Hear from Our Customers
Your bathroom stops being the room you avoid. The layout finally makes sense when you’re getting ready in the morning. Storage goes where you need it, not where a generic floor plan says it should.
The shower pressure improves. The lighting works for putting on makeup or shaving. The toilet doesn’t run all night wasting water you’re paying for.
You’re not just updating finishes. You’re fixing the things that have annoyed you for years—the drawer that sticks, the mirror that’s too high, the corner that collects mildew because the builder cut corners on ventilation. A proper bathroom remodel handles all of it, and when it’s done right, you’ll actually want to spend time in there.
This is what happens when the work is planned around your routine instead of a catalog. Deer Park homeowners deal with older housing stock, tight layouts, and outdated plumbing. You need someone who knows how to work within those constraints without making excuses.
We’ve been handling residential bathroom remodeling in Suffolk County for nearly a decade. We’re not the biggest name you’ll find, and we’re fine with that. What we are is transparent about pricing, realistic about timelines, and honest when something won’t work the way you’re picturing it.
Most bathroom contractors in Deer Park either lowball the estimate to win the job, then hit you with change orders, or they pad everything from the start and hope you don’t notice. We don’t do either. You get a clear breakdown of what things cost and why, so you can make decisions that actually fit your budget.
We’ve worked in enough Deer Park homes to know what you’re dealing with—older plumbing that needs careful handling, layouts that don’t make sense, and spaces that feel smaller than they should. We also know what’s trending here: walk-in showers, better lighting, storage that doesn’t waste space, and finishes that won’t look dated in three years.
First, we come look at your space. Not to sell you, but to understand what you’re working with and what’s realistic. We measure, check the plumbing and electrical, and talk through what you want versus what the room can handle. If your idea won’t work, we’ll tell you why and suggest something better.
Then you get a detailed estimate. Not a vague range—a real number with line items, so you know what you’re paying for. If you want to swap materials or cut something to save money, you’ll know exactly how much that changes things.
Once you approve it, we schedule the work and stick to the timeline unless we hit something unexpected—and if we do, you’ll know about it the same day, not three weeks later. Demo happens first, then rough plumbing and electrical if needed, then the rebuild: tile, vanity, fixtures, lighting, ventilation, and all the finish details that make it feel complete.
We don’t disappear halfway through or leave you waiting on a part for two weeks. The job stays active until it’s done, and when we’re finished, your bathroom works the way it should.
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A full bathroom remodel means gutting what’s not working and rebuilding it right. That includes new tile or flooring that won’t crack in a year, a vanity with storage you’ll actually use, a toilet that doesn’t waste 5,000 gallons of water annually, and a shower or tub that fits how you live now—not how someone in 1987 thought you should.
Lighting gets upgraded so you can see what you’re doing. Ventilation gets fixed so mold stops growing in the corners. Plumbing gets updated if it’s old, and electrical gets brought up to code if it’s not. Everything gets sealed, caulked, and finished so water stays where it belongs.
In Deer Park, a lot of homes still have original bathrooms from the ’70s and ’80s. That means outdated layouts, poor water pressure, single-pane windows that let in cold air, and builder-grade everything. A real remodel fixes that. You end up with a room that’s easier to clean, cheaper to run, safer to use, and worth more if you ever sell.
Walk-in showers are popular here because they’re easier to access and they make small bathrooms feel bigger. Double vanities work if you have the space. Heated floors are a nice touch in winter. We’ll walk you through what makes sense for your home and your budget, without pushing you toward the most expensive option.
Most full bathroom remodels take two to four weeks, depending on the scope. If you’re just swapping fixtures and retiling, you’re looking at the shorter end. If we’re moving plumbing, adding a walk-in shower, or dealing with structural issues, it takes longer.
Demo and rough work happen in the first few days. Then comes tile, which needs time to set before grouting. After that, we install the vanity, toilet, and fixtures, followed by painting, caulking, and final details.
