
Owner-operated bathroom remodels for SeaTac homeowners — from quick refreshes to full gut renovations across Angle Lake, McMicken Heights, and Bow Lake. Licensed, insured, and 15 minutes northwest of Kent.
SeaTac's housing stock is what shapes every remodel decision here. SeaTac's housing is largely 1950s–1970s construction — modest single-family homes on standard lots, with original kitchens that haven't been touched since the home was built. Angle Lake has a higher concentration of lakefront and view properties where homeowners are investing in larger remodels. Many homes in the airport noise corridor have had window upgrades but original kitchens and baths.
SeaTac is about a 15-minute drive northwest of our Kent location via Highway 99 or I-5. That proximity matters — when materials show up damaged or an inspector needs a same-day correction, we are not driving in from Seattle.
Talk to Us About Your ProjectWhat's Included
Bathrooms are unforgiving — water, ventilation, and tight clearances all have to work together. Below is what's typically included in a SeaTac bathroom project; we tailor every estimate to your home.
Floor tile, large-format wall tile, custom shower niches, slab walls, and proper substrate (Schluter, cement board) under everything.
Stock, semi-custom, and custom vanities. Wall-mounted, single-sink, and dual-vanity layouts with soft-close hardware.
Toilet, sink, shower valve, and tub installation. Relocating drains, replacing old galvanized supply lines, and rough-in for new fixtures.
Faucets, showerheads, body sprays, handheld wands, tub fillers, towel bars, and hardware — coordinated with your aesthetic.
Vanity sconces, recessed lighting, decorative pendants, and dimmer-friendly switching. Always to code, always GFCI-protected.
Schluter Kerdi, Wedi, or hot-mopped pans. Proper waterproofing under tile is the difference between a 5-year and 30-year bathroom.
Exhaust fans sized for the room, vented to the exterior (not the attic), with humidity-sensing controls when requested.
Frameless shower glass, custom hinged or sliding panels, and barn-door hardware. Measured and templated after the tile is set.
We pull City of SeaTac permits when plumbing or electrical work is involved, and we schedule the rough-in and final inspections.
SeaTac Permits & Considerations
The City of SeaTac requires a building permit any time a bathroom remodel involves plumbing relocation, electrical changes, or structural alterations. A like-for-like fixture swap (same toilet location, same vanity footprint) often doesn't require a permit — but moving a shower drain, adding a circuit, or changing the layout always does.
We pull every required permit through the SeaTac Permit Center, coordinate the rough-in and final inspections, and keep documentation in your project file. Bathroom permits matter especially at resale, since inspectors and appraisers flag undocumented work.
Honest Pricing
SeaTac sits in the mid-range of the Puget Sound bathroom market. Below are the typical ranges we see — actual numbers depend on shower size, tile selection, vanity choice, and whether plumbing moves.
New vanity, toilet, fixtures, tile floor and lighting. Original layout, no plumbing relocation.
Custom shower with tile, new vanity and counters, full plumbing fixtures, ventilation, waterproofing, and lighting. Most common project here.
Layout changes, large walk-in shower, frameless glass, dual vanities, premium tile, heated floors, and designer fixtures.
Ranges are typical SeaTac bathroom project costs and don't include unforeseen issues (rot under old tile, galvanized supply line replacement) — we flag those in writing the moment we find them.
How We Work
A clear process that keeps your SeaTac project on schedule, on budget, and easy to follow week-to-week.
We come to your home, measure, listen to what you want, and talk through budget and timeline honestly.
Layout, material selection, and an itemized written estimate. You approve every line before we order.
We pull the City of SeaTac permits and schedule inspections so you don’t have to think about it.
Demo, plumbing, electrical, finish work — done by our crew, not subbed out to strangers.
Final inspection, punch-list with you on-site, permit close-out, and a written warranty handed over.
SeaTac Bathroom Remodel FAQs
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