When the economy feels shaky, big home projects can feel scary. One week the news sounds hopeful. The next week, it sounds like a warning. If you’ve been thinking about remodeling your bathroom, you might be asking:
Is this still a smart move, or should I wait?
This question comes up most often for homeowners at transition points. Empty nesters rethinking how they use their space, couples planning to stay in their home through retirement, or families deciding whether their current bathroom will still work five or ten years from now.
As bathroom remodelers working with Colorado homeowners every day, we hear the same concerns again and again; cost, timing, safety, and whether remodeling still makes sense right now. Instead of guessing or reacting to headlines, let’s look at what the data actually shows and how it applies to real homes, real budgets, and real life here in Colorado.
Yes, but it helps to understand how that value works.
According to Remodeling Magazine’s 2024 Cost vs. Value Report, a midrange bathroom remodel costs about $28,000 nationwide. On average, homeowners get back about 74% of that cost when they sell their home. That means you immediately recoup $20,720 in value back into your home.
But that number only shows what happens if you sell right away. It does not include:
For homeowners who aren’t planning to move anytime soon—especially empty nesters or those settling into their “forever home”—this day-to-day value often matters just as much as resale numbers.
Bathroom remodels also perform better than many other home projects. The same report shows they land in the top half of all remodeling projects for keeping their value. No matter how you look at, whether it be enjoying the immediate benefits of an upgraded bathroom space, or the value and buyer appeal it adds back into your home upon selling, it’s a long-term value your family will benefit from.
So while a bathroom remodel isn’t a get-rich-quick project, it is one of the most reliable long-term upgrades you can make. You recover much of the cost in resale value—and you get years of daily comfort, safety, and functionality along the way. For most homeowners, that combination matters more than a short-term return.
Home equity is the part of your home you truly own.
If your home is worth $500,000 and you owe $300,000, you have $200,000 in equity.
According to CoreLogic, the average homeowner gained about $28,000 in equity during 2023. According to data from the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Colorado home values experienced significant appreciation over the past decade, though rates varied considerably by year.
Between 2017 and 2022, Colorado saw a 48% cumulative increase in home values, with the most dramatic single-year increase of 17% occurring between 2020 and 2021. More recently, annual appreciation has slowed considerably, with the U.S. national four-quarter appreciation rate at 2.2% as of Q3 2025.
Overall, since 2013, Colorado homes have grown 8.2% annually in compounded home value. Whether you live in the Front Range, the Western Slope, the mountains, or in the Four Corners area, many Colorado homeowners now have more equity than ever before.
Here’s what that really means for you as a homeowner:
Using home equity for a remodel usually costs less than using credit cards or personal loans. Home equity loans currently average between 8.15% and 8.30% APR, while credit card rates average around 22% — making credit cards nearly three times more expensive than home equity loans for financing a remodel.
Old, worn bathrooms can hurt resale value. According to the National Association of REALTORS®' 2025 Remodeling Impact Report, 35% of real estate agents have seen increased demand for bathroom renovations in recent years. Having a remodeled bathroom at selling means faster returns, and less cost of keeping your home on the market. Updating your bathroom helps protect what your home is already worth.
Unlike cars or electronics, which begin to depreciate upon use and ownership, homes usually grow in value over time. Improvements become part of that long-term value.
The takeaway: many Colorado homeowners now have flexibility they didn’t have even five years ago. This is especially relevant for homeowners approaching retirement or already retired. Many are choosing to reinvest equity into making their homes safer, easier to maintain, and more comfortable, rather than taking on future uncertainty or planning another move later in life.
For many homeowners, remodeling isn’t about chasing profit. It’s about protecting what they already have.
Wondering How This Applies to Your Home?
If you’re weighing costs, timing, or safety and wondering what applies to your home, a quick assessment can help bring clarity, without pressure. No cost. No obligation. Just clear answers for your situation.
👉 Get a No-Pressure Bathroom Assessment
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An inflation hedge simply means taking action now to avoid paying more for the same thing later. When it comes to bathroom remodeling, waiting often doesn’t save money—it usually increases the final cost.
Here’s a simple example:
If lumber, tile, and labor cost more next year than they do today, waiting means you pay more later.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, construction material prices have jumped sharply in recent years. Some bathroom materials rose by double-digit percentages during high inflation periods.
A bathroom remodel quoted at $20,000 in early 2021 would have cost approximately $23,800 by mid-2022 due to the 19% material price increase alone—an increase of nearly $4,000 just from inflation. A project quoted at $20,000 today could cost $22,000-$23,000 in 12-18 months if similar inflation patterns return.
By remodeling now, you:
You should seriously consider remodeling sooner rather than later if you’re at a life stage where stability, safety, and predictability matter more than short-term savings, especially if any of the following apply:
1. You're planning to stay in your home 3+ years. The longer you'll live with the upgrade, the more value you get from avoiding future price increases. You'll also enjoy the improved space while protecting yourself from rising costs.
