Most Western North Carolina bathroom pages open with a story about pre-war cast iron and step-over claw-foot tubs. Dana breaks that pattern. The median home in this Henderson County community east of Hendersonville was built in 1991, and only 32.6% of Dana's housing predates 1980 — which means roughly two-thirds of it went up across the 1980s, 90s and 2000s. The fixtures we pull out here are not antiques; they are builder-grade fiberglass tub-shower combos in the hall bath and oversized acrylic garden tubs in the primary suite, the standard spec of that exact construction era.
What a 1980s-90s build actually means for the work
That vintage changes the job in three concrete ways. First, demo is lighter: a fiberglass or thin-steel tub from this era lifts out in one piece through the doorway, where a 1940s cast-iron unit has to be scored and broken in place. Second, the plumbing behind the wall is usually copper or early PEX rather than failing galvanized line, so a conversion rarely turns into a surprise re-pipe. Third, the primary-suite garden tub — that deep, wide, almost-never-filled fixture — is the single most common thing Dana owners ask us to remove, because it eats floor space a roll-in shower uses far better. The honest upshot is that conversions here tend to price toward the cleaner, lower-labor end of each published range.
Built to be lived in, not flipped
Dana is overwhelmingly a place people own and stay: 83.8% of households are owner-occupied, well above the rental-heavy profile of nearby downtowns. Owners who plan to stay are the ones who invest in a bathroom that will still work in twenty years, which is why low-threshold and curbless showers — not quick rental-grade liners — are the right call for most homes here. Only 17.4% of Dana residents are 65 or older today, a younger profile than the mountain average, so much of this work is proactive: families future-proofing the house while a remodel is convenient rather than scrambling after a fall. With 7.9% of residents already reporting an ambulatory difficulty, the demand is real even before the age curve catches up.
What each path costs in Dana
We use published 2026 ranges as planning rails until a real in-home measure sets your number. A one-day acrylic tub-to-shower system runs $1,200 to $9,500; a custom-tiled walk-in shower with a niche and glass panel runs $3,500 to $15,000; a basic soaker walk-in tub installs for $3,000 to $7,000, with hydrotherapy jets pushing toward $7,000 to $15,000; and a fully curbless, zero-entry shower lands at $12,000 to $17,000. Against a median Dana home value of $249,700, even the upper end of accessible work is a modest share of the asset it protects.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tub-to-shower conversion — one-day acrylic liner system | $1,200 | $4,500 | $9,500 |
| Walk-in shower — custom tile with frameless glass, installed | $3,500 | $9,000 | $15,000 |
| Walk-in tub — basic soaker model, installed | $3,000 | $5,000 | $7,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
Dana planning figures come from HomeGuide — Tub to Shower Conversion Cost (2026) and the Cost vs. Value report for the South Atlantic region that includes North Carolina. Because Dana's newer-stock baths mostly keep their drain in place and the old tubs lift out cleanly, real jobs here tend to settle below each midpoint. The figure that matters is the fixed one we write after measuring your bathroom.
Permits, code and the materials behind the wall
Henderson County recorded 713 residential interior-remodel permits and 827 remodel-class permits overall in 2025, so the building office processes conversions like these as routine business. When the scope moves a drain, replaces an in-wall valve, or recesses the subfloor for zero entry, we pull the permit through the Henderson County building department and close out the inspection ourselves. Every tiled shower we build gets a continuous bonded waterproofing system behind the tile, and we install fixture brands a future plumber will recognize — the same Kohler, Moen, Delta and Schluter systems we list across the site. The license behind the work is verifiable at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors.
Looking at the whole room rather than just the wet area? Start at bathroom remodeling in Dana, or pair it with a Dana kitchen remodel while a crew is already on site. For line-item detail on the conversion itself, the walk-in shower cost guide breaks out every lane above.