By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Bathroom Remodeling Intake Forms: What Contractors Need to Capture at Project Intake

A bathroom remodel has more decision points per square foot than almost any other residential project. Plumbing, electrical, tile, fixtures, ventilation, waterproofing, structural concerns — all compressed into a space that rarely exceeds eighty square feet. A contractor who walks into a first meeting with a clipboard that says "name, address, budget" is going to spend the next three weeks chasing information that should have been documented in the first conversation.

The intake is where you define the project. Not the sales pitch, not the mood board — the actual scope of work, the existing conditions that will constrain it, and the decisions the homeowner needs to make before you can produce an accurate estimate. A structured bathroom remodeling intake form captures all of this in one session, so your estimator, plumber, electrician, and tile installer are all working from the same document. Here is what it needs to cover.

Project scope: defining the job before you price it

Bathroom remodels range from a weekend vanity swap to a six-week gut renovation that requires moving drain lines through a concrete slab. Your intake form needs to identify which type of project this is immediately, because everything downstream — budget, timeline, permits, subcontractors — depends on scope.

Capture the project type with clear categories:

Existing bathroom assessment: what you are working with

The existing conditions of the bathroom dictate what is possible, what is expensive, and what is going to surprise everyone if it is not documented upfront. Your intake form should walk through every system in the current space.

Current layout. Capture the dimensions and a basic floor plan. Where is the door? Which wall has the vanity? Where are the toilet, tub, and shower? A rough sketch with measurements is more useful than any description. The layout determines whether the homeowner's vision is physically possible without moving plumbing — which is the single biggest cost variable in a bathroom remodel.

Fixture locations. Document whether existing fixtures can stay in place or need to move. A toilet that stays where it is costs nothing to reconnect. A toilet that moves three feet requires relocating the closet flange, which on a slab means cutting concrete. That is a $2,000 to $5,000 line item that needs to appear in the estimate, not be discovered during demolition.

Plumbing access. Is the plumbing in an open wall (accessible from behind via a closet or adjacent room) or is it on an exterior wall with limited access? Is the bathroom over a basement with exposed joists, or is it on a concrete slab? Slab work is categorically more expensive and time-consuming than framed-floor plumbing access. This single field changes the project timeline by days.

Electrical. How many outlets exist? Are they GFCI-protected? Is there a dedicated circuit for the bathroom or is it sharing with an adjacent room? Where is the exhaust fan, and does it vent to the exterior or terminate in the attic? Is the lighting on its own circuit? Older homes frequently have bathrooms that do not meet current electrical code, which means any permitted renovation will require upgrades.

Ventilation. Document the current exhaust fan — its CFM rating, whether it has a timer switch, and where it vents. A fan that terminates in the attic instead of exiting through the roof or soffit is a code violation in every jurisdiction and will need to be corrected during the remodel. If the bathroom has an operable window, note it — some codes allow a window as an alternative to mechanical ventilation for smaller bathrooms.

Structural concerns. If the homeowner wants a freestanding cast-iron soaking tub, the floor framing needs to support it. A filled 60-gallon cast-iron tub with a person in it can weigh over 800 pounds. Standard residential floor joists may need sistering or reinforcement. Similarly, large-format porcelain tile on the floor adds significant weight. Document the floor structure so your estimator can flag structural work before it becomes a change order.

Water damage. Pull back the baseboard. Check the subfloor around the toilet base. Look for soft spots near the tub or shower. Ask the homeowner if they have noticed musty smells, peeling paint, or discoloration on the ceiling below the bathroom. Water damage behind walls and under floors is the most common hidden cost in bathroom remodeling, and documenting what you can see at intake helps set expectations for the contingency line in your estimate.

Age of systems. A bathroom with 1970s galvanized steel supply lines and cast-iron drain pipes is a different project than one with 2010 PEX and PVC. Older plumbing and electrical may need to be brought up to current code as part of any permitted renovation, and that cost needs to be in the estimate from day one.

Fixture selections: the decisions that drive the budget

Fixtures are where the homeowner's taste meets the contractor's pricing. A standard toilet costs $150. A wall-hung toilet with an in-wall carrier costs $1,200 plus the labor to frame the carrier into the wall. Both are toilets. The intake form needs to capture which direction the project is heading.

Surfaces: tile, countertops, and tub surrounds

Surface selections affect both the aesthetic and the labor cost. Large-format porcelain tile takes fewer pieces but requires a perfectly flat substrate and is harder to cut. Natural stone requires sealing. Heated floors need a dedicated electrical circuit. Capture these decisions at intake so your tile contractor can bid accurately.

Plumbing scope: the work behind the walls

Plumbing is the most consequential trade in a bathroom remodel and the one most likely to generate change orders if the scope is not clearly defined at intake.

Electrical scope: circuits, GFCI, and code compliance

Electrical work in a bathroom is governed by specific code requirements that are stricter than other rooms in the house. Your intake form should document the current state and the planned additions.

Permits and codes: what the jurisdiction requires

Bathroom remodels trigger permit requirements more often than homeowners expect. Your intake form should document what permits will be needed so the timeline and cost reflect the reality of the approval process.

Pricing: how the numbers break down

A bathroom remodel estimate is not a single number — it is a collection of trade-specific line items, material allowances, and contingencies. Your intake form should capture enough information to produce an itemized estimate, not a ballpark.

Building the estimate from a complete intake

A bathroom remodel intake form that captures scope, existing conditions, fixture selections, plumbing and electrical requirements, surface choices, permit needs, and pricing structure gives you everything you need to produce an estimate that holds up. No callbacks asking what kind of tile they want. No mid-project discovery that the floor cannot support the tub they selected. No change order because nobody documented that the bathroom is on a slab and the drain needs to move.

The intake is the foundation of the project. When it is thorough, the estimate is accurate, the timeline is realistic, and the homeowner knows what they are paying for before the first tile is removed. When it is not, every gap in documentation becomes a conversation, a delay, or a dispute.

If you are running a general home remodeling operation, bathroom projects share structural and permitting considerations with kitchen and whole-house renovations — but the fixture density, waterproofing requirements, and code-driven ventilation and GFCI mandates make bathroom intake distinctly more detailed per square foot. And if your crews also handle the plumbing side independently, a dedicated plumbing intake form captures the supply, drain, and venting scope with the specificity that a general remodel intake cannot.

The Trade Services Bundle includes bathroom remodeling alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields built for the work your crews actually do.

Bathroom remodeling intake forms — $12.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Project scope, existing conditions, fixture selections, plumbing and electrical scope, surfaces, permits, codes, and pricing structure. Built for bathroom remodel contractors.

View Bathroom Remodel Forms