Bathroom Renovation in Guelph
Compare local bathroom renovation pros in Guelph and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: CA$4,600–CA$64,400
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Bathroom Renovation prices in Guelph
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget refresh New fixtures and vanity in the existing layout | CA$4,600 | CA$7,350 | CA$11,000 |
| Full mid-range renovation Strip-out, waterproofing, retile, all new fixtures | CA$11,000 | CA$16,600 | CA$25,800 |
| High-end/primary bathroom Layout changes, custom shower, premium fittings | CA$23,000 | CA$36,800 | CA$64,400 |
How to hire a bathroom renovation pro in Canada
- Check provincial/municipal licensing where it applies (e.g., Quebec RBQ; Toronto municipal licensing) plus liability insurance and WSIB/WorkSafe coverage
- Confirm plumbing changes are done by a licensed plumber and electrical by a licensed electrician with an ESA (Ontario) or provincial equivalent inspection
- Pull a municipal permit for moving drains, framing changes, or added circuits
- Get three itemized quotes separating demolition, rough-in, waterproofing, tile, and fixture supply
- Confirm ventilation (exhaust fan vented outside) is in scope — a code requirement and mold-prevention essential
- Hold back the final payment until the deficiency list is complete (10% statutory holdback in Ontario applies to lien protection)
Canadian bathroom renovations fall under provincial building codes with municipal permits needed when plumbing, structure, or wiring changes; electrical work requires licensed electricians and provincial inspection (e.g., ESA in Ontario). Quebec additionally requires contractors to hold an RBQ licence.
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See the full breakdown of what drives bathroom renovation prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a permit to renovate a bathroom in Guelph?
A like-for-like refit usually needs no permit in Guelph, but moving drainage, altering walls, or adding a new bathroom typically does under your local building rules — and electrical and plumbing work must be done by qualified or licensed trades in most countries. Ask your contractor to name the specific approval needed; see the country checklist on this page for what applies where you live.
How do I keep bathroom renovation costs down without regretting it?
Keep the existing layout, choose mid-range fittings from stocked lines rather than special orders, use large-format tiles only on feature areas, and paint rather than tile ceilings and upper walls. Do not economize on waterproofing, drainage falls, or the tiler's labour — those are the items whose failure costs multiples later.
Walk-in shower or bathtub — what should I choose?
Walk-in showers cost less to build than bath-plus-screen setups, use less space, and suit ageing-in-place. Keep at least one bathtub in the home if you may sell to families — in most markets a home with no bath at all narrows the buyer pool. If you have two bathrooms, the common answer is one of each.
Can I use the bathroom during the renovation?
Not the one being renovated — water is disconnected and the floor is out of service for most of the project. If it is your only bathroom, ask the contractor to sequence works so the toilet is usable overnight where possible, and plan for gym showers or neighbours for the tiling and waterproofing week.
What is the correct order of works in a bathroom renovation?
Strip-out, then first-fix plumbing and electrics (pipes and cables in walls), then substrate preparation and waterproofing, then tiling, then second-fix (toilet, vanity, taps, shower screen, lights), then silicone and snagging. If a quote or schedule doesn't follow this order, question it — out-of-sequence work is how leaks and redone tiles happen.
How much does a bathroom renovation cost in Canada?
Typical full renovations run CAD 12,000-28,000 with mid-range projects around CAD 18,000; budget refreshes start near CAD 5,000-8,000 and high-end or primary-bath projects reach CAD 40,000-70,000 in major metros. These track US Angi/HomeAdvisor figures adjusted to Canadian labour rates and CAD.
Is winter a good time to renovate a bathroom in Canada?
Yes — interior work is season-proof and many renovators discount January-March when exterior work stops. The main winter caveat is ventilation during tiling and curing; make sure the contractor plans for it rather than opening windows at -20°C.
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