
Tub-to-Shower Conversion / Little Falls, NJ
Trade the tub nobody uses for a shower the family actually wants
Tub-to-shower conversions are one of the most common bathroom upgrades we do in NJ. We plan the waterproofing, drain relocation, and tile substrate before we touch anything — so the new shower works the way it should and stays sealed for the long haul.
Our approach
Trade the tub nobody uses for a shower the family actually wants
Most homeowners who call us for a tub-to-shower conversion have the same story: an old cast-iron tub nobody bathes in anymore, hard to step over, and a shower curtain or sliding door that's never quite right. Replacing it with a proper walk-in shower opens up the room, makes daily use easier, and usually stays in the same footprint — so it's a focused project, not a full bathroom gut.
The work itself is more than swapping fixtures. The drain has to move, the floor has to slope right, the substrate behind the tile has to be a real waterproof membrane, and the venting has to handle steam without rotting framing. We plan all of that before the first tile gets cut.
What this includes
- Drain relocation, waterproof membrane, and slope-to-drain done right
- Low-threshold or curbless entry options for aging-in-place
- Tile, glass, fixtures, and lighting picked together — not piecemeal
Home improvement planning
Tub-to-Shower Conversion planning in Little Falls
Home Concepts Construction works in Little Falls, NJ (Passaic County). We plan kitchen, bathroom, basement, and whole-home renovations around the realities of the homes here — older construction, mixed updates, and the kinds of layout problems that aren't visible until you open a wall.
We approach every Little Falls project the same way: walk the house first, talk through what you're actually trying to fix, and plan the work before any walls come down.
Want the full town breakdown? See remodeling in Little Falls.
What tends to matter in Little Falls
- Construction realities specific to Passaic County homes — older systems behind the walls, layouts that have been added onto over decades, and inspections that take older finishes seriously.
- Sequencing the work so the household can keep functioning during the project — important when the only full bath or the main kitchen is what's being renovated.
Our work
Tub-to-Shower Conversion projects near Little Falls




FAQ
Tub-to-Shower Conversion in Little Falls - common questions
How long does a tub-to-shower conversion take?
A focused conversion typically runs about a week of active work once materials are on site, plus selection time before that. Full-bath remodels take longer; this is one of the faster projects we do.
Will the shower fit in the same space the tub is in now?
Almost always — most standard tub footprints (60" or 54") convert to a roomy walk-in shower without expanding the wall. We measure first and confirm before pricing.
Can you do a low-threshold or curbless shower for aging in place?
Yes. We can frame in a recessed pan, slope the floor properly, and run a linear drain — that's how we get a true zero-threshold entry. We'll talk through the structural piece since it sometimes affects floor framing.
Do I need a permit?
In most NJ towns, plumbing permits are required when relocating a drain. We pull the permit and handle inspections — you don't have to deal with the township yourself.
Get a free quote
Tub-to-Shower Conversion in Little Falls - get a free quote
Tell us a little about the project and we'll get back within one business day with real answers about how it would go in a Little Falls home.
Free in-home visit
We come to you. Measure, plan, and quote on-site.
Licensed in NJ
NJ HIC #13VH10078600
Real response
Within one business day.
See more from Tub-to-Shower Conversion or learn about remodeling in Little Falls, NJ.
Nearby towns
Tub-to-Shower Conversion in nearby towns
Same crew, same standards one town over. Tap to see how the project would go there.
Ready to start?
Tell us about your project. We’ll tell you what it actually takes.
No pressure, no obligation. We’ll walk through what’s worth doing first, what can wait, and what to watch out for — before anyone talks contracts.
