Bathroom Remodeling Kennett Square PA

Kennett Square bathroom remodels span the same architectural range as the kitchens. Borough Victorians have small original baths squeezed into closets and corners. Stone farmhouses have 20th-century addition baths that don’t fit modern living. Post-2000 subdivisions have the standard oversized-jetted-tub-and-too-small-shower primary suites. We’ve been remodeling bathrooms across all of Kennett Square’s housing stock since 1989.

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Remodeling Your Kennett Square Bathroom — What to Expect

Since 1989, Fedor has rebuilt bathrooms across Kennett Borough, Kennett Township, and East Marlborough — reconfiguring tight Victorian footprints, replumbing a century of galvanized supply, working historic-respectfully in stone farmhouses, and converting subdivision jetted tubs to frameless walk-in showers, 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.

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Get the full bathroom guide

See what every bathroom tier actually costs in our service area — with line-item breakdowns from completed Fedor projects in West Chester, Exton, Wayne, and Malvern.

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What a Kennett Square bath remodel really covers

Four project profiles:

Borough Victorian baths — small (35–55 sq ft), tight footprints, replumbing required, layout reconfiguration common.

Stone farmhouse bath additions — adding modern primary suites to pre-1900 homes, working around original structure, historic-respectful detailing. Closer to Chadds Ford scope.

1950s–1970s rural ranch baths — full gut, layout reconfiguration, tub-to-shower conversions.

Post-2000 subdivision primary suites — remove jetted tub, walk-in shower with frameless glass, freestanding tub, double vanity, heated floor. Standard pattern.

Kennett Square bathroom costs across varied housing

TierRangeTypical Kennett Square project
Bath Refresh$25,000 – $40,000Powder room or post-2000 hall bath refresh
Full Bath Remodel$35,000 – $65,000Borough or post-WWII full gut with replumb
Primary / Master Bath$50,000 – $90,000+Subdivision primary suite, or stone farmhouse addition

Borough and stone farmhouse projects often land in higher tiers than subdivision projects because of the replumbing and historic-respectful work an older Kennett home needs. The Primary Bath tier doesn’t carry a hard ceiling — a stone farmhouse primary-suite addition with premium fixtures and structural work regularly exceeds $90K.

Aging-in-place additions are increasingly common in Kennett primary baths — curbless showers, integrated grab bars, comfort-height fixtures. Adds $3K–$8K at any tier.

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 Kennett Square bath is the same team that builds it. Every line on the drawing has been priced. Every spec has been confirmed. Because Kennett’s housing runs from 1750 stone farmhouse to 2008 subdivision, we scope each bath on its own terms — in a borough Victorian or a farmhouse we’ve already solved the problems other remodelers won’t find until they open a plaster wall (the galvanized supply, the cast-iron waste, the under-built floor, the septic capacity question); in a subdivision the work is predictable. We sequence the work around Kennett Borough’s inspection schedule so the project doesn’t stall waiting on the township.

The 8 steps, start to finish

  1. First Call — a 10–15 minute conversation to understand what you’re planning and whether it makes sense to meet.
  2. In-Home Consultation — we walk your space, listen, and learn what matters most in the finished result.
  3. Design Call + Initial Estimate — an initial design concept and a real budget range, walked through together.
  4. Selections & Design Refinement — vanity, tile, countertops, fixtures, hardware, lighting, paint — every choice made before we build.
  5. Fixed-Price Proposal + Contract — every line priced and confirmed buildable. The number is real before you sign.
  6. Pre-Construction — permits, ordering, scheduling, and material staging so the job runs without gaps.
  7. Construction — carpenter-led crews, a single point of contact, weekly updates, no surprise upcharges.
  8. Final Walkthrough + Warranty — we close out every detail and back the work with a 1-year workmanship warranty.

Kennett Square Borough + Kennett Township permitting for baths

We handle permitting for your project through Kennett Borough. Permit fees tend to run 1–2% of contract value and are included transparently on every Fedor proposal.

Where we source for Kennett Square bathroom projects

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What Kennett Square 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 Chester County 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 Kennett Square?

Kennett Square bathroom remodels run $25,000 to $90,000+ depending on scope and house type. A powder room or post-2000 hall-bath refresh runs $25K–$40K; a borough or post-WWII full gut with replumb runs $35K–$65K; a subdivision primary suite or a stone farmhouse primary-suite addition runs $50K–$90K+, and fully custom farmhouse suites go beyond that. Borough and farmhouse projects skew higher because of replumbing and historic-respectful work. The free cost guide above breaks every tier down line by line.

How long does a Kennett Square bathroom remodel take?

Most Kennett Square 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 — a post-2000 subdivision bath is on the shorter end, while a borough Victorian or stone farmhouse adds steps (replumbing galvanized supply, subfloor work, septic review where it applies, Kennett Borough inspections between phases). We give you a hard date at proposal and update it weekly in the JobTread portal.

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. On a borough Victorian or farmhouse 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 the wall in an 1880s Kennett Borough bath?

In an 1880–1920 Kennett Borough Victorian or a pre-1900 stone farmhouse we almost always find something — galvanized supply, corroded cast-iron waste lines, an out-of-level or under-built subfloor, knob-and-tube, 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 a tight borough Victorian bath into adjacent space?

Often, yes — and in a 35–55 sq ft borough Victorian bath it’s frequently the only way to fit a real shower, vanity, and storage. Absorbing an adjacent closet, a bit of a back bedroom, or a hall section is usually feasible; we bring in Rise Engineering when a load path or original framing is involved. Footprint changes in a 130-year-old house take careful sequencing — we scope and price the expansion before signing, not as a mid-project surprise.

Can you do a tub-to-shower conversion in my Kennett Borough home?

Yes — it’s one of the most common project types we run in the borough. Tight Victorian baths almost always use the space better with a frameless walk-in shower than with an under-used tub, and post-2000 subdivision homeowners convert the unused jetted tub for the same reason. If you genuinely take baths we’ll design in a freestanding soaker instead. We give you our honest read for your specific room, not a default upsell.

Do you have to replace the old supply and drain lines?

In an 1880s borough Victorian or pre-1900 farmhouse, usually yes — the original galvanized supply and cast-iron waste are typically partially corroded, with restricted flow and the occasional pinhole. If we’re already opening the floor and walls for the remodel, replacing them while access is open is far cheaper than coming back later. On a typical borough bath replumb, budget $3K–$6K. Post-2000 subdivision baths rarely need it. We scope and price it before signing — never as a surprise change order.

My home is on septic. Will the bath remodel require septic work?

Sometimes — this is a real Kennett Township and East Marlborough consideration on rural properties. Adding fixtures to an older septic system can push it past its design capacity. We arrange a septic engineering review during the proposal phase when it’s relevant, so the question is answered before you sign rather than discovered during inspection. If a system upgrade is needed, you’ll know the scope and cost up front.

Can you do aging-in-place modifications without it looking institutional?

Yes — and that’s the case for doing it during the remodel instead of bolting it on later. A curbless walk-in shower, blocking in the walls for future grab bars, a comfort-height toilet, and a bench detail all integrate cleanly when planned from the start. 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 Kennett Square Borough permitting cost for a bath project?

Permit fees through Kennett Borough typically run 1–2% of contract value. On a $60,000 borough bath, expect roughly $600–$1,200. 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 Kennett Square 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 100-year-old borough house, that communication is the difference between a manageable project and a stressful one.

Do you also do kitchen remodels in Kennett Square?

Yes — see Kennett Square kitchen remodeling for borough Victorian, stone farmhouse, and subdivision kitchen scope, Kennett Borough permitting, and recent Kennett Square kitchen projects.