Old Fort is a railroad village of about 555 people at the foot of the I-40 grade, and the smart way to plan a remodel here starts with one number: the median home inside the town limits is valued at just $135,900 on a median household income of $47,500. That is among the lowest housing values anywhere in our Western NC service area, and it changes the remodeling conversation entirely. The goal in Old Fort is not the largest project the room can hold — it is the project whose return survives the home's value ceiling, paired with the safety and waterproofing fixes a 1965-vintage house actually needs. Pisgah Bath & Kitchen scopes both halves of that on the same warm, fixed-quote process we run across McDowell County and the broader Blue Ridge.
Why scope discipline matters more in Old Fort
Run the arithmetic and the strategy writes itself. On a $135,900 house, an upscale kitchen at the top of the published band — well past $80,000 — would be more than half the value of the whole home, money no Old Fort owner recoups when they sell. So we start from the scope that returns the most. A minor kitchen remodel — new or refaced doors, counters, hardware, paint and lighting over the existing footprint — runs $15,000 to $30,000 and recoups roughly 96% at resale per the South Atlantic Cost vs. Value data, the highest return of any kitchen scope. A mid-range kitchen with new semi-custom cabinets, counters and appliances runs $30,000 to $80,000, and that is usually the practical ceiling for a home at this value. We lay the resale math beside your daily-use wish list at the estimate so the plan fits both — see the full breakdown in our WNC kitchen remodel cost guide.
What a 1965-era Old Fort bathroom is working with
The town's housing leans old: the median home dates to 1965 and 67% of Old Fort's stock was built before 1980 — block after block of single-level mill-and-rail houses with a five-by-eight hall bath and a cast-iron tub against the wall. The advantage of that vintage is that crawlspace-framed one-level homes are the easiest possible candidates for a step-free shower, because the drain can be reset in a joist bay without major structural work. The watch-outs are the ones every old foothills bath hides: galvanized supply piping near the end of its life and a heavy mud-set mortar bed under the original tile. We price for those after we have seen the room, never from a phone number, so the figure on your estimate is the figure on your invoice. A guest bath that keeps its layout runs $5,000 to $15,000; a full bath with new tile and fixtures lands at $7,000 to $28,000.
Aging in place, on an Old Fort budget
One in four Old Fort residents — 25.8% — is 65 or older, and 18.9% report an ambulatory difficulty, so a 1960s step-over tub is a daily hazard in a real share of these homes. The good news is that the safest fix is also the most affordable one. A tub-to-shower conversion at $1,500 to $15,000 removes the tub wall entirely and serves a standing grandchild and a seated grandparent alike, while a low-threshold walk-in shower runs $3,500 to $15,000 installed. Either way we anchor solid framing behind the walls for grab bars before the cement board goes up, so the safety hardware can be added the day it is needed. The accessible routes are detailed on our Old Fort walk-in tub & accessible bathroom page.
| Project scope | Typical cost range |
|---|---|
| Minor kitchen remodel (reface/replace doors, new counters, hardware, paint — keep layout) | $15,000 to $30,000 |
| Mid-range major kitchen remodel (new cabinets, counters, appliances, flooring) | $30,000 to $80,000 |
| Guest / hall bathroom remodel (toilet, sink, tub-shower combo) | $5,000 to $15,000 |
| Full bathroom remodel (tub or shower, vanity, toilet, flooring) | $7,000 to $28,000 |
| Small bathroom remodel (under ~40 sq ft, like-for-like update) | $3,500 to $12,000 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion (all types) | $1,500 to $15,000 |
| Walk-in shower, installed (all types) | $3,500 to $15,000 |
The Old Fort ranges shown here are drawn from outside published data — HomeGuide's 2026 bath & kitchen figures together with the 2024 Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report — South Atlantic; that South Atlantic dataset is the regional set North Carolina falls within, and what it reports are planning yardsticks for an Old Fort owner, never a binding Pisgah figure. McDowell County labor sits well below big-metro averages, so a foothills job that keeps its existing plumbing typically prices into the lower half of each band; moved fixtures push toward the top. Against a $135,900 median home value, the high-recoup scopes are the ones worth weighing first, and every job is priced individually after a free in-home estimate.
Whatever the room, the path is the same: start on the free estimate form, we measure on site, and you get real McDowell County numbers and a fixed price before you commit on a $135,900 home. Want the line-item math first? Our WNC kitchen cost guide and WNC bathroom cost guide break every scope down, and the Old Fort walk-in tub & accessible bathroom page covers step-free routes for the town's older households.