Bathroom Remodeling Wake County, Horry County

A Bathroom You Actually Want to Walk Into

Custom bathroom remodeling in Wake County, NC and Horry County, SC — backed by a lifetime installation warranty, 30+ years of experience, and a best price guarantee that’s actually enforced.

Lifetime Installation Warranty

Best Price Guarantee

30 Plus Years of Experience

12 Months No-Interest Financing

Bathroom Renovations Wake County, Horry County

Bathroom Remodeling That Actually Holds Up Here

Wake County summers are relentlessly humid. Horry County adds salt air on top of that. Both environments are genuinely hard on bathrooms — on grout, on fixtures, on anything that isn’t installed correctly or made to handle moisture. Most homeowners don’t find that out until something goes wrong. We handle bathroom remodeling across Wake County, NC and Horry County, SC — from focused updates like tub-to-shower conversions and custom tile installation to full gut-and-rebuild renovations. Whether you’re in Raleigh, Cary, Apex, Myrtle Beach, Surfside Beach, or Conway, the work is the same: done right, backed for life, and priced fairly. We’re not a national call center. We have showrooms in both Raleigh and Myrtle Beach where you can walk in, see the tile options, and talk to a real person before committing to anything.
Modern bathroom with a white vanity, black faucet, rectangular mirror, toilet, and a large glass-enclosed shower featuring bold black and white marble tiles and hexagonal black floor tiles—expertly crafted by Flooring Installation Wake County, NC. Small plant and decor on the vanity.
Modern bathroom with a double-sink vanity, large mirror, dark cabinets, freestanding bathtub, glass shower, and gray tile floor expertly installed by Flooring Installation Wake County, plus a view into the bedroom through an open door.

Tub to Shower Conversion NC, SC

That Tub You Never Use Deserves a Better Life

A lot of homeowners in Wake County and Horry County have the same setup: a bathtub that hasn’t been used in years sitting in a bathroom where the shower barely has enough room to turn around. The tub takes up a third of the space and collects dust. Meanwhile, the shower you actually use every day is cramped and dated. A tub-to-shower conversion fixes that. We remove the existing tub, reconfigure the space, and build a custom tile shower that fits how you actually live — whether that’s a clean walk-in design, a larger footprint, or an accessibility-focused layout with grab bars and a low-threshold entry. For Horry County’s large retiree population, aging-in-place features like these have become one of the most requested upgrades we handle. The work involves real tile, real waterproofing, and a finished result that looks intentional — not like something was just ripped out and patched over.

Custom Tile Installation Wake County, Horry County

What a Proper Bathroom Remodel Actually Gets You

Beyond the aesthetics, a well-done bathroom remodel changes how your home functions, holds value, and holds up over time.

Bathroom Remodel Contractors Wake County, Horry County

Everything Your Bathroom Needs, One Contractor

Because we started as a flooring company and grew into full bathroom remodeling, we can handle every surface in your bathroom under one contract. Floor tile, wall tile, shower surround, tub surround, countertop tile — all of it. That matters more than it sounds. When you’re coordinating multiple contractors, you get scheduling gaps, mismatched finishes, and no clear accountability when something doesn’t look right. With us, there’s one team, one timeline, and one point of contact. We also help you make good decisions during the selection process — steering you toward materials that hold up in your specific environment, not just whatever looks good in a showroom photo. We’ve had customers tell us that guidance alone saved them from choices they would have regretted. We serve homeowners throughout Wake County — Raleigh, Cary, Apex, Holly Springs, Fuquay-Varina, Garner, Wake Forest, Knightdale, Morrisville, and Clayton — and across Horry County, including Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach, Surfside Beach, and Conway.
Let’s Build Something You’ll Love

Tell us about your space and your goals, and we’ll help you turn your ideas into a finished result that fits your home.

Common questions about Bathroom Remodeling

It depends on scope, but here’s a realistic range for both areas. Focused updates like tile replacement or a tub-to-shower conversion typically run $3,000 to $9,000 in Wake County. Mid-range full renovations in Raleigh and surrounding Wake County areas average around $9,000 to $20,000. In Horry County, bathroom renovations generally fall between $8,000 and $12,000 for mid-range work, with more comprehensive projects reaching $20,000 and up. Permitting and inspections in Wake County can add $500 to $2,000 depending on what’s involved. The best way to get a number that actually applies to your bathroom is to schedule a free in-home estimate — we’ll assess the space and give you a written quote before any commitment.
It depends on what’s changing. In Wake County, any work that involves moving plumbing, updating electrical, or making structural changes requires a permit through the City of Raleigh Inspections Department or Wake County — and the work needs to be inspected. Cosmetic updates like swapping out tile, replacing a vanity in the same location, or painting don’t typically require permits. In Horry County, SC, similar rules apply: plumbing and electrical modifications require licensed contractors and permits through the county. Unpermitted work can create real problems when you go to sell your home, especially in Wake County’s active real estate market. We handle the permitting process as part of the project so you don’t have to figure it out yourself.
People use these terms interchangeably, but there’s a practical distinction worth knowing. A renovation typically refers to restoring or refreshing what’s already there — new tile on the same layout, updated fixtures in existing locations, fresh finishes without changing the footprint. A remodel usually means changing the structure or layout in some way — moving a wall, relocating a drain, converting a tub to a walk-in shower, or expanding the shower footprint. Both are things we handle, and both can dramatically change how a bathroom looks and functions. During your estimate, we’ll help you figure out which approach makes the most sense for your space and your budget.
For most homeowners, yes — especially in climates like Wake County’s and Horry County’s. Acrylic and panel overlay systems can look clean initially, but they’re prone to yellowing, cracking, and warping over time, particularly in high-humidity environments. Real porcelain and ceramic tile, when properly set with the right backer board and waterproofing, lasts decades. It also holds up against the kind of moisture, heat, and salt air that bathrooms in the Raleigh area and along the Grand Strand deal with constantly. Some franchise competitors push proprietary panel systems because they’re faster to install — but faster isn’t always better when you’re talking about something that needs to last.
A focused update — like retiling a shower surround or converting a tub to a basic walk-in shower — can often be completed in a few days. A mid-range full bathroom renovation typically takes one to two weeks, depending on the scope, material lead times, and whether any permit inspections are required. A full gut-and-rebuild with plumbing or electrical changes can take two to four weeks. We give you a realistic timeline before work starts, not an optimistic one that falls apart mid-project. If you’re in Horry County and working around a rental property schedule, the fall and winter off-season is typically the easiest time to get the work done without disrupting rental income.
A few things matter more than most people realize. First, verify that the contractor is licensed and insured in North Carolina or South Carolina — not just someone with a truck and a phone number. Second, ask specifically whether they’ll pull permits for any plumbing or electrical work. A contractor who skips permits to save time is putting you at risk when it comes time to sell. Third, look at reviews across multiple platforms — Google, HomeAdvisor, Angi, Nextdoor — not just the ones on their own website. Fourth, get a written estimate that specifies materials, scope, and timeline before you sign anything. And finally, pay attention to how they communicate from the very first call. A contractor who’s hard to reach before the job starts doesn’t get easier to reach once they have your deposit.
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