Most of Etowah went up in one long building season. The Census puts the median Etowah home at a build year of 1988, and the 1,580 parcels carrying a 28729 ZIP average 1988 — only 34.4% predate 1980. That is a different story than the pre-war neighborhoods of Asheville or the 1990s garden-tub estates of Flat Rock: Etowah is largely a community of late-1980s subdivisions, and the people who bought those houses new are now the 27.1% of residents who are 65 or older. The house and its owner have aged on the same clock, and the bathroom they started with was never built for the second half of that timeline.
The 1988 alcove bath, and why it stops fitting
A bathroom framed around 1988 in a Henderson County subdivision has a signature: a five-foot fiberglass tub-and-shower combo set into an alcove, a step-over wall near 14 inches high, a sliding glass door track that catches a toe, and a single low valve. It was efficient to build and fine for a 40-year-old. Thirty-some years on it asks an older knee to clear a slick wall every morning, and it gives a walker or a helper nowhere to stand. The fix is unusually clean here, because that alcove is close to the exact width a step-free fixture wants — the original plumbing wall stays put and the conversion lives inside the footprint the builder already framed.
Just as helpful: stock from this vintage tends to hide fewer ugly surprises behind the tile. Where pre-1980 homes commonly conceal corroded galvanized supply lines and mud-set mortar beds, an Etowah home of this era usually opens to copper or early PEX and a conventional wet-bed or pan, which keeps a tub-to-shower conversion both faster and more predictable to quote.
Owner-occupied means built to stay, not to sell
What separates Etowah from a turnover market is the ownership rate: 84% of households own the home they live in, well above the regional norm, and the median value sits at $338,100. People here are not staging a quick resale — they are deciding whether a house they intend to keep for another decade or two will keep fitting them. That reframes every choice we make at the estimate. We design for the long arc by default: solid blocking screwed into the studs behind any wall that might one day carry a bar, a seat sized for a real shower routine, lever or paddle valves you can work with a closed hand, and a threshold taken as close to zero as the framing allows. With 6.1% of residents already reporting an ambulatory difficulty, that geometry is not speculative — it is the current need for a meaningful share of the community.
What the work costs in Etowah
Published 2026 ranges, which we treat as planning rails until a real in-home measure pins your number: a basic soaker walk-in tub at $3,000 to $7,000 installed; a hydrotherapy model at $7,000 to $15,000; a full custom-tile tub-to-shower conversion at $3,500 to $15,000; and a curbless, tiled walk-in shower at $12,000 to $17,000. If you take the whole room down to the studs and rebuild it around access, the South Atlantic figures covering North Carolina put a full universal-design bathroom at $30,000 to $50,000. Against a median Etowah home value of $338,100, even the upper end of accessible work is a small fraction of the asset it keeps livable — and a planned remodel, unlike a scramble after a fall, gets to look good doing it.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walk-in tub — basic soaker model, installed | $3,000 | $5,000 | $7,000 |
| Walk-in tub — hydrotherapy (air + water jets), installed | $7,000 | $11,000 | $15,000 |
| 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 |
Etowah ranges draw on Angi / HomeGuide — Walk-In Tub Cost (2026) plus the regional Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report. Because the late-1980s footprint usually stays put and the plumbing tends to be newer, Etowah jobs commonly settle in the lower-to-middle of each band — your fixed figure comes from a free in-home measure, never a table.
Built to outlast the need
Permitting runs through Henderson County Building Services, whose office logged 713 residential interior-remodel filings in 2025 — so the inspection cadence behind this kind of project is well-established. We carry the permit and meet the inspectors so you never chase one yourself. On private homes we use the federal 2010 ADA Standards as our geometry reference — a 60-inch turning space, 33-to-36-inch bar height, 17-to-19-inch seat height — not because a residence is required to comply, but because those dimensions are what still work the day a walker or chair arrives. License verification lives at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors, and the estimate that starts it all is free and in your home.
Comparing routes? The regional WNC walk-in tub & accessible bathroom guide weighs tub against shower, and the Etowah walk-in shower & tub-to-shower page details the conversion itself. For the rest of the room, see bathroom remodeling in Etowah — or fold in a kitchen remodel while the crew is already on site.