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walk-in tubs, showers & tub-to-shower conversions in Cashiers, NC

Cashiers is a second-home plateau, not a city — the bath is part of a high-value mountain asset. We build walk-in tubs, walk-in showers and tub-to-shower conversions to that standard, priced from published data before anyone visits.

$1,206,868
average parcel value, ZIP 28717 (NC OneMap)
4,369
parcels across the Cashiers ZIP (NC OneMap)
27.8%
of Cashiers residents are 65+ (Census ACS)
Quick answer
What do walk-in tubs, showers & tub-to-shower conversions cost in Cashiers?
In Cashiers a soaker walk-in tub installs for $3,000 to $7,000, a custom-tiled tub-to-shower conversion runs $3,500 to $15,000, and a curbless walk-in shower lands at $12,000 to $17,000 installed — published 2026 ranges, not teaser numbers. What sets Cashiers apart is the asset around the bath: NC OneMap parcel records across ZIP 28717 average $1,206,868 across 4,369 parcels, versus a $346,200 owner-reported median inside the 683-person census place — a second-home market where the room gets built to match the house.
The local data

Cashiers' second-home profile, in numbers

Why the remodel math here is the inverse of a city's — a tiny year-round census core sitting inside a high-value plateau of seasonal owners, measured from parcel and federal Census records rather than guessed.

Cashiers housing & ownership profile (2026)
MeasureValueSource
Parcels in NC OneMap records (ZIP 28717) 4,369 NC OneMap parcels, ZIP 28717
Average parcel value across the ZIP $1,206,868 NC OneMap parcels, ZIP 28717
Year-round population (Cashiers place) 683 U.S. Census Bureau, ACS (Cashiers place)
Median owner-reported home value (place) $346,200 U.S. Census Bureau, ACS (Cashiers place)
Residents 65 or older (place) 27.8% U.S. Census Bureau, ACS (Cashiers place)
Median year built (place) 1987 U.S. Census Bureau, ACS (Cashiers place)
Homes built before 1980 (place) 39.1% U.S. Census Bureau, ACS (Cashiers place)
Owner-occupied homes (place) 63.6% U.S. Census Bureau, ACS (Cashiers place)

Cashiers parcel figures come from NC OneMap's statewide parcel layer filtered to ZIP code 28717 (4,369 parcels); the Census figures describe the smaller Cashiers place / CDP (U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 2024 5-year (Cashiers, NC)). The two scopes differ on purpose — that gap between a $346,200 place median and a $1,206,868 ZIP-wide average is the seasonal market itself. Both pulls are dated 2026-06-12 and refresh as new records post.

Cashiers reads wrong if you treat it like a town. The Census place counts just 683 year-round residents and pegs the median owner-reported home value at $346,200, which would suggest a modest mountain hamlet. Pull the parcel layer and a different place appears: NC OneMap lists 4,369 parcels inside ZIP 28717, averaging $1,206,868 apiece — roughly three-and-a-half times the place median. That spread is the plateau's open secret. Most homes here are second homes, weekend houses and gentleman's-cabin estates owned by people whose primary address is somewhere warmer, and that single fact changes almost everything about how a walk-in tub, walk-in shower or tub-to-shower conversion should be scoped on this mountain.

The second-home brief: build to the asset, not around it

In a typical market we spend the estimate talking a homeowner out of over-improving one room. Cashiers inverts that conversation. When the property behind the bathroom averages $1,206,868 across the ZIP, the risk is not spending too much on the shower — it is delivering a builder-grade conversion that looks borrowed from a starter home and quietly drags on the whole asset. A curbless, fully tiled walk-in shower at $12,000 to $17,000 installed is a low single-digit fraction of a property at that value, so the right call is usually to match the room to the house: large-format stone or porcelain, a frameless glass panel, a linear drain, and a bench that earns its place. We still price the system and the finishes on separate lines, because the watertight shell costs the same in a cabin or a manor — only the surfaces move the number.

Use, not age, is what drives the conversion here

The pre-war-pipe story that dominates older cities does not apply on this plateau. Census records put the median Cashiers home at 1987 with only 39.1% built before 1980 — these are largely 1980s-through-2000s mountain builds, framed for the era of the deep jetted garden tub. What dates them is not corroded galvanized pipe; it is a soaking tub the owners stopped climbing into years ago, taking up the best corner of a primary bath while everyone showers standing. Converting that tub to a walk-in shower reclaims real square footage and removes a slick step-over edge that is genuinely hazardous on a cold stone floor at 3,500 feet. The waterproofing standard does not bend for a younger house: every tiled conversion we build gets a continuous bonded membrane on walls and pan, banded corners, and a sloped, sealed floor — tile and grout are the finish, never the waterproofing.

Seasonal owners, coupled retirees, and what they actually need

The accessibility picture in Cashiers is its own shape. 27.8% of place residents are 65 or older, yet the share of households with someone 65+ living alone is 0% — a coupled, frequently seasonal retiree profile, not the lone-elder reality of a city. That reframes the work. The priority is a shower two people can use safely and a guest suite ready for aging parents on a visit, rather than an after-a-fall emergency retrofit. For a part-time house we lean toward a low- or zero-threshold walk-in shower over a walk-in tub, because a tub left dry between visits is a maintenance liability while a shower simply waits. Where soaking genuinely matters, a freestanding tub elsewhere in a larger home keeps both options open. We screw solid lumber backing into the studs at the entry and control wall before tile board goes on, so grab bars anchor into framing whenever they are wanted, and we hold the federal 2010 ADA Standards as our geometry reference on private homes for the dimensions that keep working as needs change.

