Picking the right bathroom remodeling contractor comes down to five non-negotiables: a valid license, proper insurance, honest reviews, a portfolio of real finished work, and a written agreement before demo day.
Nail those and you are already ahead of most homeowners who regret who they hired.
What Is Actually at Stake Here

A bathroom renovation adds real, measurable value to a home when done right. When it goes wrong, it does the opposite, and the damage is not always obvious at first. Bad waterproofing, skipped permits, and poor ventilation hide behind freshly tiled walls until they become much bigger problems.
The remodeling process involves a lot of trust. The right contractor earns it before the first tile is set.
Start With Licensing and Insurance
Ask every candidate two things right away:
- Are you a licensed contractor in this state?
- Do you carry liability insurance and workers compensation insurance?
A licensed contractor has passed trade exams and is accountable to a licensing board. Workers compensation insurance protects you if someone is injured on your job site. Liability insurance covers property damage. You can verify a contractor’s credentials through your state’s contractor licensing board, many of which are listed at USA.gov. It takes a few minutes and removes a lot of uncertainty.
No license, no workers comp? That is a red flag, and not a subtle one.
Finding Candidates Worth Talking To
Personal recommendations from family members, neighbors, or coworkers who recently had similar projects done are genuinely useful. Real feedback from someone you trust beats five-star reviews from strangers.
Beyond that, look for local contractors with verifiable histories on Google and the Better Business Bureau. Narrow your list to three to five potential contractors before requesting quotes.
What to Look at in Their Portfolio
Reviewing a contractor’s portfolio is not about admiring beautiful bathroom photography. It is about pattern recognition.
- Look for completed projects that match your own scope, not just high-end showrooms
- Consistent quality across multiple jobs, not one standout
- Before-and-after documentation that shows the full process
If a contractor cannot show you completed bathroom projects similar to yours, that gap matters. Ask directly why.
Getting Quotes Without Getting Burned

Multiple estimates are smart. Automatically choosing the lowest price is not. A bid that is dramatically lower than the others usually signals something: cheaper materials, a vague scope that invites additional costs later, or a payment schedule structured to benefit the contractor more than you.
| What to Compare | Why It Matters |
| Scope of work | Vague descriptions invite disputes |
| Materials specified | Quality products outlast budget alternatives |
| Project timelines | Unrealistic timelines create pressure to rush |
| Payment schedule | Large upfront demands are a warning sign |
| Permit responsibility | Necessary permits protect the homeowner |
A reputable contractor will walk you through every line. If anything is unclear, ask. Clear communication at the estimate stage prevents misunderstandings from becoming arguments mid-project.
The Written Contract
Everything you agreed on belongs in a legal contract. Scope of work, materials, project timelines, the payment schedule, how unexpected issues get handled, who pulls the necessary permits.
Final payment should always be tied to your approval of the completed work, not to a calendar date. If a contractor resists putting specifics in writing, that resistance itself tells you something.
Warning Signs That Should Stop You Cold
Some red flags are obvious. Others take a second look:
- Pressure to sign or decide immediately
- No verifiable local address or business presence
- Reluctance to provide references from past projects
- Asking for more than 30% upfront before any work begins
- No mention of pulling permits, which are legally required for most renovation work
The wrong contractor does not just delay your project. Fixing substandard work often costs more than the original bathroom remodel budget.
FAQ

How do I know if a contractor has real experience with bathrooms specifically? Ask for references from completed bathroom projects in the last year. An experienced contractor will produce them without hesitation.
What does a fair payment schedule look like? Generally, 10 to 30% at signing, progress payments tied to specific milestones, and the final payment held until you have reviewed and approved the work.
How long should a bathroom remodel take? Most projects run two to six weeks, depending on the scope, permit timelines, and material availability.
What if unexpected issues come up mid-project? That is exactly what your written contract should address. Change orders, added costs, and timeline adjustments should all require your written approval before work continues.
Skip the Research. Call the Right Team.
Everything above is worth knowing. It is also a lot of work. If you would rather put your bathroom renovation in the hands of a team with a proven track record and real completed projects to show for it, Gill Construction is a straightforward call away.
Take a look at what we do on our bathroom remodeling page, then call us at (254) 369-5978 or message us here when you are ready to get started.