
Bathroom Remodeling Ardmore PA
Ardmore bathrooms come with their own challenges separate from the kitchens. The tight original footprints in Lower Merion stone twins. The 50-square-foot pink-tiled hall baths in Haverford brick traditionals. The oversized primary suites in post-2000 contemporary rebuilds where the jetted tub is a relic. We’ve been remodeling Ardmore bathrooms since 1989, and the playbook is different for each profile.
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Remodeling Your Ardmore Bathroom — What to Expect
Since 1989, Fedor has rebuilt bathrooms across Ardmore, Lower Merion and Haverford Townships, and the Main Line — converting tubs to walk-in showers, replumbing a century of corroded galvanized and cast-iron lines, and reinforcing original subfloors, all on a fixed-price contract with a single point of contact who answers your calls.
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2026 Southeastern PA Bathroom Cost Guide
A complete 2026 bathroom cost reference for Chester County, Delaware County, and the Main Line — every tier, from a $25K refresh to a $90K+ primary suite.
What an Ardmore bathroom remodel actually involves
Three project profiles based on the house:
Pre-1940 Lower Merion stone twins and singles. These homes have small, original baths — usually 35–55 square feet — squeezed into closets and corners on the second floor. Common scope:
- Tub-to-shower conversion with frameless glass and tile to the ceiling — converts a tight, dated hall bath into something that actually functions
- Replumbing — galvanized supply lines and cast-iron drains that have been corroding since the 1920s usually need to come out
- Subfloor reinforcement — original floor systems weren’t designed for the weight of a freestanding tub or large tile installation
- Address the original radiator — most second-floor baths in these homes share a wall with the heating system; relocating fixtures means a plumber who knows the rough plumbing schedule
1940s–1960s Haverford brick traditionals. Larger original baths, usually 55–75 square feet, but with dated layouts and the famous mid-century color palette (pink, blue, avocado green, mustard). Scope tends to be:
- Layout reconfiguration — moving the toilet to a less-prominent wall, replacing a small built-in tub with a walk-in shower, adding a real linen closet where there used to be a built-in vanity
- Updated electrical and ventilation — adding GFCI outlets, replacing the 1960s-era wall-mounted ceramic heater that was original to the room, putting in a real exhaust fan
- Modern fixtures — comfort-height toilet, new vanity, frameless shower glass
Post-2000 contemporary rebuilds. Larger primary suites with original builder-grade tile, oversized jetted tubs nobody uses, and dated finishes. The remodel pattern is closer to what we run in Newtown Square or Exton tract homes:
- Remove the jetted tub, add a freestanding soaker tub
- Walk-in shower with frameless glass and tile to the ceiling
- Double vanity with quartz top
- Heated tile floor (almost universal request in primary baths now)
- Replace builder-grade brushed nickel fixtures with higher-spec brass or matte black, depending on style direction
Cost ranges for Ardmore bathrooms
| Tier | Range | Typical Ardmore project |
|---|---|---|
| Bath Refresh | $25,000 – $40,000 | 50 sq ft hall bath in any era home, basic refresh |
| Full Bath Remodel | $35,000 – $65,000 | Tub-to-shower conversion, full gut, replumb |
| Primary / Master Bath | $50,000 – $90,000+ | Lower Merion or post-2000 primary suite, full custom |
Lower Merion stone-home bathrooms often land at the upper end of the published ranges because of the replumbing, subfloor work, and tight access. The Primary Bath tier doesn’t carry a hard ceiling — fully custom primary suites with millwork integration, premium fixtures, and footprint expansion regularly exceed $90K. A primary bath remodel in a 1925 Ardmore stone twin involves real structural and plumbing work that a 2005 contemporary rebuild bathroom doesn’t.
Aging-in-place additions — curbless showers, grab bars, comfort-height fixtures, wider doorways — run an additional $3,000–$8,000 at any tier. Increasingly common in Ardmore primary baths.
Our Design-Build Process
Most remodels go sideways for the same reason: design and construction don’t talk to each other. The designer draws something the builder can’t actually build for the price quoted, and you’re stuck in the middle.
