Fin Home Contracting · Irving, TX
Irving Bathroom Remodeling
We're the general contractor Irving 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 Irving
Irving bathroom remodels move faster and cleaner when the contractor already understands the housing mix. A bath in Las Colinas is not the same job as one in Plymouth Park or Valley Ranch, and the estimate should reflect that from day one. We run the remodel ourselves instead of acting like a booking service between you and a set of trades.
Bathroom remodels in Irving start at $12k. In the 12,000–18,000 range, a meaningful refresh usually covers a new vanity, counters, flooring, paint, fixtures, lighting, and selective tile or shower improvements depending on the layout. We provide a written, itemized quote so you know where every dollar is allocated.
Many Irving homes were built between the 1960s and 1990s, which means demo can reveal outdated electrical, original plumbing, and floor damage around long-used wet areas. In established sections like University Hills or Bear Creek, we inspect for those issues early so the job is priced around reality, not optimism.
A local project manager will get back to you within 24 business hours.
Responds within 24 business hours
Neighborhoods we've worked in
Las Colinas · Valley Ranch · Hackberry Creek · Cottonwood Valley · University Hills · Tudor Lane · Bear Creek · Hunter Valley · Plymouth Park · Barton Estates
Bathroom remodels across DFW – including Irving.
$12k
Starting price for a meaningful Irving bathroom refresh.
Response time from a Irving-based project manager.
Years serving the Irving residential market.
What's Unique About Irving
Irving has a mix of established neighborhoods and newer builds, which means every remodel approach is different depending on the age and layout of the home. We scope each project to the specific property, not a generic template.
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NEAR IRVING CLIENT TESTIMONIALS
Fin Home Stories Near Irving
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NEIGHBORHOODS WE KNOW
Common Bathroom Remodeling Patterns Across Irving
In older central Irving and the Heritage District, bathroom remodeling often begins with small hall baths that were built for efficiency, not comfort. Many homes from the 1950s through the 1970s still rely on tub-shower combinations, older tile, small vanity cabinets, and ventilation that does not keep up with daily use. When the shower walls are opened, old plumbing, patched drywall, or moisture-damaged trim can change the scope quickly. The remodel usually focuses on a properly rebuilt wet area, stronger fan, better lighting, and a vanity that adds storage without making the room feel tighter.
In Las Colinas and Hackberry Creek, the bathroom pattern is often tied to larger homes, townhomes, and higher finish expectations. Primary baths may have good square footage but dated layouts from the 1990s or early 2000s: large tubs, framed glass, broad mirrors, and cabinet bases that do not store well. The common remodel reallocates space into a larger shower, updates tile and glass, improves vanity storage, and uses lighting that makes the room feel more intentional. In townhomes, the scope often has to be tighter, with careful attention to storage, plumbing locations, and vertical space.
In Valley Ranch and family subdivisions near the northwest side of Irving, secondary bathrooms often become the first rooms to show wear. Kids, guests, and daily routines can age grout, tub surrounds, vanity tops, and fan motors faster than homeowners expect. These remodels usually keep the tub where it belongs for family use but rebuild the wet area, replace the vanity, add durable tile, and improve lighting. Primary bathrooms may get a shower conversion or expanded shower footprint, especially when the original tub takes too much space and is rarely used.
In condo, townhome, and zero-lot-line properties around Irving’s employment corridors, bathroom remodeling is usually about making limited square footage work better. A small primary bath may need a low-threshold shower, recessed storage, a narrower but better-designed vanity, and a mirror-lighting plan that brightens the room without crowding it. Ventilation is especially important when the bath has limited exterior wall access or no window. Across Irving, the remodel scope should follow the housing type: an older central Irving ranch, a Las Colinas townhome, and a Valley Ranch family home all have different bathroom problems and different sensible solutions. That housing spread makes careful planning important, because a compact townhome bath and an older ranch bath can share the same surface symptoms while needing different construction fixes.
WHAT TO EXPECT TO PAY
Bathroom Remodeling Pricing in Irving
These are real ranges drawn from projects we've completed in Irving. 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 Irving 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
Irving vs Nearby Cities
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Irving $22,000–35,000
WHAT DRIVES COST UP
Bathroom costs in Irving move most with tile scope, which can swing $2,500–$9,000, fixtures and finishes at $1,000–$5,000, and moisture or subfloor remediation that often runs $2,000–$8,000. We flag those during the estimate so the quote reflects real conditions behind the walls and under the floor.
