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Bathroom Renovations in Melbourne 2026, Bathroom Renovation Costs, and How to Find a Reliable Bathroom Renovator Near You

Melbourne bathroom renovation guide 2026: how much a bathroom renovation costs in Melbourne, VBA licensing, heritage bathroom considerations and current renovation trends for Melbourne homes, and how to find a reliable bathroom renovator near you.

By Melbourne Daily · Published 3 July 2026, 9:37 pm

2 min read

Updated 8 July 2026, 1:00 am

Bathroom Renovations in Melbourne 2026, Bathroom Renovation Costs, and How to Find a Reliable Bathroom Renovator Near You
Photo: philip.mallis / CC BY-SA 2.0

Bathroom Renovations in Melbourne 2026

Melbourne has a large and competitive bathroom renovation market. Victorian bathroom renovation contractors must hold appropriate VBA and plumbing/electrical licences, verify at vba.vic.gov.au. Melbourne bathroom renovation costs are comparable to Sydney, with strong demand from inner-city apartment owners and suburban homeowners upgrading 1970s-2000s era bathrooms.

How Much Does a Bathroom Renovation Cost in Melbourne 2026?

  • Budget bathroom refresh (re-tile, new vanity, tap replacement, no layout change), typically $7,800-$15,500 in Melbourne
  • Mid-range bathroom renovation (new floor/wall tiles, new fixtures, shower screen, vanity), typically $15,500-$29,000 in Melbourne
  • Premium bathroom renovation (full gut-out, premium tiles, freestanding bath, custom vanity), typically $29,000-$62,000+ in Melbourne
  • Ensuite renovation (smaller, no bath), typically $11,500-$27,000 in Melbourne
  • Waterproofing only (compliance inspection and membrane, standard shower), typically $1,150-$2,700 in Melbourne
  • Tiling only (per square metre, floor and wall, supply tiles), typically $92-$180/sqm in Melbourne
  • Bathroom layout change (move drains, pipes, new wall), add $3,800-$11,500 to base cost in Melbourne

Melbourne Heritage Bathrooms and Inner-City Apartment Renovations

Melbourne's significant stock of Victorian and Edwardian homes in inner suburbs (Fitzroy, Carlton, Richmond, Thornbury) often have original or early bathroom additions that are small (2m x 1.5m is common), poorly waterproofed, and in need of full replacement. Melbourne's high-density apartment market also drives significant bathroom renovation activity, apartment bathroom renovations require body corporate approval for structural changes and must comply with the building's waterproofing requirements. Melbourne's current renovation trends follow Sydney's closely, large-format tiles, matte black fixtures, and frameless showers are dominant. vba.vic.gov.au

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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