Leicester is Buncombe County's working northwest — Sandy Mush's preserved farm valleys, New Found's coves, tractors with road manners better than most sedans. Its 3,438 homes split the way farm communities always do: homeplaces that have watched a century of family come and go, and newer houses raised on land carved from the back pasture, which is how a community that is 34.4% pre-1980 still posts a 1997 median build year. The bathrooms tell the same double story — added-on farmhouse baths overdue for real structure, and 1990s-2000s baths overdue for taste — and we remodel both with the same respect for what the property does for a living.
Designing around the well
Most of Leicester drinks from its own ground, and a bathroom that ignores its water source is a bathroom that ages badly. Iron-bearing wells stain bright acrylic and etch chrome; sediment shortens cartridge life; hardness films glass. Our well-country specification runs the other way: porcelain surfaces chosen to disguise mineral character, valves picked for serviceable cartridges rather than sealed mystery, squeegee-friendly glass or no glass at all, and — where the water test argues for it — filtration installed at the same time the walls are open. It is the least glamorous line in the quote and the one a Leicester homeowner appreciates longest.
From porch bath to primary suite
The farmhouse remodel here has a recognizable arc. The original add-on bath — often literally a converted porch — gets rebuilt as one modern room: framing corrected, floor leveled and insulated, plumbing consolidated from its wandering history into clean runs, ventilation that finally exists. Where the family is growing instead of preserving, the conversation turns to capacity: 28.1% of homes here hold one full bath, and at 2,976 median square feet, most floor plans have a candidate corner near the stack. Farm households add a third option the suburbs rarely think of — the utility bath by the working entrance, where the barn day washes off before it meets the house.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small bathroom remodel (under ~40 sq ft, like-for-like update) | $3,500 | $7,000 | $12,000 |
| Guest / hall bathroom remodel (toilet, sink, tub-shower combo) | $5,000 | $9,000 | $15,000 |
| Full bathroom remodel (tub or shower, vanity, toilet, flooring) | $7,000 | $16,000 | $28,000 |
| Master / primary bathroom remodel (double vanity, separate shower, often a soaking tub) | $18,000 | $35,000 | $80,000 |
Published ranges from HomeGuide — Bathroom Remodel Cost (2026); regional benchmark Cost vs. Value, South Atlantic. At Leicester's $284,400 median value, scope discipline — and not paying twice for mobilization on multi-bath projects — is where budgets are won.
Rural process, county standards
Unincorporated means one permit authority: Buncombe County Permits & Inspections, which we handle end-to-end, sequencing rural inspection routes into the schedule instead of letting them surprise it. Septic capacity governs added baths (the record lives at county Environmental Health; we pull it before design), existing-bath remodels never wake that issue. Materials are our standing names — Schluter waterproofing, Kohler/Moen/Delta serviceable valves — because a fixture a Leicester plumber can rebuild in 2045 beats a boutique brand nobody stocks west of Asheville. License verification: NCLBGC, always. Start at the free in-home estimate; if the kitchen's on the list too, kitchen remodeling shares the crew, and accessibility scopes live on the WNC guide.