Franklin is a small town carrying a big age load. Only about 4,268 people live inside the city limits, yet 28.8% of them are 65 or older — roughly double the share you would find in a typical North Carolina city. The number that should shape every bathroom decision here, though, is the next one: in 26% of Franklin households, that senior lives by themselves. One in four homes in this town is a person bathing with nobody else under the roof to hear a fall — and the original step-over tub, with a slick floor and a 14-inch wall to swing a leg over, is statistically the most dangerous place in the house for exactly that resident.
Three ways to make a Franklin bathroom safe to use
There is no single right answer; there are three, and the bather decides which one fits. A walk-in tub is a door-entry, seated soaking unit — you step in over a low threshold, the door seals, and the tub fills around you. It is the pick for someone who soaks for arthritis or circulation and does not mind the few minutes it takes to fill and drain. A low-threshold walk-in shower keeps a small curb but drops the step way down, fits a fold-down seat and a hand-held wand, and serves every body in the household at once. A curbless, zero-entry shower erases the threshold entirely so the floor runs unbroken into the wet area — the right call when a walker or wheelchair is in the picture now or likely later, which matters when 13.3% of Franklin residents already report an ambulatory difficulty.
The honest trade-offs: a walk-in tub serves one careful bather and asks the rest of the household to shower elsewhere; a curbless shower serves everyone but cannot offer a deep soak. In many Franklin homes the cleanest answer is a tub-to-shower conversion — the original alcove becomes a seated, low-threshold shower, which keeps the footprint, the budget and the resale logic intact while removing the riskiest fixture in the room.
What Franklin's older houses tend to hide
A conversion or accessible rebuild is only priced honestly if the quote anticipates the era. The median Franklin home dates to 1981 and 47.4% of the town's houses were standing before 1980, so the recurring conditions are familiar mountain-town ones: galvanized steel supply lines near the valve that deserve to be cut back to copper or PEX while the wall is open, cast-iron tubs heavy enough that they leave the room in pieces rather than through the doorway, and tight 5-foot alcoves framed for a tub and nothing larger. None of that stops the work; all of it belongs in a written quote as labor rather than a mid-job surprise. With 58.2% of Franklin homes owner-occupied, most of this is long-stay housing where doing the waterproofing right the first time pays off for decades.
The rural ring around the town
Franklin's service map is wider than its population suggests, and the parcel data shows why. NC OneMap counts 29,642 parcels inside the 28734 ZIP-code area — more than six parcels for every person living in the city limits — because the ring sweeps far out into rural Macon County, cove farmland and seasonal mountain property, with an average parcel value of $193,243. Practically, that means a lot of the bathrooms we are asked to make safe sit up a gravel road or on a slope lot rather than on a town street. Our in-home estimate is free across that entire footprint with no trip charge, and the path is the same whether the house is in town or out past the Little Tennessee. Start on the free estimate form or the free-estimate page.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walk-in tub — basic soaker model, installed | $3,000 | $5,000 | $7,000 |
| Walk-in tub — hydrotherapy (air + water jets), installed | $7,000 | $11,000 | $15,000 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion — one-day acrylic liner system | $1,200 | $4,500 | $9,500 |
| Tub-to-shower conversion — full custom tile | $3,500 | $8,000 | $15,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
Franklin ranges above are published third-party figures from Angi / HomeGuide — Walk-In Tub Cost (2026), with the Cost vs. Value South Atlantic report covering North Carolina as the regional benchmark — they are not Pisgah quotes. Macon County labor runs under large-metro rates, so jobs that keep the drain in place usually land in the lower half of each band; your real number comes from a free in-home measure, never a table.
Built to keep working as the need grows
Every accessible bath we build near Franklin gets solid lumber blocking screwed into the studs at the shower entry, along the control wall and beside the toilet before the cement board goes up — so a grab bar added today, or ten years from now, anchors into framing rated for a real pull rather than hollow drywall. We use the federal 2010 ADA Standards as the geometry reference on private homes — roughly a 60-inch turning circle, 33-to-36-inch bar height, a 17-to-19-inch seat — not because a residence is legally required to meet them, but because those dimensions are what still work the day a walker arrives. Permits run through the county building office, the license behind the work is verifiable at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors, and the fixtures we install are the serviceable names listed across this site — Kohler, Moen, Delta valves over Schluter waterproofing.
Rebuilding more than the wet area while we are in the house? Start at bathroom remodeling in Franklin, or pair it with a Franklin kitchen remodel on the same visit. For the line-item detail behind every scope above, the walk-in shower cost guide and the tub-to-shower conversion cost guide break it all down.