Bathroom Renovation Checklist

Table of Contents

A bathroom renovation in Sydney involves more moving parts than most homeowners expect — budgeting, trade coordination, material selections, compliance sign-offs, and handover inspections all need to happen in the right order. This checklist gives you a clear, step-by-step framework to plan, manage, and complete your renovation without missing a critical stage or blowing your budget.

Skipping steps early in the process is the most common reason renovations run over time and over budget in Sydney.

Use this checklist before you start, during the build, and at handover to stay in control of every stage of your project.

1. Set Your Budget Before Anything Else

Getting your budget right before any work begins is the single most important step in a bathroom renovation. Without a confirmed budget, every decision that follows — trades, materials, fittings — is made without a reliable reference point.

Establish a Realistic Total Budget

In Sydney, a basic bathroom renovation typically starts from $15,000 for a cosmetic refresh, while a full mid-range renovation runs between $20,000 and $35,000. High-end or complex projects can exceed $50,000 depending on size, layout changes, and finish quality. For a full breakdown of what drives pricing at every stage, the bathroom renovation costs guide covers labour allowances, material tiers, and typical Sydney price ranges in detail.

Checklist items:

  • Confirm your total available budget in writing before approaching any contractor
  • Separate your budget into labour, materials, fittings, and a contingency allocation
  • Get at least two itemised quotes before committing

Build in a Contingency Buffer

Every bathroom renovation carries the risk of unexpected costs — concealed water damage, outdated plumbing, or non-compliant waterproofing discovered during demolition. Budget a minimum 10–15% contingency on top of your total project cost. Do not treat this as spending money. It is a financial buffer for genuine surprises.

2. Plan Your Bathroom Layout and Scope

Scope decisions made early save significant money. Moving plumbing, relocating drainage, or changing the wet area footprint all add cost and time. Locking your layout before trades are engaged avoids expensive variations mid-project.

Decide: Cosmetic Refresh or Full Renovation?

A cosmetic refresh replaces surface finishes — tiles, vanity, tapware, and accessories — without touching plumbing or layout. A full renovation involves structural changes, new waterproofing, and trade coordination across plumbing, tiling, electrical, and carpentry. Knowing which category your project falls into determines your budget, timeline, and trade requirements.

Checklist items:

  • Confirm whether plumbing or drainage will be relocated
  • Confirm whether the wet area footprint is changing
  • Confirm whether the existing layout will be retained

Confirm Wet Area and Waterproofing Requirements

In NSW, all wet areas must comply with AS 3740 waterproofing standards. Waterproofing must be applied by a licensed waterproofer and inspected before tiling begins. This is a non-negotiable compliance requirement — not an optional upgrade.

Checklist items:

  • Confirm waterproofing will be completed by a licensed contractor
  • Schedule a waterproofing inspection before tiling commences
  • Retain the waterproofing certificate for your records

3. Hire Licensed Trades and Coordinate Your Team

A full bathroom renovation requires multiple licensed trades working in a specific sequence. Engaging the wrong trades, or scheduling them out of order, is one of the most common causes of delays and cost blowouts.

Licences You Need to Verify

Checklist items:

  • Plumber — licensed and insured, check NSW Fair Trading licence
  • Electrician — licensed for bathroom-specific work (exhaust fans, heated towel rails, lighting)
  • Waterproofer — licensed under NSW Home Building Act
  • Tiler — confirm experience with wet area tiling and AS 3740 compliance
  • Builder or project manager — if coordinating multiple trades

Coordinate Trade Sequencing

The correct trade sequence for a bathroom renovation is: demolition, rough-in plumbing, rough-in electrical, waterproofing inspection, tiling, fit-off plumbing, fit-off electrical, vanity and joinery installation, accessories and final clean. If you want to understand how each trade fits into the full project timeline, the bathroom renovation guide maps out the complete sequence from demolition through to final inspection.

4. Select Fixtures, Fittings, and Materials

Fixture and material selections need to be confirmed and ordered before work begins. Late selections are a leading cause of project delays in Sydney renovations.

Prioritise Value-Adding Selections

Not all upgrades deliver equal return. In a bathroom renovation, the highest-value selections are typically: floor-to-ceiling tiles (visual impact), a quality freestanding or wall-hung vanity, and water-efficient tapware. Avoid over-capitalising on luxury fittings in properties where the renovation is investment-driven.

Checklist items:

  • Confirm all tile selections, sizes, and quantities before demolition
  • Confirm vanity, basin, toilet, and tapware selections before rough-in
  • Confirm shower screen type and dimensions before tiling

Homeowners planning both a bathroom and kitchen at the same time will find the kitchen renovation guide useful for understanding how fixture selections and material lead times apply across both wet area projects. Because bathrooms and laundries often share plumbing walls and material suppliers, the laundry renovation planning guide is worth reviewing before finalising your fixture and fitting selections.

