inch, 60-inch, or 72-inch layout changes lighting, mirror placement, outlet locations, and the way the door clears the room. Fixture selections need to be locked before rough-in so valves are set at the correct depth and trim kits are compatible. Homeowners should also decide early whether they want blocking for grab bars, a bench, a handheld spray, a wider shower entry, or a lower curb. Those upgrades are easiest while walls are open and much harder to add cleanly later. Ventilation belongs in the same conversation. A bath fan that is undersized, loud, or venting into the wrong space can ruin new paint and grout within a few seasons, especially in a bathroom used daily.
Logistics matter as much as finishes. A bathroom under construction creates dust, noise, water shutoffs, and access problems in one of the most personal rooms in the house. Before work begins, homeowners should decide where materials will be staged, which floors need protection, how debris will leave the house, and how the family will function if that room is unavailable for several weeks. If the remodel is in a second-floor bath or a primary suite, protection of stairs, carpet, hardwood, and adjacent bedrooms should be part of the plan. Flower Mound permitting and neighborhood standards should also be checked before moving drains, adding electrical, changing ventilation, or altering framing. The plan does not need to predict every hidden condition, but it should make the big decisions early: what stays, what moves, what gets rebuilt, what must be inspected, and what must be ordered before demo. That is what keeps a bathroom remodel from turning into a series of rushed field decisions.
HOW IT WORKS
Our Flower Mound Process
Every step is handled locally in Flower Mound — no handoffs to a national office, no subcontracted project management.
Free On-Site Estimate
We measure your bathroom, review the existing layout, shower or tub area, vanity space, and current plumbing and electrical, then walk through your goals. You’ll get a clear written estimate with scope and pricing within 48 hours.
Design & Material Selection
We finalize your bathroom layout and confirm the plan for the vanity, shower or tub, tile, and fixtures. Then you select finishes like flooring, wall tile, countertops, plumbing fixtures, and lighting with clear pricing before we move forward.
Permitting
We submit to Flower Mound Building Inspections and track status through final approval. Once approved, we schedule all required inspections so you do not have to coordinate anything with the city.
Construction & Inspections
Demo, plumbing and electrical rough-in, inspections, waterproofing, tile installation, vanity install, finish work, and final walkthrough. We coordinate each phase and keep the schedule moving to avoid delays.
Flower Mound Permit Office
All residential permits in Flower Mound are processed through Flower Mound Building Inspections at 2121 Cross Timbers Rd., Flower Mound, TX 75028. We submit on your behalf, track status, and coordinate required inspections through final approval. We handle the process directly through Flower Mound Building Inspections. →
COMMON QUESTIONS
Flower Mound Bathroom Remodeling FAQs
Questions specific to Flower Mound — permits, warranties, and pricing.
How long does a remodel take in Flower Mound?
Projects in historic or design-review districts can add 2–6 weeks of approval time before construction starts. We flag that early so the schedule reflects the real approval path.
What does a mid-range bathroom remodel actually get me in Flower Mound?
For extensive plumbing changes, custom millwork, heated floors, steam features, freestanding tubs with custom surrounds, or luxury fixture brands, most homeowners need to budget $55,000–$90,000 or higher.
Do I need a permit for a bathroom remodel in Flower Mound?
We pull permits through Flower Mound Building Inspections and schedule inspections. If the property also needs historic or design district approval, we catch that before construction starts.
How does your pricing compare to hiring separate subcontractors?
Going direct to subs can save 8–12% on labor in some cases — but that’s before you factor in your time coordinating schedules, re-inspecting failed rough-ins, and managing material deliveries. Most homeowners who’ve done it both ways tell us the “savings” evaporated by week three.
As a general contractor, we carry full liability and workers’ comp insurance, and our subcontractors are bonded. If something goes wrong, there’s one call to make — not six.
Do you offer a warranty on your work?
Yes. Every Fin Home Custom Contracting project comes with a comprehensive warranty: 1 year on all work, 2 years on major systems, and 10 years on structural components. We also remain available after move-in to answer questions and provide support, so you can feel confident in your investment.







