Vision Bathroom Remodeling offers bathroom design services in Fort Lauderdale FL — full 3D renderings, layout planning, material selection, and complete design-build execution. Our in-house design team works with homeowners across Plantation, Weston, and Coral Springs to design bathrooms that look exactly how you imagined — before a single vanity is ordered. Every design includes a fixed-price proposal so you know the total cost before you commit. Call (954) 245-0176 for your free design consultation.
Vision Bathroom Remodeling offers full-service bathroom design in Fort Lauderdale FL — from your very first concept to a completed, fully built bathroom. Our in-house design team handles every element of the process: 3D renderings, layout planning, material selection, finish specification, and complete project coordination. We are a design-build contractor, which means the same company that designs your bathroom also builds it. There is no handoff between an architect and a separate contractor — no dropped details, no miscommunications, no surprises when construction begins. You work with one team, under one fixed-price contract, from the first consultation through the final walkthrough.
One of the most valued parts of our process is that every Fort Lauderdale homeowner receives a full 3D rendering before any demolition begins. You see exactly how your new bathroom will look — vanity placement, tile layout, countertop material, hardware finish, lighting — before a single tile is touched. If something looks off, we revise it. We offer unlimited revision rounds until you are completely satisfied with the design. Only after design approval do we issue a fixed-price quote, order materials, and schedule the build. This approach eliminates the anxiety that often comes with bathroom remodeling and ensures the finished result matches your expectations precisely. We have completed over 200 bathroom projects across Fort Lauderdale, Plantation, Weston, and all of Broward County.
The most distinctly Fort Lauderdale look combines white walls, natural teak or white oak accents, and cerulean or seafoam tile details that echo the Atlantic just minutes away. Open rainfall showers with frameless glass enclosures, weathered brass fixtures that develop a warm patina over time, and a palette that brings the outdoors in — this style is directly influenced by the city's beach lifestyle and coastal architecture. Natural textures like linen, travertine, and rattan accessories complete the look. It photographs beautifully and feels serene year-round, which makes it one of the top requests at Vision Bathroom across Fort Lauderdale beachside neighborhoods. For the right tile selections that work in a coastal design, our team guides you through the full range of cerulean, seafoam, and neutral stone options.
Hampton Transitional is the most consistently popular style in Victoria Park and Coral Ridge — two of Fort Lauderdale's most active remodeling neighborhoods. Shaker vanities in white or soft powder blue anchor the design, paired with thick quartz countertops, subway tile in classic running bond or stacked patterns, and chrome or satin nickel fixtures for a timeless, polished look. Statement mirrors with architectural frames — arched, brass-trimmed, or double-paneled — add personality without competing with the clean lines. This style bridges classic and contemporary, making it ideal for homeowners who want a bathroom that will look relevant for the next 20 years without chasing short-lived trends.
Fort Lauderdale's high-rise condominiums and modern builds have driven significant demand for the Contemporary Dark Luxury aesthetic. Matte black hardware paired with dark navy or charcoal vanities creates a dramatic, boutique-hotel feel. Calacatta marble-look porcelain slabs — large format, vein-matched across panels — bring sophistication without the maintenance of natural stone. Backlit LED mirrors provide ambient glow that makes the dark palette feel warm rather than cold. Floor-to-ceiling large-format tile eliminates grout lines visually and makes the room feel taller. This style is particularly popular in newer Fort Lauderdale construction from 2010 onward, where the architecture supports bold interior choices. See our bathroom tile options for large-format porcelain and stone-look collections.
Fort Lauderdale has a deep inventory of Mediterranean-revival architecture — arched doorways, terracotta roofs, and plaster walls are common across older neighborhoods. The Mediterranean Revival bathroom style leans into this heritage: terracotta floor tile, arched vanity mirrors that echo the architecture, warm amber lighting from sconces or pendant fixtures, hand-painted Talavera tile accents in a shower niche or backsplash, and rattan or wicker accessories for texture. This style works particularly well in homes where the rest of the house already has Spanish-influenced details, creating a cohesive feel from room to room. Colors are warm — rust, ochre, warm white, deep green — and materials are natural and artisan.
The most-requested style in Weston and Plantation for 2025–2026, the Biophilic Spa aesthetic brings nature directly into the bathroom. Natural stone on floors and walls, live-edge wood elements on floating shelves or vanity bases, plants integrated into the design through recessed niches or a window-adjacent shelf, a rainfall shower that fills the room with sound, and a freestanding soaking tub positioned to catch natural light from a window or skylight. The palette is entirely neutral — warm whites, stone, taupe, moss — nothing competes with the organic materials. This style creates the feeling of a private spa retreat and tends to be the top choice among homeowners who work from home and want a bathroom that genuinely recharges them. Call (954) 245-0176 to discuss whether a biophilic design works in your current space.
