ADA bathroom remodeling in Florida means building a bathroom to the measurable requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act — not just adding accessibility features, but hitting the actual dimensions the standard defines. That includes wheelchair clear floor and turning space, a toilet seat height of 17 to 19 inches, grab bars mounted 33 to 36 inches above the floor and anchored to withstand a substantial load, a roll-under or knee-clearance lavatory, lever-operated controls, and a zero-threshold roll-in shower. ADA compliance is the law for public and commercial facilities, and many Florida homeowners want an ADA-aligned home bathroom that meets the same key dimensions. In Florida the dimensions are only half the job: a roll-in shower removes any curb to contain water, so every clearance has to be built into a bonded waterproofing system and a properly ventilated room. We do not quote a number sight unseen; we deliver a free written line-item estimate after an in-home visit.
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See ADA Bathroom Remodeling Done Right in Florida
ADA Bathroom Remodeling in Avon Park: What Matters Locally
Climate, code, and construction style all factor into ada-bathroom-remodeling in Highlands County. The essentials:
Inland homes in Highlands County still need moisture control; we plan ada-bathroom-remodeling around Florida humidity year-round.
Inland Avon Park, in Highlands County, contends with slab moisture and sustained humidity more than salt exposure, which shapes subfloor prep and material choice for ada-bathroom-remodeling.
Picking a material for ada-bathroom-remodeling in Avon Park? Start with how it handles Florida humidity:
What Makes a Bathroom ADA-Compliant?
An ADA bathroom is defined by clearances and mounting heights, not by appearance. The difference between a bathroom that looks accessible and one that genuinely works for a wheelchair user is measured in inches — and missing them by a little defeats the whole remodel. These are the dimensions that govern the layout.
- Clear floor & turning space — an unobstructed area large enough for a wheelchair to enter, approach each fixture, and turn around
- Toilet at 17 to 19 inches — seat height measured to the top, with the centerline set the required distance from the side wall
- Grab bars at 33 to 36 inches — mounted at the code height, the correct length, and anchored to withstand a substantial pull force
- Roll-under lavatory — knee and toe clearance under the sink, with insulated supply lines and lever or sensor controls
- Roll-in shower — a zero-threshold entry, a folding seat where specified, and controls and a hand-shower within reach
Will Your Bathroom Hold ADA Clearances?
Free in-home visit, clearance and moisture assessment, and an ADA-aligned layout matched to your needs — written estimate, no pressure.
Clearances & Mounting Heights: The Numbers That Define the Build
ADA is a dimensioned standard, and the layout has to honor every figure. A grab bar two inches too high, a toilet centerline too close to the wall, or a turning space a few inches short can each make the room non-compliant — and harder to use. We design to the ADA-aligned dimensions and verify them at the final walkthrough.
- Turning clearance verified — the open floor space is confirmed against the standard before fixtures are set, not assumed afterward
- Toilet placement — seat height of 17 to 19 inches and the required centerline distance from the side wall for a side-transfer approach
- Grab-bar geometry — bars at 33 to 36 inches, of the correct length, in the rear and side positions the standard calls for
- Lavatory clearance — knee and toe space under the sink with the rim within the maximum height, supply lines insulated against contact
- Reach ranges — controls, the hand-shower, and accessories placed inside the ADA forward and side reach ranges
Why Florida ADA Remodels Are Different
An ADA roll-in shower and Florida humidity are a hard pairing, and the remodel has to satisfy both. Most Florida bathrooms sit on slab-on-grade, so moisture rises from below while a zero-threshold roll-in lets water cross the entire floor. Add the state's large population of residents who need accessible homes and, on the coast, HVHZ glazing rules, and an ADA Florida remodel carries requirements a northern one never sees.
- Roll-in shower floor recessed and waterproofed so water reaches a linear drain rather than migrating into the bathroom or the slab
- Continuous bonded membrane carried from the level shower floor out into the bathroom floor, because a roll-in entry has no curb to contain water
- Exhaust ventilation sized to the room and ducted outside, since the constant humidity is what feeds condensation mold around the new fixtures
- Slab moisture managed where slip-rated floor tile meets the roll-in shower, so vapor has no path into the new assembly
- FBC-compliant wet-area, electrical, and ventilation detailing, with HVHZ product-approved windows where coastal South Florida requires them
Fixtures & Systems We Build With
The waterproofing system and the grab-bar reinforcement matter more than the showroom finish.
- Schluter KERDI roll-in shower systems
- Wedi / Laticrete HYDRO BAN systems
- Moen SecureMount ADA grab bars
- Kohler / American Standard ADA-height fixtures
- Mapei waterproofing & thinset
- Daltile / MSI slip-rated porcelain tile
- Panasonic / Broan humidistat exhaust fans
- Best Bath / Bestbath roll-in shower bases
Will Your Bathroom Reveal Hidden Damage First?
Older Florida baths almost always hide something behind the tile — a slow shower-pan leak, a rotted bottom plate, slab moisture, or mold from years of trapped steam. An ADA remodel opens the wet area to the studs and often moves walls for clearance, which is the ideal moment to find and fix all of it before the compliant build goes in.
