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How to Quote a Bathroom Refit (With Example Pricing)

Step-by-step guide to pricing a bathroom refit in the UK. Covers labour, materials, contingency, and how to present your quote professionally.

The Gaffer Team
Business Advice
Feb 20, 2026
11 min read

Quoting a bathroom refit is one of the most common — and most nerve-wracking — tasks for UK plumbers and builders. Get it right, and you win work at a healthy margin. Get it wrong, and you're either doing the job for free or losing it to a competitor.

This guide walks you through exactly how to build a bathroom refit quote, with real pricing examples for 2026.

Step 1: Site Survey

Never quote a bathroom without seeing it first. A 30-minute site survey saves you from nasty surprises. Check for:

  • **Access**: Can you get a bath up the stairs? Will you need to remove doors?
  • **Existing plumbing**: Copper, plastic, or lead? Where are the soil pipes?
  • **Electrics**: Location of existing circuits. Will you need a Part P electrician?
  • **Ventilation**: Existing extractor fan? Window? Building regs require adequate ventilation.
  • **Damp or rot**: Check under the bath and behind tiles. Factor in remedial work.
  • **Asbestos**: Properties built before 2000 may have asbestos in tiles, adhesive, or pipe lagging.

Step 2: Scope of Work

Break the job into clear phases and list exactly what's included:

1. Strip out existing suite, tiles, and fittings

2. Plumbing first fix — hot/cold supplies, waste runs

3. Electrical first fix — extractor fan, lighting, shaver socket

4. Tanking/waterproofing wet areas

5. Install bath/shower tray

6. Wall and floor tiling

7. Plumbing second fix — sanitaryware, taps, shower

8. Electrical second fix — fan, lights, heated towel rail

9. Silicone, grouting, snagging

Step 3: Example Pricing (2026)

Here's a realistic breakdown for a standard bathroom refit in the South West of England:

| Item | Cost |

| --- | --- |

| Strip out and waste removal | £400–£600 |

| Plumbing first fix | £600–£900 |

| Plumbing second fix | £400–£600 |

| Electrical work (Part P) | £300–£500 |

| Tiling (walls and floor) | £800–£1,200 |

| Tanking/waterproofing | £200–£350 |

| Bathroom suite (supply) | £800–£2,000 |

| Sundries and materials | £300–£500 |

| **Total** | **£3,800–£6,650** |

London and the South East: add 20–30%. North and Midlands: reduce by 10–15%.

Step 4: Add Contingency

Always add 10–15% contingency for hidden problems — rotten joists, lead pipes, asbestos. State this on your quote: "Quote is based on current visible conditions. If additional work is required, we will discuss with you before proceeding."

Step 5: Present Professionally

Your quote should include: itemised costs, scope of work, what's excluded (redecoration, flooring outside bathroom), estimated timeline, payment terms, and validity period. Use our [free quote template generator](/tools/quote-template) to create a professional PDF.

Step 6: Follow Up

Most customers get 3 quotes. The contractor who follows up within 48 hours — with a friendly call, not a pushy message — wins significantly more work. If you use Gaffer, quote follow-ups are automated.

The Gaffer Team
Business Advice

Writing about business strategy, technology, and best practices for contractors and tradespeople.

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