Why Irving Pricing Works This Way
What Shapes Bathroom Remodeling Costs in Irving
In Las Colinas, Valley Ranch, and Hackberry Creek, the biggest bathroom remodeling cost driver is often the age of the house rather than the size of the bathroom. Postwar homes, 1970s ranches, townhomes, and newer corporate-area housing may have compact hall baths, cast-iron or older drain lines, patched tile, low vanities, and ventilation that was acceptable decades ago but does not handle modern shower use well. When a bathroom like that is opened up, the estimate has to account for more than new fixtures. Subfloor repair, valve replacement, wall flattening, tub removal, waterproof backer systems, and electrical updates for lighting or GFCI protection can all change the price before the visible finishes are installed. A small bathroom can still become a larger scope if the tub alcove, drain, or floor structure needs correction.
In Heritage District, Central Irving, and Las Colinas, primary bathrooms built or remodeled in the 1980s and 1990s tend to carry a different cost pattern. These baths may have more square footage, but it is often consumed by oversized garden tubs, narrow showers, long mirrors, and vanity cabinets with poor storage. Converting that layout into a larger shower with glass, a cleaner tub decision, better lighting, and usable drawer storage changes the budget because multiple trades touch the same room. Tile selection is one of the biggest swings: a simple ceramic surround, a large-format porcelain shower, and a patterned floor with detailed cuts do not install at the same labor level. Shower glass also matters, especially when the design calls for custom sizing instead of a standard opening.
In central Irving and Heritage District-area homes, older-home uncertainty adds cost discipline to the planning process. Moving a toilet or shower drain across a slab, fixing moisture-damaged framing, replacing corroded shutoffs, or venting a fan properly to the exterior can add thousands compared with a fixture-in-place remodel. In Las Colinas and Hackberry Creek homes, the finish expectations usually push the other direction: better plumbing trims, custom vanities, thicker glass, designer tile, and more layered lighting. Costs often differ by housing type: small older baths need efficient rebuilding, while Las Colinas properties usually push finish and glass budgets higher. The estimate is most reliable when the scope separates the controllable choices, such as vanity, tile, glass, and fixtures, from the construction conditions that have to be solved for the bathroom to last. That distinction is important because an older hall bath, a 1990s primary suite, and a newer family bath may look similar in square footage, but they draw money from very different parts of the scope.
Ready to Remodel Your Irving Bathroom?
Get a written estimate from a local project manager — within 48 hours, on-site.
Irving Cost Guide
How Much Does It Cost to Remodel a Bathroom in Irving?
Get a detailed breakdown of bathroom remodeling costs in Irving 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 Irving Bathroom Is Ready for a Remodel
A bathroom in Irving is usually ready for remodeling when the room stops behaving like a dry, dependable part of the house. Across Las Colinas, Valley Ranch, Hackberry Creek, the Hospital District, Heritage District, and established central Irving neighborhoods, that often means bathrooms built into mid-century homes, 1970s and 1980s brick houses, townhomes, executive homes, and newer properties near mixed-use development. The visible clues can look minor at first: cracked grout at the shower corners, loose tile near the tub, a vanity side panel swelling at the floor, or a faucet that leaves mineral stains no matter how often it is cleaned. The important question is whether those issues are isolated or part of a pattern. If the same shower corner keeps opening, if the bath mat hides a low spot in the floor, or if the ceiling below a bathroom shows even faint staining, the bathroom is giving you a construction signal, not a decorating signal. A remodel becomes the better option when repair work is repeating without changing the underlying condition.
Ventilation problems are another strong sign. In Irving, we would pay close attention to older bathrooms with limited ventilation, second-floor townhome baths, dated shower valves, and primary showers where glass, grout, and caulk have been patched repeatedly. A bathroom that holds humidity long after a shower will age faster than the rest of the home. You may see peeling ceiling paint, recurring mildew at the caulk line, rusty light fixtures, mirror backing that darkens at the edges, or cabinet boxes that feel rough and swollen near the floor. Those symptoms are not solved by choosing a better paint color. They point to airflow, waterproofing, or fixture conditions that need to be corrected as part of the remodel. When a bathroom has been patched for years, the demolition phase often reveals why the symptoms kept coming back: old backing materials, poor slope, gaps behind the trim, or a shower assembly that was never built to handle daily use for 20 or 30 years.
