Bathroom Renovation in Middlesbrough
Compare local bathroom fitting / new bathroom pros in Middlesbrough and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: £1,850–£18,400
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Bathroom Renovation prices in Middlesbrough
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget refresh New suite fitted in the existing layout, minimal tiling | £1,850 | £3,200 | £4,600 |
| Standard full refit Strip-out, new suite, full retile, new flooring | £5,050 | £6,450 | £7,800 |
| Large/high-end bathroom Layout changes, premium sanitaryware, underfloor heating | £9,200 | £12,900 | £18,400 |
How to hire a bathroom renovation pro in United Kingdom
- Check reviews and past work on Checkatrade or MyBuilder, and ask for two recent local installs to contact
- Confirm any new circuits or electric showers are installed by a Part P registered electrician who can self-certify
- If a gas combi boiler or gas water heating is affected, use a Gas Safe registered engineer
- Notify Building Control if drainage is altered or a new bathroom is created — like-for-like refits don't need it
- Get an itemized quote separating strip-out, first fix, tiling (per m² with tile allowance), and sanitaryware supply
- Agree staged payments with 5-10% retained until snagging is complete
The UK requires Part P compliance for bathroom electrical work (new circuits, electric showers) via a registered electrician or Building Control, and Building Regulations approval when drainage is altered or a new bathroom is formed. There is no licence for bathroom fitters themselves, so scheme memberships and references carry the weight.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives bathroom renovation prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need waterproofing, and can I skip redoing it?
If the renovation strips the shower area back to the substrate, waterproofing must be redone — a failed membrane is the most expensive bathroom defect there is, because the fix means demolishing finished tiling. Several countries regulate wet-area waterproofing explicitly. Never let a contractor tile directly over an old or damaged membrane.
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.
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.
Is tiling over existing tiles ever OK?
It can work on sound, well-bonded wall tiles and saves strip-out cost, but it fails on floors with movement, adds thickness that fouls doors and fittings, and hides the condition of the substrate and membrane. Most renovators strip back in wet areas — if a contractor proposes tile-over-tile in the shower zone specifically, treat it as a cost-cutting red flag.
What drives the cost of a bathroom renovation?
In rough order: whether you move plumbing (relocating the toilet or shower is the single biggest multiplier), the quality tier of tiles and fittings, bathroom size, waterproofing scope, and access (upper floors and apartment buildings cost more). Labour typically makes up 40-60% of the total, so a bigger bathroom does not scale cost linearly — fixture count matters more than floor area.
How much does moving the toilet or shower add?
Relocating a toilet means rerouting the soil pipe and adjusting floor levels; moving a shower means new drainage falls and full re-waterproofing. Either typically adds a meaningful share of the total budget and extra days of work. If your budget is tight, keeping the existing layout is the single most effective cost-saver.
How much does a new bathroom cost in the UK?
Checkatrade's 2025-26 guide puts a new bathroom including materials at £5,500-£8,000 with an average around £7,000; budget refits can come in near £3,000-£4,500 and large or high-end bathrooms run £14,000+. Fitting labour alone is typically £1,500-£4,000 depending on scope.
How long does a UK bathroom refit take?
A straightforward refit takes about 5-10 working days; layout changes or first-floor drainage rework push it to two to three weeks. Book fitters ahead — good bathroom installers in most UK cities carry 4-8 week lead times.
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