2. You're preparing to sell within 2 years. With 24% of REALTORS® recommending bathroom updates before listing and buyers becoming less willing to compromise on home condition, waiting could mean both higher renovation costs AND a lower sale price due to an outdated bathroom.
3. Your bathroom has safety concerns or is clearly outdated. If you're already dealing with old fixtures, worn surfaces, or accessibility issues, delaying means paying more later to fix the same problems—problems that are only getting worse and potentially hurting your home's value every day.
4. You have budget flexibility now but uncertain income ahead. If you're approaching retirement, facing industry changes, or expecting life transitions, locking in today's costs provides financial predictability when you might have less flexibility later.
5. You're seeing visible deterioration. Small issues like grout cracks, fixture leaks, or surface wear only get worse with time. Water damage behind walls can turn a $20,000 remodel into a $30,000+ remediation project.
If you’re unsure which category you fall into, that’s common — and exactly where a quick assessment helps.
On the other hand, if you're planning to sell within 6-12 months, have a perfectly functional bathroom that doesn't hurt your home's appeal, or are facing immediate financial uncertainty, it may be worth consulting with a local real estate professional about whether minor updates would suffice.
The bottom line: For Colorado homeowners planning to stay in their homes or who have bathrooms showing their age, remodeling now isn't just about comfort. It's a smart financial hedge against inflation, rising labor costs, and the compounding effect of deferred maintenance. The question isn't whether to remodel, but whether you want to pay today's prices or tomorrow's.
Not really. While cost and value matter, most homeowners don’t decide to remodel a bathroom because of spreadsheets alone. They remodel because the space no longer feels safe, comfortable, or easy to use—and those issues affect daily life far more than people expect.
Bathrooms are one of the most dangerous rooms in the house.
According to the CDC, about 235,000 people go to the emergency room every year because of bathroom injuries. Falls are the leading cause—and they don’t just affect older adults. Kids, busy parents, and anyone dealing with slippery floors or poor lighting are at risk.
The good news? Many of these injuries are preventable.
Simple, well-planned upgrades can dramatically reduce risk, including:
These updates aren’t about making your home feel clinical or institutional. They’re about designing a bathroom that works for people at every stage of life. Safer bathrooms reduce the risk of serious injuries, help homeowners stay independent longer, and lower the chances of costly medical or assisted-living decisions later on.
For many homeowners in their 50s, 60s, and beyond, these updates are less about age—and more about making sure their home continues to work as life changes.
Most people use their bathroom 6–8 times a day. Over a year, that’s thousands of visits. When a space doesn’t work well, those small annoyances pile up fast.
A thoughtful remodel improves how the bathroom functions every single day with upgrades like:
These changes don’t just make the bathroom look better, they make daily routines smoother, safer, and less stressful. It’s the kind of improvement you feel constantly, not just when guests come over.
Efficiency matters more than ever.
The EPA reports that WaterSense® fixtures can reduce water use by 20–30% without sacrificing performance. That means less water down the drain—and lower monthly bills.
Good ventilation also plays a quiet but important role. By managing moisture properly, it helps prevent:
These problems are expensive to fix once they start. Preventing them through smart design and better systems is often far cheaper than repairing the damage later.
The monthly savings may seem small—but over 10, 15, or 20 years, they add up in a meaningful way.
This depends more on you than on the economy.
Slower economic times can also help homeowners. Contractors may have more availability, better scheduling, and sometimes better pricing.
Bathroom remodeling isn’t good or bad on its own. Ultimately, it depends on your needs and finances. The data shows that bathroom remodels:
If your finances are solid and your bathroom has real problems, waiting for a “perfect” economy may not help. Bathrooms don’t fix themselves—and prices rarely go backward.
For many homeowners, especially those with strong equity, the best time to remodel is simply when they’re ready.
If you’re starting to wonder whether a bathroom remodel makes sense for this stage of your life, whether you’re planning to stay put long-term, simplify maintenance, or make your home safer for the years ahead—we offer a no-cost, no-obligation bathroom assessment.
We’ll look at your space, talk through your goals, and help you understand what options actually make sense, without pressure, sales tactics, or rushed decisions.
You can get started by filling out the form at www.homepridebath.com/start-your-remodel.
Not quite ready yet? That’s completely okay.
Visit our Learning Center to explore clear, honest articles that explain what bathroom remodeling really involves, so you can move forward when the timing feels right for you—not anyone else.
If your bathroom looks outdated or damaged, remodeling before selling can help attract buyers. Just don’t overdo it. Sometimes small updates are enough.
A well-built bathroom adds value for many years. Simple, classic designs age better than trendy ones.
Most homeowners see the best results from a midrange remodel, often between $14,000 and $30,000 in Colorado markets.
It can raise your home’s value, but lenders usually require a new appraisal before counting it toward borrowing power.
Usually no—but they can increase your home’s cost basis, which may lower taxes when you sell. Some medical upgrades may qualify—check with a tax professional.