Cashiers planning ranges — walk-in tub, shower & conversion scopes (2026, installed)
ScopeLowTypicalHigh
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

For Cashiers these are published 2026 planning rails from Angi / HomeGuide — Walk-In Tub Cost (2026) alongside the Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report that covers North Carolina — not Pisgah quotes. On the plateau the spread inside each band is driven less by labor than by the finish package the home calls for, which is why a real number only comes after a free in-home measure rather than off this table.

Still weighing a soaking tub against a step-free shower for a Cashiers home? Our Cashiers walk-in tub & accessible bathroom page runs that choice against the plateau's own data, and the Cashiers walk-in shower & tub-to-shower page details each conversion lane. Rebuilding more than the wet area? Start at bathroom remodeling in Cashiers — or fold in a Cashiers kitchen remodel while the crew is already up the mountain. Line items by scope live in the WNC walk-in tub cost guide.

Cashiers estimates

A bath built to the mountain

A free, no-obligation in-home measure on the Cashiers-Highlands-Sapphire plateau — usually scheduled within 48 hr, with no trip charge up the mountain.

FAQ

Cashiers accessibility & conversion questions

Why is a walk-in tub or shower priced higher in Cashiers than in a typical mountain town?
It usually is not the labor — it is the house. Parcel records across ZIP 28717 average $1,206,868 across 4,369 parcels, so the bathroom you are remodeling tends to sit inside a finished mountain home where stone, slab, frameless glass and a heated tile floor are the expectation, not the splurge. The fixtures and waterproofing carry standard published ranges; the finish package is where a Cashiers job climbs. We break the difference between the system and the finishes out as separate lines on the free in-home estimate so you can see exactly what is driving the number.
I only use the house a few months a year. Is a walk-in tub worth it for a seasonal home?
For a true seasonal owner, a walk-in tub is often the wrong call — its therapeutic value comes from daily use, and a unit sitting dry nine months a year invites seal and pump issues. In a second home we more often recommend a low-threshold or curbless walk-in shower instead, which has nothing to freeze, drain or seize between visits and serves guests of every age. With 63.6% owner-occupancy reported in the Cashiers place and a large seasonal contingent beyond it, we scope a lot of these as winter-rated, low-maintenance showers. Compare the two routes on our Cashiers walk-in shower & tub-to-shower page.
How does Cashiers' high property value change the remodel math?
It flips the usual over-improvement worry on its head. In a market where ZIP-wide parcels average $1,206,868, even a fully tiled curbless shower at $12,000 to $17,000 is a low single-digit percentage of the property — the room can be built to the standard of the house without out-running its value, which is exactly the trap a $60,000 kitchen can fall into in a $325,000 home elsewhere. The honest counsel here is to match the bath to the asset, not to shrink it. See the whole-room version at bathroom remodeling in Cashiers.
Most Cashiers homes are not that old — why convert the tub at all?
True — the median Cashiers home in census records dates to 1987, and only 39.1% predate 1980, so this is not a pre-war-pipe story. The driver here is use, not age: a 1980s-90s mountain house was built with a deep garden or jetted tub that today mostly runs showers and collects dust, while a step-over edge is the last thing an owner wants on a wet stone floor at altitude. Converting that tub to a walk-in shower reclaims the footprint for the way the room is actually used. Line items live in the WNC tub-to-shower cost guide.
Do I need a permit for this work in Jackson County?
If the project moves a drain, opens a wall to replace a shower valve, or recesses the subfloor for a curbless pan — and a walk-in tub, conversion or zero-entry shower almost always does one of those — it is permitted work in Jackson County, and the inspection sequence is part of the job we own, not something you should be chasing. A like-for-like grab-bar install into existing blocking is not permitted work. We hold the permit and meet the inspectors; timeline impact is measured in days, which we write into the schedule and explain in our timeline & permits guide. The license behind any North Carolina remodel is verifiable at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors.
There is no 65+ resident living alone in the Cashiers numbers — does aging-in-place work still make sense?
It does, and the zero is part of the story. The Cashiers place reports 0% of households with someone 65+ living alone, against 27.8% of residents being 65 or older — a coupled, often seasonal retiree profile rather than the lone-elder pattern of a city. That changes the design brief: the priority here is a shower two people can use safely and a guest bath ready for visiting parents, not an emergency retrofit. We build solid backing for grab bars and comfort-height fixtures into that planned work. Map it against the data on our Cashiers walk-in tub & accessible bathroom page.
Do you actually drive out to Cashiers, or only the Asheville side?
We cover Cashiers and the Highlands-Glenville-Sapphire plateau as part of our 24-county Western North Carolina footprint — the in-home estimate is free with no trip charge to get a real measure on a mountain bathroom. Cashiers sits at roughly 3,500 feet on the Jackson County plateau, so we plan material delivery and cure windows around the cooler, wetter climate up top rather than assuming valley conditions. Check that your Cashiers-plateau address falls inside our route on the areas we serve page.
Cashiers, on the plateau

Step-free, up here

A walk-in tub, walk-in shower or tub-to-shower conversion built to the standard of a Cashiers home — free in-home estimate, published cost ranges, licensed & insured.

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