Highlands is a place the numbers describe better than any brochure. Inside the town line live only 1,074 year-round residents, yet the surrounding ZIP 28741 carries 8,111 parcels — that is roughly seven and a half properties for every full-time person — and they average $787,409 apiece. The town's own median home value sits at $700,900. What that arithmetic spells out is a seasonal mountain-resort economy: a small permanent community living among a large stock of high-value second homes and retreats. Layer on the age data — 46.9% of residents are 65 or older — and a clear remodeling need falls out: owners who have loved this Plateau for decades, want to keep coming back into their eighties, and have the home value to do the bathroom right rather than cheap.
The Highlands advantage: no value ceiling on doing it well
In a starter-home market, the hard conversation is restraint — spend too much on one bathroom and you never see it back at resale. Highlands flips that script. When the typical home is worth north of $700,900 and Plateau parcels average $787,409, even a top-end curbless rebuild at $12,000 to $17,000 is a low single-digit slice of the asset, and a full universal-design bathroom at $30,000 to $50,000 in the South Atlantic data still reads as proportionate. That frees us to build accessibility the way it should be built up here — stone or large-format porcelain, a frameless glass panel, a recessed niche, and a bench that looks like a spa ledge rather than a grab fixture. The result protects the owner's independence and the home's market position at the same time.
Build it for a second home, not just a first one
Most properties on the Plateau are not lived in year-round, and that shapes the right design. With 67.2% owner-occupancy inside the town and many owners away for months at a stretch, our default is a low- or zero-threshold walk-in shower with a fold-down seat and a hand wand — a fixture that works for an aging owner, an adult child visiting, and any guest or seasonal renter, all without a single-purpose tub sitting idle nine months a year. Where soaking genuinely matters, a compact walk-in tub still fits an original footprint, and we will lay out the trade-off honestly. Because the home may sit empty through the cold months, we also pay attention to the unglamorous parts: shut-off accessibility, freeze-resistant supply runs, and a shower that drains and dries cleanly when nobody is there to wipe it down.
Older cabins, mountain framing, and what demo finds
The town's median home was built in 1981, and 47.4% of homes predate 1980 — on this Plateau that mostly means cabins, chalets and lodge-style houses framed over crawlspaces or daylight basements rather than poured on slabs. That is good news for going curbless: a joist bay underneath usually lets us recess the floor and drop the drain without heroics, so the shower plane runs unbroken out into the room. The recurring complications up here are the ones altitude and seasonal use create — supply lines that were winterized by a part-time owner, the occasional galvanized run worth replacing while the wall is open, and the simple logistics of moving fixtures and tile up the mountain. None of it changes whether the work succeeds; all of it belongs in an honest quote written after we have stood in the bathroom, which is why our estimate is a measure-first visit, not a phone price.
| 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 |
| 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 |
The bands above are published outside figures — Angi / HomeGuide — Walk-In Tub Cost (2026) for the fixtures, with the regional South Atlantic Cost vs. Value benchmark (North Carolina is in that region) for whole-room scope — never a Pisgah price. On the Plateau we add a modest, separately itemized line for hauling crews and material up the mountain rather than hiding it inside the scope. The figure you actually pay is set at a free, in-home measure here in Highlands.
Built to outlast the need
Every accessible bath we build in Highlands 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 up — so a grab bar, today or a decade from now, anchors into framing rated for a real pull rather than hollow drywall. We treat the federal 2010 ADA Standards as our geometry reference on private homes (a 60-inch turning circle, 33-to-36-inch bar height, 17-to-19-inch seat height) because those dimensions are what keep working when a walker or wheelchair eventually arrives, not because a residence is required to meet them. Permits run through the Macon County building department, the license behind the work is verifiable at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors, and the estimate that starts it all is free and in your home.
Still weighing a tub against a shower? Our regional WNC walk-in tub & accessible bathroom guide runs that decision in detail, and the WNC walk-in shower & tub-to-shower guide covers every conversion route. Rebuilding more than the wet area? Start at bathroom & kitchen remodeling in Highlands.