Every other town we serve carries a backlog of mid-century bathrooms; Weaverville's story runs the opposite direction. The town boomed as Asheville's northern commuter valley in the 1990s and 2000s — median build year 2000 in town, 1993 across the 5,675-home ring — and that whole generation of houses is now crossing the 25-year line together. Their bathrooms were never broken, just built to a price: serviceable fiberglass, cultured marble, oak-front vanities, sheet vinyl. The first-remodel wave replaces all of it at once, and Weaverville is where that wave is cresting in Buncombe County.
Why young-stock remodels price so well
On a 1998 house the things that make old-town remodels expensive mostly do not exist: supply lines are copper or PEX from the start, panels have capacity and grounding, subfloors have not marinated under fifty years of slow leaks. Demo is fast, correction lines are rare, and the quote concentrates on what you chose instead of what we found. It shows in the one-bath statistic too — only 15.4% of in-town homes have a single full bathroom, the lowest share of any market on our books, so Weaverville projects are almost never about adding capacity. They are about taking the bath the builder priced down and finishing it the way the house deserves.
The standard transformation
The work follows a recognizable arc because the starting point is so uniform. The framed slider and fiberglass pan give way to a tiled, glass-walled shower at $3,500 to $15,000; the corner soaker's footprint gets reclaimed where it earns its space back; vanities step up to real cabinetry with quartz; lighting and ventilation get engineered instead of inherited. A full treatment lands in the $7,000 to $28,000 band, a primary suite in $18,000 to $80,000 — and because the bones cooperate, schedule risk stays low: most Weaverville full remodels run their written timeline without a single change order.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| 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 |
| Walk-in shower — custom tile with frameless glass, installed | $3,500 | $9,000 | $15,000 |
Published ranges from HomeGuide — Bathroom Remodel Cost (2026), benchmarked against Cost vs. Value, South Atlantic. Young-stock economics generally land Weaverville jobs below each midpoint when the footprint holds.
Built once, ready for the decades
Weaverville's buyers skew two ways — young families pushed north by Asheville prices, and retirees choosing a walkable Main Street — and we build the same bathroom for both: waterproofed like it matters, reinforced for the grab bars one of those groups will eventually want, thresholds kept low, fixtures from catalogs (Kohler, Moen, Delta, Schluter) that any future tradesperson can service. With 27.7% of the town already 65-plus, the aging-ready details are not speculative; the dedicated options live on our WNC accessible bathroom guide. Permits file with Buncombe County, verification is a search away at the NCLBGC, and the free in-home estimate is where your house's numbers replace the town's.