A Texas hall bath remodel without moving plumbing fixtures runs $14,000–$22,000. The same scope with relocated toilet, sink, or tub runs $19,000–$28,000. Move plumbing only when the existing layout is genuinely unworkable — every relocated drain adds $1,800–$3,400 in plumbing labor and a 1-week schedule extension for the rough-in inspection.
A Texas master bath remodel sits in three tiers. Refresh ($32,000–$42,000): replace tile, vanity, fixtures, glass, paint, lighting. Mid-range gut ($46,000–$62,000): replace everything plus expand or relocate the shower, add a freestanding tub, upgrade the vanity to double sink. Premium ($68,000–$110,000): rework the layout, add radiant heated floors, install a steam shower, upgrade to a wet room, integrate smart fixtures.
Tile is the largest single line item in any Texas bath, at 22–34% of the budget. Standard porcelain tile installed runs $12–$22/sf. Large-format porcelain (24x48 and up) runs $18–$32/sf. Natural stone (marble, travertine) runs $28–$58/sf. Mosaic accents add $48–$120/sf for the accent area.
Glass enclosures range $1,800 (basic semi-frameless) to $4,800 (frameless steam-tight) for a typical 4x6 shower. Custom shapes (curves, neo-angle, multi-panel) add $1,200–$2,800.
Vanities split into stock ($800–$2,400 for single sink), semi-custom ($2,800–$6,400), and full custom ($6,800+). The countertop adds $400–$1,800 for quartz or $800–$3,200 for natural stone, depending on top size.
Plumbing fixtures (faucets, shower trim, toilet) run $1,400–$4,800 for a quality builder-grade set, $4,800–$12,000 for designer (Brizo, Kallista, Waterworks). Toto and Kohler one-piece toilets dominate Texas builds at $480–$1,400.
Heated floors (a frequent master-bath upgrade) add $1,800–$3,800 installed for a typical 60–100 sf area. Wet-room conversions (open shower with curbless drain) add $3,400–$7,800 for waterproofing and drainage.
Texas bath permit fees run $58–$210 in most cities. Inspections add 1–2 weeks. The most common permit-trigger violations are unlicensed plumbing fixture relocations and unpermitted drywall removal that exposes electrical — both easy to avoid.