Quick Answer

Bathroom Renovation Cost in Los Angeles (2026)

Average cost in Los Angeles

US$45,374avg

US$15,000 — US$120,000

US$500 — US$1,400 per sq ft

+5% YoY
12 sources
Updated 1 weeks ago
Greater LA

Cost Breakdown

Itemized
Labor

Skilled trades (plumbing, electrical, tile)

US$6,750 — US$54,000

45%

Materials & Fixtures

Tile, vanity, shower systems, and lighting

US$5,250 — US$42,000

35%

Design & Planning

Architectural plans and interior design

US$1,500 — US$12,000

10%

Permits & Inspections

LADBS fees and code compliance

US$750 — US$6,000

5%

Contingency

Buffer for hidden structural/plumbing issues

US$750 — US$6,000

5%

🧾Sales Tax (7.25%) — California
Base cost + $3,290 tax$48,664

Sales Tax at 7.25%

📋What's Included

Scope

Typically Includes

  • Vanity & sink replacement
  • Toilet replacement
  • Tub/shower update
  • Tile flooring & walls
  • Basic plumbing
  • Lighting & exhaust fan
  • Labor & installation

Typically Excludes

  • Full tub-to-shower conversion
  • Heated floors
  • Custom glass enclosures
  • Structural modifications
  • Permits

Based on a standard 5x8 ft bathroom. Master bath or custom designs may cost more.

🧮Estimate Your Cost

Interactive

Estimated Cost

US$24,063

US$19,250 — US$28,876

Based on 12 sources and market data for Los Angeles. Actual costs may vary depending on specific project requirements.

📈Price Momentum

Year-over-year

~1 year ago

US$43,213

Today

US$45,374

Bathroom Renovation in Los Angeles is 5.0% compared to roughly a year ago — about US$2,161 more on the average project.

Comparison derived from the year-over-year change rate, not a month-by-month price index. We don't store historical snapshots yet — when we do, this will become a real time series.

🏢Top Bathroom Reno Contractors in Los Angeles

Verified providers
🔨

Ivy Builders Remodeling, Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling

12100 Wilshire Blvd #1450, Los Angeles, CA 90025, USA

5.0
★★★★★

112 reviews

🔨

AP Remodeling Inc.

5972 Washington Blvd, Culver City, CA 90232, USA

4.9
★★★★½

150 reviews

🔨

Joel & Co. Construction

11693 San Vicente Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90049, USA

4.9
★★★★½

112 reviews

🔨

N & L Remodeling

108 S Coronado St, Los Angeles, CA 90057, USA

4.9
★★★★½

78 reviews

🔨

SB Remodeling Inc.

6513 Hollywood Blvd #216, Los Angeles, CA 90028, USA

4.9
★★★★½

49 reviews

Provider data sourced from public business directories. Ratings and reviews are public and may change. LookupCost is not affiliated with listed providers.

💬What People Actually Paid

Community

Common Questions

Building permit fees in Los Angeles typically scale with project valuation, ranging from $500 to $1,800 for a standard bathroom renovation. Projects in HPOZ or hillside zones may incur additional surcharges of 15-25%.

A standard guest bathroom remodel takes 3 to 5 weeks of active construction. Large primary suites with custom tile work and layout changes typically require 6 to 8 weeks, excluding the 4-6 week lead time for permit approvals.

Yes, mid-range bathroom remodels in Los Angeles currently deliver an ROI of 65-80%. In high-competition areas like Santa Monica or Pasadena, updated bathrooms are often a deciding factor for buyers and can significantly reduce time on market.

Labor is the primary driver, with plumber rates reaching $85-$175/hr in 2026. Material-wise, custom walk-in showers average $7,875, while moving plumbing fixtures (like a toilet or drain) can add $5,000 to $15,000 to the base cost.

📊Our Methodology

How we collect data
1

Aggregated from 5+ verified web sources and cost databases

2

Licensed contractor estimates and regional cost guides

3

Government construction and labor statistics

4

Community-reported project costs and reviews

Last data collection: 1 weeks ago. Updates run weekly. All costs in USD.

About this data

Cost figures are estimates synthesized from public market data using AI research and refreshed regularly. Real project costs vary by scope, materials, contractor, and site conditions. Always get verified quotes from licensed contractors for your specific project.

Spotted bad data? Let us know — we'll review and update.