The design phase is the most important part of any bathroom remodel — and it is also the phase where most Fort Lauderdale homeowners feel most uncertain. Vision Bathroom has developed a structured, step-by-step design process that eliminates guesswork and gives you complete visibility into what your bathroom will look like before any physical work begins. The typical design phase runs 2–3 weeks from your first consultation to design approval and fixed-price quote, at which point we begin ordering materials and scheduling the build.
Your first meeting with a Vision Bathroom designer is a conversation, not a sales pitch. We ask about your style preferences — do you have images saved? A Pinterest board? A hotel bathroom you loved? We gather your full wish list: what features are non-negotiable, what you could live without, what you regret about your current bathroom. Budget is discussed honestly and early, so we design something that is achievable, not aspirational in a way that leads to disappointment later.
A Vision Bathroom designer visits your Fort Lauderdale home and documents every dimension of your existing bathroom: floor-to-ceiling height, window and door positions, plumbing rough-in locations, electrical panel position, ventilation, and structural wall positions. These measurements feed directly into the CAD model — nothing is estimated or averaged. We also photograph the space from every angle, which allows us to create a rendering that accurately reflects your room's proportions and natural light.
Using your room measurements and style brief, our design team builds a full CAD model of your bathroom. We produce a precise floor plan showing vanity layout, shower footprint, tub placement (if applicable), toilet position, and traffic flow. From the floor plan we generate a photorealistic 3D rendering showing the finished bathroom from multiple angles. You see the exact tile pattern on the floor, the countertop material on the vanity, the hardware finish on the faucet, and the light from the fixture above the mirror. Renderings are delivered within 5–7 business days of your measurement visit.
Material selection is one of the most enjoyable parts of the process for most homeowners. You can visit our showroom to touch and see samples in person, or work from digital swatches and material boards if you prefer remote collaboration. Your designer guides you through tile options, quartz and stone countertops, vanity styles, hardware finishes, mirrors, and plumbing fixtures. Every selection is visualized in your 3D render before you commit — you never have to imagine how it will look.
Once you see your first 3D render, revisions are common — and completely expected. We offer unlimited revisions until you are fully satisfied with the design. Want to try a different tile on the shower floor? Change the vanity color? Swap the fixture finish from satin nickel to matte black? All of that happens in the design phase at no extra charge. Once you sign off on the final design, we issue a fixed-price proposal. The number on that proposal is the number you pay — no surprises mid-construction.
Choosing the right color palette for a Fort Lauderdale bathroom is more nuanced than it seems. Florida's intense natural light — full sun, coastal glare, and high UV all year round — affects how colors read on walls, tile, and cabinetry in ways that Northern-market design guides do not account for. Our design team works with Fort Lauderdale's specific light quality every day, which shapes the palette recommendations we give every client.
White remains the most timeless bathroom palette, and for good reason — it reflects light, makes spaces feel larger, and works with virtually any hardware or fixture finish. In Fort Lauderdale, however, pure white on large wall surfaces can wash out in direct sunlight, reading as almost bluish-cool. Our designers typically recommend warm whites (cream, ivory, linen white) that hold their depth and warmth under Florida's bright natural light. White is the top choice for small bathrooms, guest bathrooms, and any space where making the room feel larger is the primary goal.
Gray dominated bathroom design from approximately 2015 to 2023 and remains popular today, particularly in homes that were renovated during that period and are now being refreshed. Cool grays can read as clinical under Florida's bright light, so we typically steer clients toward greige (gray-beige blends) that hold warmth across lighting conditions. Greige vanities paired with white quartz countertops and warm-toned wood accents create a balanced, approachable palette.
Dark accent vanities — navy blue, forest green, charcoal, deep black — have been the dominant trend from 2023 through 2026. A navy vanity base with a white or Calacatta quartz countertop creates a striking focal point that photographs beautifully and makes the bathroom feel curated rather than builder-standard. In Fort Lauderdale, this palette works especially well in bathrooms with good natural light, where the dark base is balanced by white tile and bright windows.
The most-requested palette for 2025–2026 bathroom design in Fort Lauderdale is a warm, natural spectrum — wood tones, stone, linen, warm sand. Warm tones balance Fort Lauderdale's bright natural light in a way that cool-dominant palettes cannot: they prevent that "bleached out" feeling that occurs when strong sunlight hits pure white or cool gray surfaces. Natural materials — travertine, warm oak, jute, plaster-look tile — are inherently warm-toned and suit this aesthetic perfectly.