Confirm Lead Times Before Work Starts

Tiles, vanities, and specialty fittings can carry lead times of 4–12 weeks in Sydney. Order all materials before demolition begins to avoid the project stalling mid-build.

Checklist items:

  • Confirm lead times with all suppliers at point of order
  • Arrange a secure delivery and storage location on site
  • Have a confirmed delivery date before scheduling demolition

5. Manage the Renovation in Progress

Active budget and scope management during the build prevents small issues from becoming expensive problems. Homeowners who check in regularly and document everything in writing are far less likely to face disputes or unexpected final invoices.

Track Costs Against Your Budget Weekly

Compare actual spend against your budget allocation at least once a week. Flag any variation before it is approved, not after. Homeowners managing a bathroom as part of a larger project will find the whole home renovation planning guide essential for coordinating trades, budgets, and timelines across multiple rooms simultaneously.

Checklist items:

  • Review invoices against quoted scope weekly
  • Confirm any additional costs in writing before approving work
  • Keep a running total of approved variations against your contingency

Document Changes and Variations in Writing

Any change to the original scope — additional work, material substitutions, or timeline adjustments — must be documented as a formal variation and signed by both parties before work proceeds. Verbal agreements are not enforceable.

Checklist items:

  • Request a written variation for every scope change
  • Do not allow additional work to proceed without a signed variation
  • Keep copies of all variations with your original contract

6. Final Inspections and Handover

The final stage of a bathroom renovation involves compliance inspections, a defects review, and formal handover. Do not make final payment until all items on your defects list are resolved.

Waterproofing and Tiling Sign-Off

In NSW, waterproofing must be inspected and certified before tiling begins. Retain this certificate — it is required for insurance purposes and may be requested during a property sale. For projects that include structural changes alongside the bathroom, the home extension inspections guide explains what additional sign-offs and certifications apply when scope extends beyond a standard wet area renovation.

Checklist items:

  • Confirm waterproofing certificate has been issued and retained
  • Confirm tiling has been inspected for compliance with AS 3740
  • Confirm all plumbing and electrical work has been signed off

Defects List and Practical Completion

Walk through the completed bathroom with your contractor before making final payment. Document every defect — grout inconsistencies, silicone gaps, scratched fittings, incomplete caulking — in writing. Agree on a rectification timeline before signing off on practical completion.

Checklist items:

  • Complete a written defects list at practical completion walkthrough
  • Agree on a rectification date for all defects before final payment
  • Retain all warranties, certificates, and compliance documents

Conclusion

A bathroom renovation in Sydney runs smoothly when every stage is planned, documented, and managed in sequence. Budget discipline, licensed trades, compliant waterproofing, and a thorough handover inspection are the four pillars of a renovation that stays on time and on budget.

Skipping any step in this checklist increases the risk of cost blowouts, compliance failures, or disputes at handover. The earlier each item is addressed, the less it costs to resolve.

At Sydney Home Renovation, we manage every stage of this checklist on your behalf — from transparent cost planning and trade coordination through to final inspection and handover. Contact our team to start your bathroom renovation with a clear plan and a realistic budget.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a bathroom renovation take in Sydney?

A standard bathroom renovation in Sydney typically takes 2–4 weeks from demolition to practical completion, depending on scope, trade availability, and material lead times. Complex projects involving layout changes or structural work may take 5–8 weeks.

What is the biggest hidden cost in a bathroom renovation?

Concealed water damage discovered during demolition is the most common hidden cost in Sydney bathroom renovations. Rotted framing, damaged subfloors, and non-compliant waterproofing can add $2,000–$8,000 or more to a project budget, which is why a 10–15% contingency is essential.

Do I need council approval for a bathroom renovation in NSW?

Most standard bathroom renovations in NSW do not require council approval and are classified as exempt development. However, if the renovation involves structural changes, changes to the building footprint, or work on a heritage-listed property, a development application or complying development certificate may be required.

How much should I budget for a bathroom renovation in Sydney?

A cosmetic bathroom renovation in Sydney typically starts from $15,000, a mid-range full renovation ranges from $20,000 to $35,000, and a high-end or complex renovation can exceed $50,000. The final cost depends on bathroom size, layout changes, fixture quality, and trade rates.

What trades do I need for a full bathroom renovation?

A full bathroom renovation requires a licensed plumber, electrician, waterproofer, and tiler at minimum. Depending on scope, you may also need a carpenter for vanity and joinery installation, a plasterer, and a builder or project manager to coordinate the full trade sequence.

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