We document any moisture or mold the moment the walls open, photograph the condition, and fold the remediation into the same crew and schedule — so the project does not stall waiting on a separate restoration contractor. Accessible Bathroom Estimate →
Florida Building Code, HVHZ, and Permits for ADA Remodels
An ADA bathroom remodel in Florida almost always requires a permit, because it typically moves plumbing, may move walls for clearance, recesses the shower floor, updates electrical, and reworks the wet-area assembly — all governed by the Florida Building Code, which carries its own accessibility provisions. If the remodel includes or replaces a bathroom window in a High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (Miami-Dade, Broward, and other coastal South Florida jurisdictions), that glazing carries product-approval requirements as well.
We tell you during the estimate exactly which permits and inspections your project needs, pull them, and coordinate the inspections — so the ADA bathroom is built to code and documented, which matters for both compliance and resale.
Our 6-Step ADA Bathroom Process
Every Pro Work ADA remodel follows the same six-step framework — built for a compliant, dry, code-aligned result in a Florida climate.
- Free in-home consultation. We measure, confirm mobility needs, and assess whether the existing footprint can hold ADA-aligned clearances. You see layout options for fixtures, turning space, and a roll-in or curbless shower. No commitment.
- Written estimate & ADA-aligned layout. Line-item breakdown — demolition, framing for clearances, reinforcement, roll-in waterproofing, slip-rated tile, ADA fixtures, and timeline — with a dimensioned layout plan, delivered after the visit.
- Demolition & grab-bar reinforcement. Strip the wet area to the studs, inspect for slab moisture and mold, then install continuous in-wall blocking at the grab-bar and seat zones so bars anchor to structure at the correct heights.
- Roll-in waterproofing. Recess the shower floor for a zero-threshold roll-in, install a linear drain, and bond a continuous membrane across the wet walls and the level floor. Inspections passed before tile.
- Slip-rated tile, ADA fixtures & grab bars. DCOF slip-rated floor tile, an ADA-height toilet, a roll-under lavatory, lever controls, grab bars anchored to the reinforcement, and a humidistat exhaust fan ducted outside. Daily cleanup, single point of contact.
Skip the "Looks Accessible" Gamble
Fast reply. Verified ADA-aligned clearances. Reinforced grab bars. Florida-grade waterproofing. Done right, the first time.
How to Identify a Qualified Florida ADA Remodeler
The fixtures matter less than the verified clearances, the reinforcement, and the waterproofing behind them. A bathroom that misses ADA dimensions, or has bars in drywall, is non-compliant and unsafe. Verify all of the following before signing anything:
- Clearances measured and verified
- A qualified ADA remodeler measures turning space, fixture placement, and reach ranges against the standard — before and after the build. If the scope skips dimensions, the room may not be compliant.
- Grab-bar reinforcement to structure
- ADA bars must withstand a substantial pull load, which requires solid in-wall blocking, not drywall anchors. If the scope says "ADA grab bars with anchors," the safety feature is a future failure.
- Roll-in shower waterproofed continuously
- A zero-threshold roll-in has no curb to contain water, so the membrane must run from the shower floor into the bathroom floor. Skipping this turns a compliant shower into a slab-moisture problem.
- Slip-rated tile specified by DCOF
- Wet, ADA-aligned floors need tile with a dynamic coefficient of friction of at least 0.42. An under-rated floor on a roll-in layout is a fall hazard.
- Permits pulled and inspections coordinated
- An ADA remodel touches plumbing, electrical, possibly walls, and the wet-area assembly, so it needs permits. An installer who skips them leaves you with uninspected, undocumented work.
Florida ADA Bathroom Case Study
Our Installation Standards
Every Pro Work ADA bathroom remodel meets these installation standards:
- Florida Building Code compliance
- Wet areas, plumbing, electrical, and ventilation built to FBC requirements and accessibility provisions, with HVHZ product-approved glazing where coastal South Florida requires it.
- Verified clearances
- Turning space, fixture placement, and grab-bar heights checked against the ADA-aligned dimensions at the final walkthrough — the step that turns a remodel into one a wheelchair user can actually rely on.
Why Florida Homeowners Choose Pro Work for ADA Bathrooms
Most remodelers treat ADA as a label to apply after the fact. We treat it as the dimensions that drive the layout and the moisture system that has to surround them. The same crew that lays out your clearances also installs the reinforcement, waterproofs the roll-in, and sizes the ventilation — so the ADA bathroom you paid for is compliant and stays dry behind the tile.
- Built to the numbers. Verified turning space, seat heights, and bar heights — not an "accessible enough" guess.
- Reinforcement every job. Solid in-wall blocking so ADA grab bars hold a real load.
- Free in-home estimate. On-site measurement, clearance and moisture assessment, line-item breakdown, no high-pressure sales tactic.
- One crew, demo to finish. Demolition, framing, reinforcement, waterproofing, and finish under one schedule — no bouncing between contractors.
Related Bathroom Work We Coordinate
An ADA remodel pulls in every bathroom trade. We hold it all under one crew so the room comes together compliant, waterproofed, and ventilated:
- Walk-In Shower Installation — roll-in and curbless linear-drain showers built to ADA-aligned dimensions.
- Accessible Bathroom Remodeling — aging-in-place layouts when a code-specific ADA standard is not required.
- Tub-to-Shower Conversion — replacing a high-wall tub with a zero-threshold roll-in shower.
- Bathroom Flooring — waterproof, slip-rated porcelain sloped where it meets a roll-in shower.