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Tub-to-Shower Conversion Guide for Virginia Beach Homeowners

A tub-to-shower conversion is one of the most common bathroom remodel scopes across Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Norfolk, and Coastal Virginia. For a typical Kempsville, Bayside, Great Neck, Salem, Greenbrier, Western Branch, or Indian River primary-residence home, it's a 1–3 day project that meaningfully changes how the bathroom is used day to day.

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What's actually involved

The crew removes the existing tub and surround, inspects framing, joists, subfloor (or slab) and crawl-space conditions for moisture damage — common in 1890s–1930s Ghent / Larchmont / Park Place historic intown Norfolk stock above crawl spaces and in 1950s–1970s Kempsville / Aragona / Bayside / Thoroughgood / Greenbrier / Western Branch / Talbot Park mid-century stock — installs a new shower pan, builds the new shower walls (acrylic insert, semi-custom acrylic, or tile), reworks plumbing as needed, and sets glass or a curtain rod. Permits are typically pulled when plumbing is moved.

Virginia Beach specifics worth flagging

Newer Great Neck, Salem, Strawbridge, Red Mill, Lago Mar, Grassfield, Hickory, Edinburgh, River Walk, and Pleasant Grove subdivisions are usually the cleanest, fastest scopes — framed alcoves with builder-grade tubs ready to swap, often on slab. Mid-century Kempsville, Aragona, Bayside, Thoroughgood, Greenbrier, Western Branch, Indian River, Talbot Park, and Bayview stock more often has original cast-iron drains, lead-bend connections, undersized supply lines, and aging crawl-space conditions worth scoping carefully. Coastal Oceanfront, North End, Sandbridge, Chic's Beach, Ocean View, East Beach, and Willoughby stock often has salt-air-rated requirements, elevated framing, and flood-prone substructures.

  • Plaster and lath walls behind original tile (Ghent / Larchmont / Park Place intown Norfolk)
  • Salt-air-rated fasteners, glass coatings, and finishes for Oceanfront / Sandbridge / Chic's Beach / Ocean View properties
  • Flood-zone substructure prep (low-lying Sandbridge / Ocean View / Willoughby / Back Bay)
  • Subfloor and joist moisture damage from prior tub leaks plus humid coastal summers
  • Vent fan replacement — undersized or non-vented fans common in older intown and beach-house stock fail faster in humid coastal bathrooms
  • Slab-on-grade vs. crawl-space-routed plumbing (1990s–2020s subdivisions are mostly slab; pre-1990 intown and mid-century stock is mostly crawl-space)
  • HOA rules in Edinburgh, River Walk, Hickory Ridge, Pleasant Grove, Town Center, East Beach
  • Military-family rental turnover scopes (Naval Station Norfolk, NAS Oceana, JEB Little Creek-Fort Story, Dam Neck)
  • Glass enclosure choice (frameless, semi-frameless, sliding)

Not sure which option fits your home? Julia will walk you through a 2-minute guided conversation and show you a personalized remodel profile.

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Frequently asked questions

Is one full bathroom enough for resale in Virginia Beach?+

On primary-residence Great Neck, Kempsville, Salem, Strawbridge, Red Mill, Greenbrier, Western Branch, Grassfield, and Hickory homes, family buyers usually expect at least one tub somewhere in the home. On long-tenure aging-in-place stock across Ghent, Larchmont, Bayside, Thoroughgood, and Talbot Park, walk-in showers are the norm. On Town Center / Pembroke / Downtown Norfolk / East Beach condos and townhouses, walk-in showers are standard.

Popular Virginia Beach / South Hampton Roads guides

Tub-to-Shower Conversion (Virginia Beach) for Virginia Beach, VA homeowners
Virginia Beach is the anchor independent city of the South Hampton Roads / Coastal Virginia branch. Housing runs from coastal beach-house stock at the Oceanfront, North End, Croatan, Sandbridge, Chic's Beach, and Cape Henry, to 1950s–1970s brick ranches across Kempsville, Aragona, Bayside, Thoroughgood, Windsor Woods, and Rosemont, to 1980s–2010s suburban subdivisions across Great Neck, Little Neck, Kings Grant, Salem, Strawbridge, Red Mill, and Lago Mar, plus newer Town Center / Pembroke infill and rural-edge Pungo / Back Bay properties.
Tub-to-Shower Conversion (Virginia Beach) for Oceanfront, VA homeowners
The Oceanfront is the resort core along Atlantic Avenue and the boardwalk — beach houses, condos, mid-rise hotels, and small apartments directly facing the Atlantic, with salt-air exposure and flood-zone considerations across much of the corridor.
Tub-to-Shower Conversion (Virginia Beach) for Great Neck, VA homeowners
Great Neck spans the Great Neck Road corridor between Shore Drive and Virginia Beach Boulevard — established suburban subdivisions, brick ranches, two-story colonials, and waterfront homes near Long Creek and Broad Bay.
Tub-to-Shower Conversion (Virginia Beach) for Kempsville, VA homeowners
Kempsville is one of the largest established neighborhoods in Virginia Beach — 1960s–1980s brick ranches, split-levels, and two-story colonials across the central city, plus newer infill along the Kempsville Road and Princess Anne Road corridors.

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BathGuide is a 2-minute guided conversation, not a contractor form. You'll see your personalized remodel profile before sharing anything. Matching with a local provider is optional and only happens if you want it.

See Which Bath Option Fits My Home
Private · no commitment · 2 minutes