Flat Rock is an outlier on the one statistic that drives this work. At 53.5% aged 65 and over, the village is past the tipping point most towns only approach — a majority of residents are at or near the age when a step-over tub stops being a fixture and starts being a fall risk. Pair that with a 95.3% owner-occupancy rate and a $601,700 median home value, and the picture is specific: people who own substantial homes, intend to stay in them, and have a near-term reason to retire the tub. The walk-in shower conversion is not a speculative upgrade in Flat Rock — it is the default renovation of a town aging in place on purpose.
Why demo day here is the easy part
The good news under the tile is that Flat Rock's housing is comparatively young. The median home was built in 1992, only 30.1% of houses predate 1980, and across the 6,152 parcels in the 28731 situs ring the average construction year is 1989. That vintage almost guarantees the donor fixture is a one-piece fiberglass or acrylic tub-shower set against open studs during construction — the cleanest tear-out in the trade. There is no mud-set mortar bed to break apart, no galvanized supply line hiding behind fifty-year-old lath. We section the unit out in a morning, leaving a framing bay modern waterproofing systems were engineered to fit. The budget, in other words, follows your finish decisions rather than what the wall surprises us with.
The curbless case, made by the numbers
When over half a town is 65-plus and 22% of households are a senior living alone, the zero-entry floor moves from luxury to logic. A true curbless shower lets one person enter without lifting a foot over a threshold and without a second set of hands nearby — and Flat Rock's 8.5% ambulatory-difficulty rate — about one resident in twelve — means that independence is already being tested in plenty of these homes. The recess adds roughly 20-to-30% over a curbed build at $12,000 to $17,000 installed, but it is the version nobody has to demolish and rebuild at eighty. Scaled to the whole room — reinforced walls, accessible vanity heights, slip-rated tile — it becomes the universal-design package at $30,000 to $50,000.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tub-to-shower conversion — one-day acrylic liner system | $1,200 | $4,500 | $9,500 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion — full custom tile | $3,500 | $8,000 | $15,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
| Universal-design / accessible bathroom remodel (curbless shower, accessible vanity, grab bars) | $30,000 | $40,750 | $50,000 |
Flat Rock pricing reflects published 2026 figures from HomeGuide / Angi — Tub to Shower Conversion Cost (2026), with the Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report as the regional yardstick. Because the housing stock is newer and largely owner-occupied, Flat Rock jobs tend to be specified toward the durable middle and top of each band rather than the rental-grade floor.
Built to outlast the owner
In a town this committed to staying put, the waterproofing is the whole investment. Every tiled conversion we build gets a continuous bonded system — membrane on the walls, a sloped and sealed pan, banded corners and either a curb or a recessed transition — because tile and grout are finish, not waterproofing. We specify the recognizable valves and systems listed across this site (Schluter membranes, Kohler, Moen and Delta trim) precisely so any plumber in Henderson County can service the bath decades on, which matters most in homes meant to be lived in for life. Permits, when scope trips them, file through Henderson County Building Services, and the license behind the work verifies at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors. Weighing a walk-in tub against a shower? That decision is mapped on the Flat Rock walk-in tub page; the free in-home estimate turns any lane above into a fixed quote.