Two honest readings of Woodfin disagree about its age, and the disagreement is the whole point. The Census place — the incorporated town limits — reports a median build year of 1999 with only 29.5% of homes standing before 1980. Buncombe County's 2025 appraisal file, cut by Woodfin situs across the wider mailing area, lists 2,363 residential buildings with a median of 2002 yet a 41.7% pre-1980 share. A town that reads young by one measure and substantially older by another is a town that grew in two distinct eras — and a conversion crew has to quote for both.
The largest baths we work on
The number that sets Woodfin apart from every town on this map is size: a median home of 2,386 sq ft in county appraisal records, well above the WNC norm. Square footage like that usually buys a primary bath with real floor area — and that changes the calculus on a conversion. Where a cramped 1950s bath forces a tight acrylic stall, a Woodfin primary often has the room for a tiled walk-in with a bench and a niche, or a true zero-entry plane that still leaves space for a vanity and a separate soaking tub. The conversion here is less about rescuing a small room and more about modernizing a generous one, which is why the custom tile and curbless lanes tend to fit a Woodfin primary bath better than the tight one-day acrylic swap.
Two eras, two demo days
Pricing honesty in Woodfin means anticipating which era a bath belongs to. In the newer subdivisions that pulled the Census median to 1999, the donor fixture is typically a 1990s-2000s fiberglass or acrylic surround set against bare studs — sectioned out in a morning, leaving clean framing the modern membrane systems were built for. In the older river-corridor and Beaverdam pockets behind the 41.7% pre-1980 figure, demo can uncover mud-set tile or aging supply lines at the valve, which is the right moment to cut galvanized back to copper or PEX. Same finished shower either way; different labor line underneath, which is exactly why our quotes are written after we've stood in the room.
| 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 — 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 Woodfin we anchor these bands to HomeGuide / Angi — Tub to Shower Conversion Cost (2026), with the Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report as the regional reference point. Because Woodfin's baths are roomy, jobs more often reach the tile and curbless midpoints than bottom out at the acrylic floor — and any conversion that keeps the existing drain still saves real money off the high end.
Built to last in a two-vintage town
Every tiled conversion we set in Woodfin gets a continuous bonded waterproofing system — membrane up the walls, a sloped and sealed pan, banded corners, and a curb or recess — because tile and grout decorate the shower, they do not waterproof it. That discipline is what keeps a leak from quietly feeding a framing repair years out. We install the recognizable names we list across the site — Schluter systems and Kohler, Moen and Delta valves — so any Buncombe County plumber can service the bath decades from now. Whenever the scope crosses into permitted territory, that filing goes through Buncombe County Permits & Inspections for the Woodfin job, while the credential standing behind our crew can be checked at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors.
Still torn between keeping a tub and switching to a step-free shower for an aging-in-place Woodfin bath? Our Woodfin walk-in tub & accessible bathroom page runs that decision against the town's aging numbers. Reworking more than the wet area? Start at bathroom remodeling in Woodfin — and the walk-in shower cost guide holds the line-item detail for every lane above.