Run the numbers and Clyde reads as the exception in our service area. Where most WNC towns carry a majority of homes built before 1980, Clyde's median home was finished in 1986, only 39.3% predate 1980, and the 8,321-parcel 28721 ring averages a structure year of 1983. That is a town that came of age during the one-piece fiberglass tub-shower era — and those fixtures, installed by the thousand in new construction, are now reaching the age where the surface yellows and the standing-water shine wears off. The conversion here is less about retiring a step-over hazard and more about replacing a fixture that has simply done its decades.
The 1980s fixture, and why it converts so clean
A one-piece fiberglass tub-shower is set in place during the framing stage, before the surrounding walls are closed up. That single fact governs the entire job. When we section the unit out — and it leaves the bathroom the same way it came in, in pieces, never back through the finished door — what is left is an open stud bay, square and dry, exactly what a modern bonded membrane and backer board were engineered to attach to. There is no mortar bed to demolish and no 400-pound cast-iron tub to score and break apart on the floor. With roughly 4,949 dated structures in the surrounding ZCTA weighted toward that build era, the demo in a Clyde bathroom is about as repeatable as this work gets, and the quote reflects it.
Owners who stay, and what they should buy
The other half of Clyde's story is who owns these houses. At 66.8% owner-occupancy, this is a stay-put town, not the renter-majority market the WNC cities have become — and that changes the right recommendation. Where a landlord buys speed and grout-free walls, a long-tenured Clyde owner gets far more from a custom-tile conversion at $3,500 to $15,000: a continuous waterproofing system behind the wall, tile chosen on purpose, a niche that fits the shampoo, and glass sized to the room. The one-day acrylic lane at $1,200 to $9,500 still has its place for a fast, durable swap, but when you are going to shower in it every morning for the next twenty years, the design payoff of tile usually wins the math.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tub-to-shower conversion — one-day acrylic liner system | $1,200 | $4,500 | $9,500 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion (all types) | $1,500 | $5,000 | $15,000 |
| Walk-in shower — custom tile with frameless glass, installed | $3,500 | $9,000 | $15,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
For Clyde these published bands come from HomeGuide — Tub to Shower Conversion Cost (2026), checked against the Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report as the regional yardstick. Because the 1980s donor fixture comes out clean and the drain usually stays put, Clyde jobs commonly settle below each midpoint.
Done once, done right: the waterproofing standard
Newer framing does not excuse a thin build. Every tiled conversion we set in Clyde gets a continuous bonded waterproofing system — membrane on the walls, a sloped and sealed pan, banded corners and curb or recess — because tile and grout decorate a shower, they do not waterproof it. That hidden layer is the entire difference between a bath still dry behind the wall in forty years and a slow leak feeding a framing repair. We install the recognizable names listed across this site — Schluter systems and Kohler, Moen and Delta valves — so any plumber in Haywood County can service the bath long after we are gone. When the scope trips a permit it files with Haywood County Building Inspections, and the license behind any NC remodel verifies at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors.
Thinking the tub-versus-shower question through for accessibility instead? The Clyde walk-in tub & accessible bathroom page runs that call against the town's own demographics, and the walk-in shower cost guide holds the line-item detail for every lane above. Ready to put a number on yours? The free in-home estimate turns any lane into a fixed, written quote.