Updated May 2026 · Local pricing for the Nashville-Davidson metro area
Free quotes from pre-screened local contractors. No signup required.
Powered by Thumbtack
Prices estimated using the NailThePrice Local Cost Model™ — national averages adjusted for Murfreesboro's labor rates, cost of living, and material pricing.
The cost to add a bathroom in Murfreesboro ranges from $11,420 to $47,600, with most homeowners paying around $23,800. Your actual cost depends on several factors specific to your home and the Nashville-Davidson market.
A full bathroom with shower/tub costs roughly twice what a half bath (toilet and sink only) costs due to additional plumbing, tile, and fixtures.
Adding a bathroom near existing plumbing (above or adjacent to a kitchen or other bathroom) significantly reduces pipe routing costs.
Tile floors in bathrooms cost more to install than vinyl or laminate but offer better water resistance and durability in wet areas.
Basic fixtures (toilet, vanity, tub) start around $500 total while mid-range sets run $1,500–$3,000 and high-end can exceed $5,000.
Building code requires exhaust ventilation in all bathrooms — adding a vent fan with ductwork to the exterior costs $200–$500.
The South generally offers lower labor costs, though fast-growing metro areas are seeing rates climb. Year-round building seasons mean more consistent pricing and availability.
It's almost never the vanity or tile selection. The number jumps when the project goes from "we're adding a bathroom" to "we're extending plumbing, ventilation, and electrical infrastructure into a part of the house that wasn't designed for it."
I've been around a lot of bathroom additions where the room itself looked straightforward on paper, then somebody opened the walls and realized the nearest usable drain stack was farther away than expected, the panel was already full, or there was no clean path to vent the exhaust fan properly. That's usually the point where the original budget starts moving.
Bathrooms are deceptively demanding electrically for such small spaces. Dedicated GFCI protection, lighting, exhaust fans, heated floors, vanity lighting, and sometimes high-draw items like whirlpool tubs or electric radiant heat all stack into one relatively tight area. I see a lot of quotes that make the bathroom itself sound simple while barely mentioning the infrastructure required to support it properly.
One coordination issue that shows up constantly is spacing. Electricians, plumbers, HVAC installers, tile crews, and cabinet installers all need access to the same stud bays and ceiling cavities, and bathrooms don't leave much extra room to work with. I've seen beautiful remodels end up with awkward light placement, noisy fans, or impossible-to-service plumbing because nobody coordinated layout decisions early enough.
I also pay attention to the ventilation plan immediately. Bathrooms trap moisture fast, and I've seen plenty of expensive remodels where the fan felt like an afterthought. Quiet, properly vented exhaust matters more long term than most of the cosmetic upgrades people spend time debating.
One honest boundary here: plumbing fixture layout, waterproofing systems, drainage design, and fixture selection are outside my trade. What I'm usually looking at is whether the circuits, lighting layout, ventilation power, and GFCI protection were planned before the walls started closing up instead of getting figured out room-by-room during the install.
The bathroom additions that seem to age the best are usually the ones that stayed simple and functional instead of trying to cram every possible feature into a small footprint. Once projects start stacking heated floors, steam showers, body sprays, smart mirrors, towel warmers, and oversized lighting packages into one bathroom, the complexity climbs fast and so does the number of future failure points.
Budget $190–$760 for permits and inspections. Your contractor typically handles the permit process, but confirm this upfront.
Hiring a pro? Make sure they're properly licensed — see how to get licensed as a plumber in Tennessee.
Standard materials work well without extreme weather considerations. Focus budget on quality fixtures and efficient systems rather than climate-specific protections.
This project requires a licensed professional in Murfreesboro. Attempting bathroom addition without proper licensing can void insurance and create serious safety hazards.
Compare licensed, insured contractors serving Nashville-Davidson.
Powered by Thumbtack
The average cost to add a bathroom in Murfreesboro ranges from $11,420 to $47,600, with most homeowners paying around $23,800. This estimate includes both labor ($14,280) and materials ($9,520). Costs in Murfreesboro are near the national average due to local cost of living and labor market conditions. Get multiple quotes from licensed Murfreesboro contractors to lock in the best price.
Yes, Murfreesboro typically requires a permit for bathroom addition. Budget $190–$760 for permit fees and expect 1–2 weeks for approval. Your contractor typically handles the permit application. Working without a required permit can void warranties and create problems when selling your home.
Most bathroom addition projects in Murfreesboro take 14–45 days to complete. The timeline depends on project scope, contractor availability in the Nashville-Davidson metro area, and seasonal demand. Scheduling during Murfreesboro's off-peak season (typically winter months) can reduce wait times and may lower costs.
Yes — adding a full bathroom typically increases home value by $20,000–$40,000, with a return on investment of 50–60%. A half bath addition returns even more per dollar spent since it costs less. Homes with one bathroom benefit the most from adding a second.
Yes, but basement bathrooms often require an ejector pump ($500–$1,500) to lift waste up to the main sewer line if the drain is below the sewer connection. This adds cost but is a common and reliable solution.