Bathroom Remodels in Steamboat Springs

Here's what a bathroom remodel really involves, what makes one last, and how we run it — in plain English. The part you'll never see decides everything, so we build the waterproofing first and the tile second, with the owner on the job and a photo every working day.

Call or text 970-393-6239 — photos of your space welcome · 30-minute response, Mon–Fri.

Steamboat Springs and the Yampa Valley · Written line-item proposal within 48 hours of your walkthrough · Licensed and insured in Colorado.

A bathroom looks like a small room, but it's the one where the part you can't see matters most. This page walks you through what actually goes into a bathroom remodel — starting with the waterproofing that decides whether it lasts twenty years or fails in five — plus what drives the cost and how we keep the whole thing from becoming a surprise. Read it and you'll know enough to make confident calls and ask the right questions, without needing to become a contractor yourself.

The eight things that make a bathroom — and why one of them matters most.

You don't need to master all of these. You just need to know they exist and which one carries the room. We handle the build; this is so you understand what you're paying for.

Layout

How the room works for the way you use it — where the shower, toilet, and vanity sit, whether you're opening a cramped footprint, converting a tub to a walk-in, or combining two tight rooms into a suite. What matters: the plumbing and electrical for the new layout get planned before demo, so the room you drew is the room you get.

The waterproofing system

This is the work you'll never see and the reason the bathroom lasts. Tile and grout are not waterproof on their own — water gets through them over time. What actually keeps your wall and subfloor dry is a full waterproofing system behind every wet wall and under every floor, detailed at the pan, curb, niche, and every corner and seam. Skip or rush it and you're repairing wet framing in a few years, not redoing tile — the single most expensive shortcut in a remodel. What matters: this is the part you're really paying us for. The tile sits on top of it.

Tile & shower

Set straight, on that waterproofing, with the cuts landing where they should and niches and benches built in — not bolted on. Lippage-free walls, a floor that drains, grout that's clean and sealed. What matters: a standard tub-shower, a full walk-in, a curbless build, and a steam shower are four different builds behind the wall — and the choice drives both cost and waterproofing detail.

Vanities & storage

Single or double vanities, custom or supplied, set level and plumbed clean — with storage, lighting, and counter height planned for how you actually use the room. What matters: counter height and storage are easy to get generic and easy to get right; we plan them for you, not for a showroom.

Fixtures

The faucets, valves, toilet, and the shower system you choose — this is the line you control most, from solid-and-simple to high-end. What matters: keeping fixtures where they are is the budget-friendly path; moving the shower, toilet, or vanity means opening walls or the slab to re-run lines.

Ventilation

A bathroom that can't clear its own moisture grows mold and lifts paint — and a mountain climate makes that worse. What matters: the exhaust is sized to the room and vented outside, not into the attic, so the room dries the way it should.

Radiant floor heat

A heated bathroom floor is the upgrade owners up here never regret. What matters: heated floors behave differently on a mountain slab than on a flatland subfloor — the slab pulls heat — so the system has to be specified and set for that, not installed to a generic instruction sheet.

Glass & enclosures

Frameless and semi-frameless glass, custom doors and panels. What matters: glass is measured to the finished tile so it seals and sits true — not ordered off a guess and forced to fit.

Not sure which of these matter for your bathroom?

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239

Bathrooms are one of the four interior remodels we run the same way — see Interior Remodels for the full picture, or jump straight to Kitchen Remodels and Whole-Home Remodels.

What actually drives the cost of a bathroom — so you can steer it.

No honest builder can price your bathroom from a web page, and we won't pretend to. What we can do is show you what moves the number, so you walk into your walkthrough knowing where the dollars go and which choices are yours. Your written, line-item proposal comes after the walkthrough.

The biggest budget levers

  • Tile scope — how much tile and where (floor only vs. full-height walls), plus size, material, and pattern. Intricate layouts and large-format or natural stone take more labor and care.

  • The shower system — a standard tub-shower, a full walk-in tile shower, a curbless shower, or a steam shower are four very different builds behind the wall.

