Most accessibility pages open with a town's age problem. Cedar Mountain hands you a different opening line: a thinly built, high-equity mountain ZIP where the land itself is half the inventory. NC OneMap's statewide parcel file counts 926 parcels inside ZIP 28718, yet only 559 of them — about 60% — carry a dated structure. The rest is wooded acreage, view lots and second-home sites strung along the Greenville Highway toward the South Carolina line. The homes that do exist average $618,896 in value, and that combination of high worth and low density is what quietly rewrites how a walk-in tub or curbless shower gets specified up here.
Why value, not vintage, sets the brief in Cedar Mountain
The dated homes in the 28718 ZIP average a 1977 build year and split almost evenly across the 1980 line — 44.5% predate it, the rest came after. That cusp matters less than the price tag attached to it. When the typical home it sits in is worth half a million dollars or more, the conversation is never what is the cheapest unit that fits; it is which fixture belongs in a retreat this valuable and protects it for the next twenty years. In practice that pulls Cedar Mountain owners straight past the bargain acrylic kit and into a tiled or curbless build that earns its place against the rest of the house — which is why we treat the custom lane as the default here, not the upsell.
Match the fix to a mountain second home
The low-density story changes the logistics as much as the finish. A large share of these parcels are reached by long private drives and run on well water and septic rather than municipal lines, so we pressure-check the existing valve while the wall is open and fit a thermostatic mixer where variable well pressure warrants one. Many of these homes are also used only part of the year, which makes a leak behind a tiled wall far more dangerous — a slow failure can run unwatched for months in an empty mountain house. That is precisely the case for a continuous bonded waterproofing system over a fast acrylic kit, and it is the kind of condition we want to see in person before a single number goes on paper.
What each path costs here
Published 2026 ranges, which we treat as planning rails until a real on-site measure: a basic soaker walk-in tub at $3,000 to $7,000 installed, holding the original footprint for arthritis or circulation soaking; a one-day acrylic conversion at $1,200 to $9,500 for a guest bath, a rental cabin or a quick swap; a custom-tile conversion at $3,500 to $15,000, the common owner-occupied choice in this value tier; and a fully curbless walk-in shower at $12,000 to $17,000 when the threshold should disappear for good. Rebuild the entire room around access — a full universal-design bath — and the South Atlantic figures that include North Carolina put it at $30,000 to $50,000. Against a $618,896-average parcel, even the upper end is a small fraction of the asset it safeguards.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walk-in tub — basic soaker model, installed | $3,000 | $5,000 | $7,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion — full custom tile | $3,500 | $8,000 | $15,000 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion — one-day acrylic liner system | $1,200 | $4,500 | $9,500 |
For Cedar Mountain we publish ranges from HomeGuide / Angi — Tub to Shower Conversion Cost (2026), with the Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report as the regional yardstick. A remote 28718 lot adds mobilization that nudges the low end up, while keeping the existing drain location pulls it back down; in this value tier owners more often choose the up. Your number comes from a free in-home measure, never a table.
Built to outlast the need
Every accessible bath we build gets solid lumber backing screwed into the studs at the shower entry, along the control wall and beside the toilet before the tile board goes on, so a grab bar — today's or one added a decade from now — anchors into framing rated for a genuine pull instead of hollow drywall. We hold the federal 2010 ADA Standards as our geometry reference on private homes (60-inch turning space, 33-to-36-inch bar height, 17-to-19-inch seat height) because those dimensions keep working when a walker or chair eventually arrives, even where a residence is not legally bound to them. Permits route through Transylvania County, the license behind the work verifies at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors, and the estimate that starts it all is free and in your home.
Rebuilding more than the wet area? Start at bathroom remodeling in Cedar Mountain, or step into the kitchen on the Cedar Mountain kitchen remodeling page. For the line-item detail behind every range above, the WNC walk-in tub cost guide and the regional walk-in shower & tub-to-shower page carry the full breakdown.