Design Bathroom Renovation Plan
Plan a bathroom renovation by defining layout constraints, specifying fixtures within plumbing rough-in locations, selecting tile and finishes, addressing ventilation and code requirements, and producing contractor-ready documentation.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: The National Kitchen and Bath Association (NKBA) publishes the Bathroom Planning Guidelines — the industry standard for professional bathroom designers and contractors. Local building codes (IRC for residential) govern clearances, ventilation, GFCI outlet requirements, and structural limitations. All licensed contractors request a specification document before bidding; an undocumented renovation produces inconsistent bids and scope creep.
Impact: Bathroom renovation averages $10,000–$25,000 for a full remodel; the most common cost overruns come from scope changes after work begins (moving plumbing rough-ins adds $500–$3,000 per fixture), discovered structural issues (waterproofing failures, rot under the subfloor), and missing code compliance items (no GFCI, insufficient ventilation). Thorough upfront planning captures 80% of these issues before work starts.
Steps
1. Audit the existing bathroom — document constraints before designing
Before selecting anything, document what you have:
- Plumbing rough-in locations: measure from the wall to the center of: toilet flange, supply lines (cold/hot), drain location
- Toilet rough-in: distance from finished wall to toilet flange center; standard = 12 inches; older homes may be 10 or 14 inches — determines toilet model compatibility
- Wall stud locations: mark stud positions; affects where you can anchor fixtures (vanity, towel bars, blocking for grab bars)
- Subfloor condition: probe for soft spots near the toilet and in the shower area (signs of water damage requiring repair before tiling)
- Ceiling height: affects shower head height and any lowered soffit designs
- Electrical panel: note circuit capacity for heated floor or towel warmer additions
Photograph everything in the existing state before demolition.
2. Define layout options within plumbing constraints
Moving a toilet, tub, or shower requires moving the drain — expensive and disruptive:
- Keep fixtures in place (swap only): lowest cost; highest design constraint
- Rotate 90° (same drain but different orientation): moderate cost; usually requires rerouting supply lines
- Relocate fixture to different wall: high cost; requires opening floor or ceiling below
NKBA minimum clearances (code-minimum, not ideal):
- Toilet centerline: 15 inches from any side wall or obstruction (15" code minimum; 18" recommended)
- In front of toilet: 21 inches minimum clear floor space (30" recommended)
- Shower: 30"×30" minimum interior; 36"×36" recommended; walk-in preferred over 48"
- Vanity height: 32"–36" (standard), 34"–38" for comfort height
Design the layout on grid paper (¼ inch = 1 foot scale) showing all fixtures with minimum clearances confirmed.
3. Specify fixtures — measure twice, order once
For each fixture, specify completely before ordering:
- Toilet: rough-in size (10/12/14"); elongated vs. round bowl; comfort height vs. standard; flush performance (MaP score 500+ = minimum; 800+ = high performance); water efficiency (1.28 gpf vs. older 1.6 gpf)
- Vanity and sink: width (ensure it clears the door swing); single vs. double sink; undermount vs. drop-in; confirm drain location aligns with existing rough-in or budget for rerouting
- Shower/tub: shower pan size (confirm fits the stall); prefab vs. custom tile; niche depth (wall framing permits standard 3.5" depth for 4×12" or similar tiles); grab bar blocking (install now even if not installing bars yet)
- Faucets/hardware: confirm finish (chrome, brushed nickel, matte black) matches across all fixtures; confirm faucet hole configuration matches the sink
4. Design tile and finishes
Tile selection drives the renovation's aesthetic and cost:
- Floor tile: non-slip rating required (DCOF ≥0.42 wet for bathroom floors); larger format tiles have fewer grout lines but require flat substrate (self-leveling compound); pattern direction affects perceived size of the room
- Shower wall tile: water-resistant grout (epoxy or modified polymer); 12"×24" or larger tiles minimizes grout maintenance; niche tile matches or contrasts the field tile; floor of the shower needs smaller tiles for pitch compliance
- Grout: white grout in shower = high maintenance; match grout color to tile to reduce visual fatigue; epoxy grout in the shower floor is more durable
Lighting: 3-zone layered lighting:
- Ambient (overhead): recessed LED cans or surface mount
- Task (vanity): vertical sconces at eye level on each side of the mirror (reduces shadows) are preferred over overhead-only strip lighting
- Accent (optional): under-vanity, in-niche, or decorative
5. Address ventilation and code requirements
Ventilation is code-required and often neglected:
- Exhaust fan: minimum 1 CFM per square foot of bathroom area; minimum 50 CFM (IRC); recommended: 80–110 CFM for improved moisture removal
- GFCI protection: all receptacles within 6 feet of a water source (code in all US jurisdictions); GFCI receptacle or GFCI breaker for the bathroom circuit
- Heated floor: requires its own 120V circuit with GFCI; thermostat required; plan circuit routing before flooring
6. Produce contractor documentation
Before soliciting bids:
- Floor plan with dimensions and fixture rough-in locations
- Elevation drawings of shower and vanity walls
- Fixture specification sheet: brand, model number, finish for every item
- Tile specification sheet: brand, size, pattern, color, grout selection
- Scope of work checklist: demo, waterproofing, plumbing rough-in, electrical, tile, fixtures, finishes
Consistent documentation allows multiple contractors to bid against identical scope — apples-to-apples comparison. Without a spec document, bids vary widely in what they include, making comparison impossible.
Common Mistakes
- Skipping subfloor inspection: existing water damage discovered after demo adds $500–$5,000 to the project. Probe for soft spots before signing a contract and include contingency in the budget.
- Ordering fixtures before confirming rough-in dimensions: a toilet with the wrong rough-in size requires returning it (restock fees) or re-roughing the plumbing. Measure first, order second.
- No grab bar blocking: most grab bars are installed when the homeowner is older. Framing blocking into the walls at 33"–36" height during the renovation costs $100–$300; adding it post-tile requires opening the wall.
When NOT to Use
- Commercial or ADA-required bathroom design: commercial bathrooms and those required to meet ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) standards have different clearances, fixture heights, and turning radius requirements that go beyond the residential guidelines described here.