  • Fixtures and finishes — the vanity, faucets, valves, glass, and lighting. This is the line you control most, from solid-and-simple to high-end.

  • Moving plumbing — keeping fixtures where they are is the least expensive path; relocating the shower, toilet, or vanity means opening walls or the slab.

  • Layout changes — combining rooms, expanding the footprint, or converting a tub to a walk-in adds demo, framing, and coordination.

  • Heated floors — radiant floor heat is a popular add up here; it adds material and labor and is specified for the slab.

  • The home itself — older homes can hide surprises behind the wall (failed waterproofing, old plumbing, asbestos or lead in pre-1980 homes we test for before demo). We scope what we can see and handle the rest with a written change order, never a surprise bill.

How we keep you in control

  • You see the levers before you spend. The walkthrough makes clear which choices drive the cost and which are yours.

  • Allowances are written and visible. Tile, fixtures, and finishes carry clear allowances in the scope, so you know what's budgeted and what an upgrade costs.

  • Changes are priced in writing, first. Nothing gets billed without a change order you approve. The price doesn't move on you mid-job.

  • The proposal is line-item. You see what each part of the bathroom costs, not a single lump sum.

Get your honest range.

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239

A Steamboat bathroom has a few things a flatland bathroom doesn't.

Altitude, slab construction, long winters, and owners who aren't always in town change how a bathroom should be built up here. We plan for all of it.

Waterproofing that holds through freeze-thaw.

Up here, water that gets behind tile doesn't just sit — it freezes, expands, and pries the assembly apart over a winter. That's exactly why we build the full waterproofing system first and detail every seam and corner, so water has nowhere to go but the drain.

Radiant floor heat, tuned for slabs at altitude.

Heated floors behave differently on a mountain slab than on a flatland subfloor — the slab pulls heat. We specify and set the system for that, so the floor is warm where you stand, not fighting the concrete underneath it.

Ventilation built for mountain-winter moisture.

Dry mountain air outside, a hot shower inside, and a big swing between them is a recipe for condensation and mold if the room can't dry itself. We size the exhaust to the room and vent it outside, so the bathroom manages water on its own instead of trapping it in the wall.

Older homes get tested before demo.

Homes built before 1980 can hide asbestos or lead, so we test before anything comes off a wall — no surprises mid-demo, no exposure to your family.

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239

Waterproofing first, tile second — and a photo every working day.

Anyone can set tile. The difference is everything that happens before it, and how the whole job is run. Here it is in one place.

1. The wet areas come first.

We build the full waterproofing system — detailed at every pan, curb, niche, and corner — before a single tile is set, and we plan the plumbing and electrical for the layout before demo, so the room you drew is the room you get.

2. One job at a time, owner on it.

We run one project at a time, and the owner is on your job. Call or text the same number and hear back the same business day, not a relay through a foreman.

3. The no-surprise spine.

A written, line-item scope before demo · a photo and status update every working day plus a short written weekly recap · change orders priced in writing and approved before any work proceeds · final payment only after you sign off at the walkthrough.

4. The guarantee, in one line.

A written 2-year workmanship warranty above the local 1-year norm, a verified crew (current insurance certificate, Colorado trade license where applicable, signed agreement before they enter your home), and your home left broom-clean at the end of every working day.

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239

Five questions to sit with before your walkthrough.

You don't need answers to all of these — they're just the things worth thinking about. Come with a sense of them and your walkthrough goes further, faster.

1. How do you use this bathroom, and who uses it?

A daily primary bath, a guest bath, a kids' bath, or an aging-in-place suite are different builds — the way you use it should drive the layout and the fixtures before any tile gets picked.

2. What frustrates you most about it now?

A cramped shower, no storage, a tub you never use, poor light or a fan that does nothing — naming the real pain points tells us what the remodel has to solve.

3. Tub, walk-in shower, or both?

Converting a tub to a walk-in or going curbless changes the build behind the wall and the budget. Knowing what you want out of the shower up front shapes everything downstream.