We use a design-build model — the team that designs your Ardmore bath is the same team that builds it. Every line on the drawing has been priced. Every spec has been confirmed. By the time we hand you a contract, the number is real, the timeline is real, and we’ve already solved the problems other remodelers won’t discover until they open a pre-1940 wall — the corroded cast-iron drains, the galvanized supply, the knob-and-tube, the under-built subfloor. We sequence the work around the inspection schedule of Lower Merion or Haverford Township — whichever your block falls in — so the project doesn’t stall waiting on the township.
The 8 steps, start to finish
- First Call — a 10–15 minute conversation to understand what you’re planning and whether it makes sense to meet.
- In-Home Consultation — we walk your space, listen, and learn what matters most in the finished result.
- Design Call + Initial Estimate — an initial design concept and a real budget range, walked through together.
- Selections & Design Refinement — vanity, tile, countertops, fixtures, hardware, lighting, paint — every choice made before we build.
- Fixed-Price Proposal + Contract — every line priced and confirmed buildable. The number is real before you sign.
- Pre-Construction — permits, ordering, scheduling, and material staging so the job runs without gaps.
- Construction — carpenter-led crews, a single point of contact, weekly updates, no surprise upcharges.
- Final Walkthrough + Warranty — we close out every detail and back the work with a 1-year workmanship warranty.
Permitting in Ardmore
We handle permitting for your project through Lower Merion Township for eastern Ardmore blocks, or Haverford Township for the western blocks past County Line Road. Permit fees tend to run 1–2% of contract value and are included transparently on every Fedor proposal.
Where we source for Ardmore baths
- Plumbing fixtures: Ferguson (King of Prussia)
- Tile and stone: Devon Tile or The Tile Shop (King of Prussia)
- Flooring: Avalon Flooring (King of Prussia)
- Appliances: Gerhard’s Appliances (Ardmore — in town)
Recent Work
Recent Ardmore Projects
What Ardmore Homeowners Say About Working With Us
★★★★★ 4.8 / 5
186+ verified reviews across Google and Angi
Reading reviews is the single best way to know what working with a contractor is actually like. We’d rather you read what our Main Line clients say in their own words than read marketing copy from us.
We used Fedor Fabrication to remodel our hall bathroom. They did a wonderful job. We were impressed by their design specialist who listened to our ideas and helped make them work within our budget. Their workers were great — always polite, efficient and very tidy. A friend recommended Fedor and we are so glad we had them do this job — we highly recommend them.
Harry U. — verified Google review
by far the best around ! kitchen and bathrooms in 2 homes that are outstanding …no need to interview other contractors !
Jack K. — verified Google review
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a bathroom remodel cost in Ardmore?
Ardmore bathroom remodels run $25,000 to $90,000+ depending on scope. A 50-square-foot hall-bath refresh starts around $25K–$40K; a full gut with a tub-to-shower conversion and replumb runs $35K–$65K; a Lower Merion or post-2000 primary suite, full custom, runs $50K–$90K+ and goes beyond that with millwork and footprint expansion. Lower Merion stone-home baths land at the upper end of each tier because the replumbing, subfloor work, and tight access pre-1940 homes need adds real cost. The free cost guide above breaks every tier down line by line.
How long does an Ardmore stone twin bathroom remodel take?
Most Ardmore bathroom remodels run 5–7 weeks of active construction once tile and fixtures are on site. The full timeline from first call to final walkthrough is typically 2.5–4 months, because a pre-1940 Lower Merion stone twin adds steps a newer home doesn’t — selective demo around plaster, galvanized-and-cast-iron replumb, subfloor reinforcement, and township inspections between phases. We give you a hard date at proposal and update it weekly in the JobTread portal so you’re never guessing where the project stands.
What’s included in your fixed-price quote?
Everything we can see at signing: design, all materials (tile, vanity, fixtures, hardware), all labor and trade partners (plumbing through AA to Z, electrical through S.B. Electric, tile, finish carpentry), permits, inspections, dumpster, project management, and the final walkthrough. The known old-house work — replumbing, subfloor reinforcement, plaster repair — is priced in, not left as an allowance that balloons mid-project. The only thing that changes the number is scope you choose to add after signing, documented and approved by you in writing first.