Function is the other half of the decision. Many Irving bathrooms are not failing dramatically; they are simply built around narrow shower entries, low vanities, cramped hall baths, oversized tubs in primary suites, and lighting that makes the room feel older than the rest of the home. That matters because daily use exposes bad planning. If two people cannot use the vanity at the same time, if towels have to be stored in a hallway, if the shower entry is narrow, or if the lighting makes shaving, makeup, or medication routines difficult, the bathroom is costing time every day. The case gets stronger when safety enters the picture. High tub walls, slick floors, missing blocking for future grab bars, and cramped toilet clearances are all signs that the room may not support the next 10 to 20 years of use. Irving's housing mix makes bathroom condition especially noticeable because buyers may compare a dated bath against everything from older ranch homes to polished Las Colinas inventory. At that point, remodeling is not about making the bathroom look newer; it is about rebuilding the room so it works reliably.
LOCAL PROJECT PLANNING
What to Plan For Before a Bathroom Remodel in Irving
A bathroom remodel in Irving should begin with a clear look at the house, not with tile samples. Around Las Colinas, Valley Ranch, Heritage District, and older central Irving neighborhoods, the housing stock includes older ranch houses, townhomes, condos, and larger suburban homes with varied plumbing access, usually from the 1950s through the 2000s. Those homes can remodel very well, but the scope needs to be defined before construction starts. The big question is whether the bathroom is staying in the same footprint or whether the project includes fixture relocation, a new shower footprint, a different vanity size, or a tub removal. Each of those decisions affects plumbing, waterproofing, glass, tile layout, and inspection timing. Planning also needs to account for what is behind the finishes: old angle stops that may not close, original mixing valves, patched drywall near showers, soft flooring near tubs, or bath fans that were never routed properly. Shared-wall or HOA limitations, older valves, upstairs bath waterproofing, and primary bathrooms where the tub-shower balance no longer fits daily use are the kinds of conditions that should be discussed before the first wall is opened. The more detailed the preconstruction plan is, the less likely the project is to drift once demolition reveals the real condition of the room.
The design should be finalized enough that the rough-in work can proceed without guessing. That means the homeowner should know the shower valve type, whether there will be one niche or two, whether the shower head is fixed or handheld, where the bench goes, what glass swing or panel arrangement is planned, and how the vanity storage actually works. Bathroom remodels often run into trouble when the visible materials are selected but the technical details are vague. A wall-hung vanity, freestanding tub filler, curbless shower, or relocated toilet can be the right choice, but each one needs framing, waterproofing, plumbing, and inspection planning before the room is opened. Lighting deserves the same attention. Many older bathrooms rely on a single vanity bar or a central ceiling light, which leaves the shower dim and the mirror harsh. Planning for layered lighting, GFCI-protected outlets, exhaust capacity, and humidity-resistant finishes helps the finished bathroom feel better and last longer. Homeowners should also order enough attic, wall, or ceiling investigation to understand whether the fan can be routed properly and whether recessed lighting or new switches can be added without tearing into rooms that were not supposed to be part of the project.
A bathroom remodel also needs a realistic household plan. If the project is a hall bath used by kids or guests, the family may need a temporary routine for showers, storage, and morning traffic. If it is a primary bath, the bedroom may become part of the work zone, which means furniture protection, dust barriers, and access rules need to be clear. Homes with tight driveways, finished stairways, or long walks from the parking area require more thought about demolition removal and material staging. Irving permitting, HOA or condo rules, and careful planning around access paths should be addressed before construction begins, especially when plumbing, electrical, ventilation, or framing changes are part of the scope. A homeowner does not need to know every trade detail, but they should know the core plan: the final layout, the wet-area system, the ventilation route, the finish selections, the inspection path, and the backup bathroom strategy. When those pieces are settled before demo, the remodel has a much better chance of staying orderly.
HOW IT WORKS
Our Irving Process
Every step is handled locally in Irving — 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 Irving 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.
Irving Permit Office
All residential permits in Irving are processed through Irving Building Inspections. We submit on your behalf, track status, and schedule all required inspections so you do not have to chase paperwork. We handle the process directly through Irving Building Inspections. →
COMMON QUESTIONS
Irving Bathroom Remodeling FAQs
Questions specific to Irving — permits, warranties, and pricing.
How long does a remodel take in Irving?
We give every project a specific timeline at the estimate stage, not a generic range, once we’ve walked the space and understood the scope.
What does a mid-range bathroom remodel actually get me in Irving?
Layout reconfigurations, custom-built cabinetry, freestanding tubs, heated floors, or luxury finishes typically push the project past this budget into $38,000–$58,000+.
Do I need a permit for a bathroom remodel in Irving?
We handle the permit process through Irving Building Inspections and coordinate inspections as each phase is completed.
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.







