Arden grew up as the address south-Buncombe families chose when they wanted square footage — and the records still read that way. The median home in county appraisal data measures 2,821 heated square feet, a median build year of 1997, and a remarkable 13.9% single-full-bath share against a county norm closer to a third. Translate that to remodeling and you get a town whose owners aren't asking us to find room for a bathroom; they already have several. Their question is sequencing — which of three or four baths earns the renovation first, and how the others carry the household while it happens.
The 1990s primary suite, finally finished
The signature Arden project is the primary bath of a 1997-era house: a tile-decked garden tub that gets used twice a year, a separate fiberglass shower module that has chalked and yellowed, a sprawling double vanity in oak or honey laminate, and brass or polished-chrome trim throughout. Because the house is large and built to modern code, almost the whole budget converts to visible upgrade. The standard move is to demolish the unused garden-tub corner and let its drain and supply feed a wide tiled or curbless walk-in shower — the $12,000 to $17,000 scope — which usually opens enough floor to keep a freestanding soaker too. A $18,000 to $80,000 primary remodel in Arden buys finish and layout, not structural rescue.
Spare baths change the whole job
The flip side of an 13.9% one-bath rate is that almost every Arden household keeps a working shower while we build. That single fact reshapes the project: we can take a bath fully offline for a true gut-and-tile without renting you a portable, sequence two baths back-to-back under one mobilization, and stage materials in a guest bath that won't be touched for weeks. Secondary and hall baths here run the $5,000 to $15,000 band, climbing toward the $7,000 to $28,000 full-remodel range as footprint grows; the pool or bonus-room bath is often a quick durability-and-style refresh once the suite is done. We plan the whole rotation at the estimate so the house is never harder to live in than it has to be.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full bathroom remodel (tub or shower, vanity, toilet, flooring) | $7,000 | $16,000 | $28,000 |
| Guest / hall bathroom remodel (toilet, sink, tub-shower combo) | $5,000 | $9,000 | $15,000 |
| Master / primary bathroom remodel (double vanity, separate shower, often a soaking tub) | $18,000 | $35,000 | $80,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
Arden ranges as published by HomeGuide — Bathroom Remodel Cost (2026), with the South Atlantic Cost vs. Value report as the regional resale yardstick. Local jobs lean to the upper half of each band because the median Arden bath is part of a 2,821 sq ft home — larger rooms, more tile and plumbing per project.
Bigger homes, room to plan ahead
The same generous footprint that drives Arden costs up also makes it the easiest town in our book to future-proof. With an average 28704 parcel value of $464,969 and floor plans that started big, a curbless entry, a shower bench and comfort-height fixtures slot in without crowding anything — the aging-in-place upgrades that feel like a compromise in a small house feel like an amenity here. Permits route through Buncombe County's office for any plumbing or structural change; materials hold our standard (Schluter-class waterproofing, Kohler/Moen/Delta valves); and you can confirm any contractor's standing at the NCLBGC before signing. Start with the free in-home estimate, or read the cost mechanics first in the WNC bathroom cost guide. Asheville's city stock has its own page at bathroom remodeling in Asheville.