Delays happen when we open walls and find problems—old cast iron that’s rusted through, joists that aren’t up to code, or electrical that needs upgrading. We flag those immediately and give you options. The goal is to keep moving without cutting corners, because a bathroom that’s done fast but done wrong just means you’re calling someone else in two years.
A full bathroom remodel in Deer Park typically runs between $15,000 and $35,000, depending on size, materials, and how much structural work is needed. A small bathroom with mid-range finishes will land on the lower end. A larger space with custom tile, high-end fixtures, or layout changes will cost more.
The biggest variables are tile choice, vanity quality, and whether we’re relocating plumbing. Moving a toilet or shower drain means cutting into the floor and rerouting pipes, which adds labor and cost. Sticking with the existing layout saves money.
We don’t give ballpark estimates over the phone because every bathroom is different. What we do is come out, assess the space, and give you a detailed quote that breaks down materials and labor. That way, you’re making decisions based on real numbers, not guesses. If your budget is tight, we’ll show you where you can save without compromising quality.
If your bathroom looks dated or has functional issues, yes—it’s one of the best investments you can make before selling. Buyers in Deer Park notice bathrooms. A tired, outdated space with old tile, poor lighting, and worn fixtures will drag down your home’s value and give buyers a reason to lowball their offer.
You don’t need to go high-end. A clean, modern bathroom with neutral finishes, good lighting, and updated fixtures will appeal to most buyers. Focus on functionality: fix leaks, improve water pressure, add ventilation if it’s missing, and make sure everything works smoothly.
Most bathroom remodels recoup 60-70% of their cost at resale, and in a competitive market, they can be the difference between sitting on the market and getting multiple offers. If you’re planning to sell within the next year or two, it’s worth having a conversation about what updates will give you the best return.
Yes, and it’s one of the most common requests we get in Deer Park. Walk-in showers make small bathrooms feel larger because they eliminate the visual bulk of a tub and shower curtain. They’re also easier to clean and safer to use, especially if mobility is a concern.
The key is planning the layout so the shower doesn’t dominate the room. We typically recommend a glass enclosure to keep sightlines open, and we position the showerhead and controls so water doesn’t spray everywhere when the door opens. If space is really tight, a corner unit works well.
You’ll lose the tub, which matters if you have young kids or if you like soaking. But for most homeowners, the trade-off is worth it. Walk-in showers are more practical, they look modern, and they’re a selling point if you ever move. We’ll measure your space and show you what’s possible before you commit to anything.
It depends on the scope of work. If you’re replacing fixtures, retiling, or updating finishes, you typically don’t need a permit. If you’re moving plumbing, adding electrical, or changing the layout, you do.
Deer Park follows New York State building codes, and the town requires permits for any work that involves structural changes, new plumbing lines, or electrical upgrades. Skipping the permit might save time upfront, but it can cause problems when you sell—buyers’ inspectors will flag unpermitted work, and you’ll either need to get it permitted retroactively or renegotiate the sale price.
We handle permits as part of the process. We pull them, schedule inspections, and make sure everything is up to code before we close out the job. It adds a little time to the project, but it protects you down the road and ensures the work is done right.
Ventilation is the biggest factor. If your bathroom doesn’t have an exhaust fan, or if the one you have is undersized or vented into the attic instead of outside, mold will keep coming back no matter how much you clean. A proper fan pulls moisture out of the room before it condenses on walls and ceilings.
We also use mold-resistant materials—cement backer board behind tile, mold-resistant drywall on ceilings, and high-quality caulk and grout sealer that won’t break down in a few years. Waterproofing is critical in wet areas like the shower and around the tub. If it’s not done right, water gets behind the tile and creates the perfect environment for mold.
Finally, regular maintenance matters. Wipe down surfaces after showers, run the fan for 15-20 minutes after bathing, and reseal grout every year or two. A well-built bathroom will resist mold, but no bathroom is maintenance-free. We’ll walk you through what to watch for and how to keep everything in good shape once the remodel is done.