Hello,
We have purchased a house built in 1998.
We now want to renovate the bathroom.
Our ideas are: a walk-in shower, corner bathtub, standard toilet, standard sink, and a mirror about 1.50 x 0.80 meters (5 feet x 2.6 feet), costing around 300€. The room is 11 square meters (118 square feet).
We plan to remove the old tiles ourselves. The new tiles we like cost about 25€ per square meter (2.3 square feet).
The tiling will only be halfway up the walls, except in the shower area, where it will go up to the ceiling.
The corner bathtub we like costs about 400€.
Can someone give an approximate price estimate? I know you can spend endless amounts on a bathroom, but we don’t want anything luxurious.
My budget is roughly around 10,000€. Is that realistic?
Thank you!
We have purchased a house built in 1998.
We now want to renovate the bathroom.
Our ideas are: a walk-in shower, corner bathtub, standard toilet, standard sink, and a mirror about 1.50 x 0.80 meters (5 feet x 2.6 feet), costing around 300€. The room is 11 square meters (118 square feet).
We plan to remove the old tiles ourselves. The new tiles we like cost about 25€ per square meter (2.3 square feet).
The tiling will only be halfway up the walls, except in the shower area, where it will go up to the ceiling.
The corner bathtub we like costs about 400€.
Can someone give an approximate price estimate? I know you can spend endless amounts on a bathroom, but we don’t want anything luxurious.
My budget is roughly around 10,000€. Is that realistic?
Thank you!
As mentioned above, I could remove the old tiles and take out the old sink and toilet. I don’t feel confident enough to lay tiles myself; I would definitely need some help with that. The installation of the underfloor heating, bathtub, and shower I would definitely have done by a professional.
It should actually be feasible with 10,000 EUR and some personal work. Of course, bathroom fixtures from a sanitary showroom can quickly become much more expensive—I’ve experienced that myself. By the way, you don’t necessarily have to choose a fixed glass panel for the shower from the bathroom showroom. Mine came from a glazier, and the stainless steel fittings were made by a metalworker, whom the bathroom planner/plumber confidently brought in. That also saves some costs.
I also did the non-tiled walls myself; perhaps you could do that too.
I also did the non-tiled walls myself; perhaps you could do that too.
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