4. Are you keeping the plumbing where it is, or moving it?

Staying put is the budget-friendly path; moving the shower, toilet, or vanity opens walls or the slab and adds cost. Knowing your appetite for change helps us scope it honestly.

5. Planning for the long run?

If you want to stay in this home for years, a curbless shower, wider doorway, grab-bar blocking set in the wall, and comfort-height fixtures are worth deciding now — they're far easier to build in than to add later.

Ready to talk it through?

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239

Steamboat bathroom remodels — common questions.

How long does a bathroom remodel take?

Most bathrooms run a few weeks of active work once we start, depending on the scope and how much moves. Tile and waterproofing need proper cure time and can't be rushed without risking the finish, and remote mountain delivery adds a few days to material lead times — so the schedule we give you builds in both. You get the real timeline in your written proposal, and a photo every working day so you always see where it stands.

Can you do just one bathroom, or do I need to redo the whole suite?

Either. We run one bathroom or a full master-suite conversion the same careful way — one job at a time, on a written scope. A single guest bath and a moved-plumbing primary suite are different builds, and your walkthrough sorts out which one yours is.

Why does waterproofing matter so much — isn't the tile what keeps water out?

Tile and grout are not waterproof on their own; water gets through them over time. What actually keeps your wall and subfloor dry is the waterproofing system underneath — the membrane, the slope, and the way every seam and corner is detailed. Skip or rush it and you're repairing wet framing in a few years, not redoing tile. It's the most important part of the job and the part you never see, which is why we lead with it.

Can you build a curbless or aging-in-place bathroom?

Yes. Curbless (zero-threshold) showers, wider doorways, grab-bar blocking set in the wall during framing, comfort-height fixtures, and bench seating are all part of how we plan a bath you can use for the long run. Curbless in particular lives or dies on the slope and waterproofing under the floor, which is exactly the work we specialize in.

What about ventilation — do mountain bathrooms really need more?

They need it done right. A bathroom that can't clear its own moisture grows mold and lifts paint, and the dry-air-outside, hot-shower-inside swing up here makes that worse. We size the exhaust to the room and vent it outside — not into the attic — so the bathroom dries the way it should at altitude.

Can I still use my other bathroom while you work?

Yes — we work in the bathroom we're remodeling and keep the rest of your home protected and broom-clean at the end of every working day. If we're touching shared plumbing, we tell you ahead of any water shut-off so you're never caught off guard. If it's your only bathroom, we plan the sequence to keep downtime as short as the build allows and walk you through it before demo.

Do you move plumbing, or only work where the fixtures already are?

Both. Keeping fixtures where they are is the least expensive path, but if your layout needs the shower, toilet, or vanity moved, we plan and re-run the lines before demo. Moving plumbing is one of the bigger cost levers, so we make sure it's a deliberate choice — flagged at the walkthrough, priced in the written scope.

What does the 2-year workmanship warranty cover?

Our written workmanship warranty covers the quality of our work — the installation and craftsmanship — and starts the day of your final walkthrough. Manufacturer warranties on fixtures, tile, and materials are separate and pass through to you. If something in our workmanship needs attention in that window, you call the same number you always have.

Have a question that isn't here?

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239

Craftsmanship you can see.

The photos here show real finished bathroom craftsmanship completed by our crew, used with permission. We don't show stock images or another company's work as our own. As our first Elk Ridge bathrooms complete with homeowner consent, full before-and-after sets will be added here.

Verified client reviews will appear here as our first Elk Ridge projects complete. We don't post reviews or ratings we haven't earned yet.

Your bathroom starts with one walkthrough.

Send a few photos or book a 20-minute call with the owner, not a salesperson. You'll get clear scope direction, an honest budget range, and a written line-item proposal within 48 hours. No charge, no obligation.

Request a consultation — call or text 970-393-6239 · Email info@elkridgeinteriors.com

Written proposal within 48 hours of your walkthrough. Calls and texts answered Monday–Friday, 7am–6pm MT — photos welcome. Messages returned the same business day. You reach us directly — no call center, no obligation.