What happens behind a pre-1940 Ardmore wall?
In a pre-1940 Ardmore stone twin we almost always find something — corroded cast-iron waste lines, galvanized supply, knob-and-tube wiring, an out-of-level or under-built subfloor, or old water damage under the tub. None of it surprises us; it’s why these projects take real expertise to run. We document whatever we find, photograph it, price the fix, and get your written approval before proceeding. No silent change orders.
Can you expand my primary bath into an adjacent closet or bedroom?
Yes — it’s a common Ardmore primary-bath ask, especially in Lower Merion stone twins where the original baths run 35–55 sq ft and won’t fit a double vanity, walk-in shower, and freestanding tub. Absorbing an adjacent closet, small bedroom, or hall section is usually feasible; we bring in Rise Engineering when a load path is involved. Adding 30–80 sq ft typically adds $15K–$35K depending on whether we’re moving a load-bearing wall and relocating plumbing.
Should I keep the old tub, or convert to a walk-in shower?
Honestly, most Ardmore homeowners convert. Tub-to-shower conversions are one of our most-common Ardmore bathroom projects — in a tight stone-twin hall bath a frameless walk-in shower uses the space far better than a dated built-in tub, and the oversized jetted tubs in post-2000 rebuilds rarely get used and the motors fail. If you genuinely take baths, we’ll design in a freestanding soaker instead — better than a jetted tub and much easier to clean. We give you our honest read for your specific room, not a default upsell.
Do you have to replace the cast-iron drains?
Sometimes. We don’t replace cast-iron drains as a default — they last a long time and replacing them adds significant cost. We do replace them when the home shows signs of corrosion (slow drains, recurring clogs at fitting joints, visible exterior pitting) or when the bathroom layout is changing in a way that requires new drain runs. If we’re already opening the floor for a footprint change or a freestanding tub, replacing them while access is open is far cheaper than coming back later. On a typical primary-bath replumb, budget $3K–$6K. We scope and price it before signing — never as a surprise change order.
Will the remodel damage the plaster ceiling in the room below?
Plan on some plaster ceiling restoration below — it’s nearly unavoidable when you replumb a second-floor Ardmore stone-twin bath. We include it in scope from the start rather than treating it as a surprise. Where the ceiling is historic or has decorative plaster, we restore it properly rather than just drywalling over it, and we tell you up front which approach your specific room calls for and what it costs.
Can you do aging-in-place modifications without it looking institutional?
Yes — curbless showers, grab bars, comfort-height fixtures, wider doorways. We’ve worked aging-in-place specs into Ardmore primary baths regularly, and that’s the case for doing it during the remodel instead of bolting it on later. Built in at the framing stage it adds roughly $3K–$8K, and done right you’d never read it as “aging-in-place” — it just looks like a well-designed bathroom that happens to work at any age.
What does Lower Merion or Haverford Township permitting cost for an Ardmore bath project?
Permit fees through Lower Merion Township (eastern Ardmore) or Haverford Township (western blocks) typically run 1–2% of contract value. On a $50,000 bathroom, expect roughly $500–$1,000 in permit and inspection fees. We pull every required permit, schedule the inspections around the production schedule, and show the permit cost as a transparent line item on the proposal — it’s never buried in markup or sprung on you mid-project.
Do I need to hire my own designer?
No separate designer needed — we’re design-build, so the team that designs your Ardmore bath is the team that builds it; nothing gets drawn that we can’t build for the price quoted.
How will you communicate with me during construction?
During construction you get one point of contact (Alex or your project manager) who answers calls and texts, weekly progress updates, and a heads-up before anything becomes a problem, plus the live JobTread portal showing schedule, budget, and invoices. On a pre-1940 stone home, that communication is the difference between a manageable project and a stressful one.
Do you also do kitchen remodels in Ardmore?
Yes — see Ardmore kitchen remodeling for stone twin and brick traditional kitchen scope, Lower Merion / Haverford permitting, and recent Ardmore kitchen projects.
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Ready to Start Planning Your Ardmore Bathroom Remodel?
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