Tub-to-shower conversion realities in Colorado
Because a tub-to-shower conversion touches drain lines and supply, it's a permitted project in Colorado. Varies by municipality; Denver requires a Class B or C license for most residential remodels - verify your contractor's status before signing. Water conditions in Colorado homes influence the finish choice: hard water accelerates spotting on frameless glass, and coastal humidity affects sealant longevity around low-curb shower pans.
- Licensing: Varies by municipality; Denver requires a Class B or C license for most residential remodels
- Permit authority: City or county building department
- Typical permit fees: $150–$500 for a bathroom remodel permit
What actually changes
Every tub-to-shower conversion touches the same four things: the tub comes out, the drain gets adapted (tub drains sit at one end; showers usually need centered or linear drains), the walls get rebuilt (tub-surround wall is shorter than a shower's), and the plumbing valve gets updated to a shower-height mixing valve.
The scope difference between a $7,000 conversion and a $20,000 conversion isn't the fixtures - it's whether the existing footprint stays (acrylic drop-in) or you're moving the drain, running new tile, and adding a curbless entry.
- Tub demolition and haul-off
- Drain relocation or adaptation (tub drain → shower drain)
- Wall build-out to shower height (usually 84" from floor)
- New shower valve at shower height (usually 48" from floor)
- Waterproofing (mandatory for tile, built-in for acrylic)
- New shower pan or acrylic base
- Optional: curbless entry, linear drain, custom glass
Acrylic vs. tile vs. semi-custom
Three material paths, three price bands, three timelines.
Acrylic (or gel-coat) systems: 1-piece or 3-piece pre-fab wall panels bond to the studs. Fastest, cheapest, and lowest-maintenance. Modern acrylic looks better than the 1980s tubs most people remember - subway patterns and stone-look panels are widely available.
Tile: full waterproofing membrane, cement board or foam substrate, tile install, grout, sealer. Longest install, highest maintenance (grout needs re-sealing), and unlimited aesthetic range. Best for high-end remodels and resale-driven projects.
Semi-custom (Onyx, Swanstone, Corian): solid-surface panels with real grout lines and better hand-feel than acrylic. Sits between the two.
- Acrylic: $7,500–$14,000 typical, 3–5 day install
- Semi-custom solid surface: $10,000–$18,000 typical, 5–7 day install
- Tile (custom): $14,000–$28,000 typical, 2–3 week install
| Acrylic | Semi-custom solid-surface | Custom tile | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical cost | $7,500–$14,000 | $10,000–$18,000 | $14,000–$28,000+ |
| Install time | 3–5 days | 5–7 days | 2–3 weeks |
| Maintenance | Wipe clean | Wipe clean | Grout care, resealing |
| Design flexibility | Curated finishes | Real grout lines, better hand-feel | Unlimited |
| Best for | Speed + budget | Middle ground | High-end / resale |
Does removing a tub hurt resale?
The old rule of thumb, "keep at least one tub in the house" - still holds in single-bathroom homes and homes marketed to families with young children. In master baths of multi-bathroom homes, replacing the tub with a large walk-in shower typically increases perceived value, not decreases it.
The safest rule: if this is your only tub, keep a tub somewhere in the house (guest bath, kids' bath). If this is a secondary bath and the master already has a tub, converting is a clear upgrade for most buyers.
Aging-in-place considerations
Tub-to-shower is the most common aging-in-place project. Getting over a 15-inch tub wall is a fall risk that only grows with age. A curbless shower with a handheld sprayer and a fold-down or built-in bench solves the mobility issue and looks like a modern spa, not a hospital.
If aging-in-place is on your radar even five years out, add wall blocking for grab bars during this project, even if you don't install the bars now. Opening walls later just to add blocking costs almost as much as the original conversion.
- Curbless entry or ≤1/2" threshold
- Handheld shower on a slide bar (59" minimum length)
- Fold-down or built-in bench
- Blocking for future grab bars (even if not installed today)
- Lever-handle shower valve, not knobs
Permits and inspections
Almost every tub-to-shower conversion requires a plumbing permit because the drain moves and a new shower valve gets installed. Most jurisdictions also require an electrical permit if the vent fan is upgraded or new lighting is added.
The permit itself typically costs $150–$400. Reputable contractors pull it for you. If a contractor tries to skip the permit to "save you money," that's a red flag - unpermitted work can trigger issues at resale, force retroactive inspection, and voids most homeowner insurance for water damage from the shower.
Want a personalized bathroom remodel plan tailored to your Colorado home? Julia walks you through a 2-minute guided conversation.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a tub-to-shower conversion cost?+
National mid-range is $7,500–$14,000 for an acrylic conversion in the existing footprint. Semi-custom solid surface runs $10,000–$18,000. Custom tile with a curbless entry and custom glass runs $14,000–$28,000+. Regional labor and materials shift these ranges 15–30% up or down.
How long does it take?+
Acrylic: 3–5 days. Semi-custom solid surface: 5–7 days. Custom tile: 2–3 weeks. Add 2–4 weeks if custom shower glass is fabricated after tile install.
Can I keep the same drain location?+
Usually yes for acrylic conversions - most acrylic shower bases are designed to adapt a standard tub drain to a shower drain without moving the plumbing. Custom tile showers with linear drains or centered drains typically need drain relocation, which triggers subfloor work.
Do I need a permit?+
Almost always. Any project that moves plumbing or replaces a shower valve requires a permit in most US jurisdictions. Reputable contractors pull the permit for you; the fee is usually $150–$400.
Do I need a permit for this project in Colorado?+
Almost always yes if the project changes plumbing, electrical, or structural work - which most bathroom remodels do. Cosmetic-only work (paint, fixture swaps without changing supply/drain lines) generally does not. City or county building department.
How do I verify a bathroom remodeler's license in Colorado?+
Check with Licensed at the city or county level (no state general contractor license). Varies by municipality; Denver requires a Class B or C license for most residential remodels. The absence of the required registration is disqualifying regardless of price or reviews.
What do bathroom remodel permits typically cost in Colorado?+
$150–$500 for a bathroom remodel permit. Fees vary by municipality and the scope of work triggering the permit.
Local guides in Colorado
More Colorado planning guides
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