Hear from Our Customers
You stop thinking about everything that used to annoy you. The cramped shower. The vanity with no storage. The lighting that makes you squint every morning.
Your bathroom starts working with you instead of against you. You get the layout you need, the fixtures that fit your space, and materials built to handle Long Island’s humidity without warping or cracking in two years.
And when you eventually sell, buyers notice. Updated bathrooms move homes faster in Northport—especially when the work is done right the first time. You’re not just remodeling for today. You’re protecting your investment and making your home more competitive when it matters.
We’ve handled bathroom reconstruction across Suffolk County for nearly a decade. We’re not new to Northport’s older homes, the permitting process at Town Hall, or what it takes to update plumbing and electrical in houses built 50+ years ago.
You won’t get a sales pitch. You’ll get a detailed quote that covers materials, labor, timeline, and cleanup. If something changes during demolition—outdated wiring, hidden water damage—we contact you before any extra work starts.
We show up when we say we will. We stick to our quotes. And we treat your home like it matters, because it does.
First, we walk through your bathroom and talk about what’s not working. Storage, lighting, layout—whatever’s driving you crazy. We measure everything, discuss your budget, and put together a quote that includes design consultation, permits, demolition, plumbing, electrical, flooring, fixtures, and cleanup.
Once you approve the plan, we handle the permit applications with the Town of Huntington. You don’t need to visit Town Hall or figure out what paperwork is required. We know which projects need permits and how to get them approved without delays.
Demo starts once permits are in hand. We protect the rest of your home, remove old fixtures and materials, and address any issues we find—like outdated plumbing or water damage. If something needs attention, you hear about it immediately with options and costs before we proceed.
Then comes the rebuild: new plumbing and electrical, tile work, flooring, vanity and fixture installation. Most bathroom remodels take two to three weeks from start to finish. We clean up daily and do a final walkthrough with you before we’re done.
Ready to get started?
Your bathroom renovation covers everything needed to complete the job. Design consultation to plan the layout and select materials. All necessary permits for plumbing, electrical, or structural work. Demolition and debris removal. Plumbing updates and fixture installation. Electrical work including lighting, outlets, and ventilation. Flooring, wall treatments, and tile work. Vanity, toilet, shower, and tub installation. Final cleanup.
Northport homes—especially in the village center and along the harbor—often have older plumbing systems that need specific attention during remodels. We select materials that handle Long Island’s humidity and temperature swings without cracking or warping. Proper moisture control matters here, and we build for durability, not just appearance.
If you’re adding walk-in shower installation or updating to a curbless shower, we make sure the slope and waterproofing are done right. If you’re keeping the tub, we can refinish or replace it depending on condition and budget. Every decision gets explained before work begins, so you know exactly what you’re getting and why it matters.
Most bathroom remodels in Northport range from $15,000 to $40,000 depending on size, materials, and scope. A small bathroom with basic updates—new vanity, toilet, tile, and fixtures—typically starts around $15,000 to $25,000. A full bathroom renovation with custom tile work, upgraded plumbing, new lighting, and higher-end fixtures usually runs $25,000 to $40,000 or more.
Primary bathrooms with larger layouts, walk-in showers, double vanities, and premium finishes can exceed $40,000. The final cost depends on what you’re changing, what materials you select, and what we find during demolition.
We give you a detailed quote upfront that covers materials, labor, permits, and cleanup. If we discover issues like outdated wiring or water damage during the project, we contact you immediately with options and costs before proceeding. No surprise bills halfway through.
Most bathroom remodels take two to three weeks once work begins. Smaller projects—like updating fixtures, flooring, and vanity without major plumbing or layout changes—can finish in about two weeks. Full renovations with new plumbing, electrical work, custom tile, and layout changes typically take closer to three weeks.
The timeline depends on permit approval, material availability, and what we find during demolition. If your home has older plumbing or electrical systems that need updating, that adds time. We give you a realistic schedule during the estimate, not an optimistic one.
We protect the rest of your home during construction and clean up daily. You’ll know what’s happening each week, and we don’t disappear for days at a time. If delays happen—material backorders, permit issues, unexpected problems—we tell you immediately and adjust the timeline.
It depends on the scope of your project. If you’re doing any plumbing work, electrical work, or structural changes, you need permits from the Town of Huntington. Replacing a vanity and repainting doesn’t require permits. Relocating plumbing, adding new electrical circuits, removing walls, or installing new fixtures does.
We handle all permit applications as part of your bathroom remodel. You don’t need to visit Town Hall, figure out what paperwork is required, or follow up on approvals. We know which projects need permits, what documentation the town requires, and how to get approvals without delays.
Skipping permits causes problems when you sell your home. Buyers’ inspectors flag unpermitted work, which can kill deals or force you to rip out and redo the bathroom to code. We pull permits, schedule inspections, and make sure everything is documented properly so you don’t have issues later.
Clear out everything from your bathroom before we start—toiletries, towels, medications, anything stored in cabinets or on shelves. We’ll protect the rest of your home with plastic sheeting and floor coverings, but removing your belongings prevents damage and speeds up demolition.
If you only have one bathroom, plan for limited access during construction. The toilet and shower will be out of service for most of the project. Some homeowners use a second bathroom if they have one, stay with family for a week, or make do with temporary arrangements.
We’ll need access to water shutoffs and your electrical panel. Make sure we can reach the basement or utility area without obstacles. If you have pets, plan to keep them in a separate area during work hours—demolition is loud and doors stay open for material transport.
We can work with your existing layout if it’s functional and you’re happy with it. Keeping the toilet, sink, and shower in the same locations saves money because we’re not relocating plumbing lines or drains. You can still update everything—new tile, fixtures, vanity, lighting—without changing the footprint.
If your layout isn’t working, we can relocate fixtures. Moving a toilet or shower requires rerouting plumbing and drain lines, which adds cost and time. But if you’re constantly fighting a cramped shower or a vanity that blocks the door, changing the layout makes sense.
We’ll walk through your bathroom during the estimate and discuss what’s possible within your budget. Sometimes small changes—like swapping a bulky tub for a walk-in shower or moving the vanity a few feet—make a huge difference without a complete reconfiguration. We’ll show you options and costs so you can decide what’s worth it.
We contact you immediately before any additional work begins. Older Northport homes often hide surprises—outdated wiring that’s not up to code, plumbing leaks that caused subfloor damage, mold behind old tile. We don’t just fix it and hand you a bill. We stop, document the issue, explain your options, and give you costs for the repair.
You decide whether to address it now or later. Most homeowners choose to fix problems during the remodel because everything’s already open and accessible. Ignoring water damage or faulty wiring creates bigger issues down the road, and it’s cheaper to handle it now than to rip everything apart again in two years.
We build extra time into our schedules for unexpected issues because they happen frequently in older homes. If we find something, it might add a few days to the timeline, but you’ll know about it upfront. No surprise costs, no work without approval, no assumptions about what you want to spend.