Should You Convert Your Inglewood Tub to a Walk-In Shower?
A tub nobody uses is wasted space. Here is how to decide whether a tub-to-shower conversion is right for your Inglewood bathroom — and what the project really involves.
One of the most common requests we get in Inglewood is some version of "can we get rid of this tub?" Often the answer is a clear yes — a tub that nobody actually bathes in is taking up the room a generous walk-in shower could fill. But the decision deserves a little thought, because in some homes keeping a tub is the smarter move. Here is how we help homeowners decide, and what the conversion actually involves.
When converting makes sense
A tub-to-shower conversion is usually the right call when the tub is rarely used, when the household wants a larger, more accessible shower, or when the bathroom is the primary bath and comfort matters more than resale flexibility. A walk-in shower opens the room visually, suits how most adults actually bathe, and — done with a low or curbless entry — is easier to step into as people age.
- The tub is used for storage, not bathing
- You want a larger, more open shower experience
- Stepping over a high tub wall is becoming a concern
- It is a primary bath where daily comfort outweighs resale flexibility
- The existing tub-shower combo is cramped and dated
When to keep a tub
Conversion is not always right. If the bathroom is the only full bath in the Inglewood home, keeping at least one tub is wise for resale and for families with young children — many buyers want a tub somewhere in the house. In that case, the better move is often to remodel the tub and surround rather than remove it, or to convert a secondary bath while keeping the main one intact. We will tell you honestly which situation you are in.
What the conversion actually involves
A tub-to-shower conversion is more than pulling out the tub and dropping in a shower. The plumbing usually has to move — the drain location changes and the valve often does too. The new shower needs a properly sloped, leak-proof pan and full waterproofing on the walls before any tile goes up. Done right, it is a real build, which is exactly why the waterproofing and the pan are where you never want a crew cutting corners.
The bathroom is where an Inglewood home shows its age and where a remodel pays off most. Updated, well-built bathrooms are among the features that most influence how a home feels to live in and how it shows to a buyer. The return is genuine, but it lives in the details: the waterproofing, the level set of the tile, the tight plumbing connections. Those unglamorous parts are exactly where a remodel earns — or loses — its value.
Curbless and accessible options
If aging in place is on your mind, this is the moment to consider a curbless or low-threshold entry. A curbless shower has no lip to step over, which is both a sleek modern look and a genuine accessibility feature. Pair it with a built-in bench, a handheld shower, and grab bars (or blocking in the walls so bars can be added later) and you have a shower that works now and adapts as needs change. These details have to be planned into the framing, so it is far cheaper to decide now than to retrofit later.
The Inglewood angle
Many Inglewood bathrooms still have the original builder-grade tub-shower combo with a fiberglass surround, and those are ideal conversion candidates. Removing that dated unit and building a custom-tiled walk-in shower is often the single change that modernizes the whole bathroom. Because these homes were built around standard plumbing, the conversions are usually straightforward for a crew that knows the local construction.
There is a right way and a wrong way to run a remodeling business, and the wrong way is what has given the trade its reputation — the bid that wins on price and then climbs, the crew juggling five jobs so yours stalls, the corners cut where you cannot see. Inglewood Bathroom Remodel does the right way: one crew, one written price, clear communication, and work we stand behind. We would rather build a referral business than chase the next cheap bid.
Comfort and value, together
Underneath all the decisions, a bathroom remodel is really about two things at once: a space you enjoy every day and an investment in your Inglewood home. The two are not in tension — a well-designed, well-built bathroom delivers both, because the same quality that makes a room comfortable to live in is what makes it hold its value at resale. The mistake is treating them as a choice, chasing either the cheapest job or the flashiest finishes while neglecting the craftsmanship that actually carries both. Build it right, and you get the daily comfort and the lasting value in the same project.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
It helps to step back and see a bathroom as a system rather than a collection of fixtures. The layout, the plumbing, the waterproofing, the tile, the vanity, the lighting — they all depend on each other, and a decision in one ripples through the rest. Moving the shower changes the plumbing; choosing large tile changes the substrate prep; adding storage changes the layout. The Inglewood homeowners who get a remodel they love are the ones who treat it as the connected project it is, planning the whole thing up front rather than deciding piece by piece as the work goes.
The cost of cutting corners
Almost every regret in a bathroom remodel traces back to a corner cut on something invisible. Skipped waterproofing that lets water into the wall. A substrate that was not flattened, so the tile cracks. Plumbing reconnected to failing old valves. None of these show on day one, which is exactly why a cheap crew cuts them — and exactly why they fail a year or three later, when the fix means tearing out the work you just paid for. The pattern is consistent enough that we tell every Inglewood homeowner the same thing: the cheapest remodel is the one built right the first time.
If you have a tub you never use and a shower you wish were bigger, a conversion might be exactly right — or it might not, depending on your home. <a href="tel:+16574410368">Call 657-441-0368</a> for a free consultation and we will give you a straight answer and a written estimate.