Bathroom Renovation in Athlone
Compare local bathroom renovation pros in Athlone and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: ZAR 17,500–ZAR 230,000
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Bathroom Renovation prices in Athlone
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget refresh New fixtures in the existing layout, partial tiling | ZAR 17,500 | ZAR 27,600 | ZAR 41,400 |
| Standard full renovation Strip-out, waterproofing, retile, new suite | ZAR 41,400 | ZAR 59,800 | ZAR 87,400 |
| Luxury renovation Layout change, frameless shower, premium fittings | ZAR 82,800 | ZAR 128,800 | ZAR 230,000 |
How to hire a bathroom renovation pro in South Africa
- Get an itemized quote in ZAR: strip-out, plumbing points, waterproofing, tiling per m², and sanitaryware with PC amounts
- Require an electrical Certificate of Compliance for any wiring (heated towel rails, new lights, extractor fans)
- In Cape Town, note plumbing work must be done or signed off by a registered plumber (municipal by-law)
- Physically check one or two completed bathrooms by the contractor
- Confirm waterproofing product and warranty in writing before tiling starts
- Stage payments and hold 5-10% retention until the snag list is closed
South African bathroom renovations rarely need municipal plan approval unless walls or drainage layouts change, but electrical work requires a Certificate of Compliance and Cape Town's water by-laws require registered plumbers for plumbing work. Enforcement is uneven, so contractual protections and reference checks do the heavy lifting.
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 supply the fittings myself or buy through the contractor?
Buying your own toilet, vanity, and taps gives price control; buying through the contractor makes them responsible for defects, wrong sizes, and delivery timing. A common middle path: contractor supplies everything built-in or warranty-critical (shower valves, waste, membrane), you supply visible items like mirrors and accessories. Whoever supplies an item owns replacing it if it arrives damaged.
Can I renovate my bathroom in stages to spread the cost?
Only in limited ways. Swapping a vanity, toilet, or taps in place works as standalone jobs, but anything touching the shower area, waterproofing, or tiling should be done in one hit — redoing tiles twice or breaking a waterproof membrane to add something later costs more than doing it together.
Should I hire one bathroom fitter or separate trades?
A bathroom renovation touches plumbing, electrics, waterproofing, tiling, and carpentry. A bathroom specialist or small contractor who coordinates all of it is usually worth the margin unless you have renovation experience — sequencing errors between trades (tiler before the plumber finished rough-in, for example) are the classic self-managed failure.
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.
How much deposit should I pay a bathroom renovator?
Around 10-20% is normal, sometimes more where custom vanities or imported fittings must be ordered up front — in that case pay the supplier invoice share, not a round 50%. Hold 5-10% back until the room has been used for a week or two and the snag list (grout gaps, silicone, door alignment) is closed.
What should I check at handover of a renovated bathroom?
Run every fixture: check drainage speed, look under the vanity for weeps, confirm the shower floor falls to the drain (pour a bucket and watch), check grout lines are even and silicone is continuous, and test the extractor fan. Photograph everything and get the waterproofing product and warranty terms in writing before releasing final payment.
How much does a bathroom renovation cost in South Africa?
Local cost guides put the range at roughly R19,000-R69,000 with an average around R44,000 for a standard renovation; luxury projects in Johannesburg and Cape Town run R90,000-R250,000. Imported sanitaryware moves with the rand, so local-brand fittings are the main budget lever.
Do water restrictions affect bathroom renovation choices in South Africa?
In drought-prone metros, low-flow showerheads, dual-flush toilets, and greywater-ready plumbing are worth specifying during a renovation — some municipalities incentivize them and they cut utility bills permanently. It costs little to include while walls are open and much more to retrofit.
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