Sage green has moved from a niche choice to one of the most-requested bathroom colors we see. It works exceptionally well in Fort Lauderdale bathroom remodels because it reads as calm and spa-like without feeling cold or clinical. Sage pairs naturally with warm brass or unlacquered brass fixtures, natural stone countertops, and white subway tile — a combination that is consistently beautiful and difficult to tire of. It is a particularly strong choice for master bathrooms where the goal is a retreat from daily life.
Slate, charcoal, and forest green create a bold, moody atmosphere in bathrooms that feels like a private boutique hotel. This palette is not for every Fort Lauderdale home, but in the right space — a large master bathroom with good lighting design and luxury finishes — it is extraordinary. The key to making dark bathrooms work in Florida is layered lighting: backlit mirrors, recessed ceiling fixtures, and vanity sconces create warmth and depth that prevent the space from feeling like a cave.
Fort Lauderdale receives intense, direct sunlight year-round, amplified by coastal glare from the Intracoastal and Atlantic. This affects color perception in bathrooms significantly:
Fort Lauderdale's housing stock spans nearly a century of residential construction, and each era produced distinct bathroom footprints and structural constraints. From the compact CBS block homes built in the 1950s through 1980s to the sprawling luxury masters in newer Weston and Coral Ridge builds, our team has designed layouts for every size and configuration. Understanding common Fort Lauderdale bathroom footprints allows us to plan realistic, high-impact designs from the first consultation.
The 5×7 (35 square foot) bathroom is the most prevalent footprint in Fort Lauderdale homes built between the 1960s and 1980s. These are functional but often cramped — a single-sink vanity, a tub-shower combo, and a toilet. Maximizing a 5×7 requires smart space planning: a floating vanity raises the perceived floor area by exposing floor tile beneath it; a frameless glass shower enclosure eliminates the visual weight of a shower curtain or heavy door frame; a pocket door replaces a swing door and recovers 6–8 square feet of usable space; and light colors throughout — wall tile, floor tile, and vanity — make the room feel significantly more spacious. See our full bathroom remodeling page for before-and-after examples from 5×7 renovations in Fort Lauderdale neighborhoods.
The 8×10 master bath (80 square feet) is a highly workable footprint that allows for meaningful upgrades without structural changes. A double-sink vanity, a walk-in shower, and a separate toilet compartment all fit comfortably at this size. This is the most common footprint we work with in Fort Lauderdale's 1990s–2000s subdivisions, and a well-planned renovation at this size delivers transformative results. We typically recommend a 60-inch double vanity, a 36×60-inch or larger walk-in shower, and floor-to-ceiling tile on at least the shower wall to maximize the visual impact.
Larger master bathrooms — common in Weston luxury builds and newer Fort Lauderdale custom homes — allow for a fully separated layout: a dedicated vanity wall with his-and-hers sinks, a standalone soaking tub positioned as a focal point (often under a window or skylight), a walk-in shower with multiple heads and a bench, and a private toilet room with a door. At 12×16 or larger, a bathroom begins to function more like a suite — integrated storage, a lounge chair, integrated TV behind a mirror, or a coffee station are all realistic additions. Our team designs these spaces to feel luxurious and curated, not overloaded.
Fort Lauderdale has one of Florida's largest retiree and senior populations, and ADA-accessible bathroom design is a frequent and important request. A well-designed accessible bathroom does not need to look institutional — with the right layout planning and material choices, it can be as beautiful as any luxury renovation. Key elements include: a curbless (zero-threshold) shower entry, a wide shower opening of at least 36 inches, grab bars integrated into the tile design rather than retrofitted as afterthoughts, a comfort-height toilet, and a vanity with knee clearance for seated use. Vision Bathroom designs ADA-compliant bathrooms across Fort Lauderdale and all of Broward County that meet code and look exceptional. Call (954) 245-0176 to discuss your accessibility needs.
Material selection is where bathroom design decisions have the most visible and lasting impact. In Fort Lauderdale, South Florida's climate adds an important layer of consideration: humidity, coastal air, and year-round moisture exposure affect how materials perform over time. Vision Bathroom recommends materials that are both beautiful and appropriate for Broward County's environment.
Porcelain tile is our top recommendation for Fort Lauderdale bathrooms and the most durable option available. Dense, non-porous, and resistant to moisture, staining, and coastal humidity, porcelain handles South Florida conditions exceptionally well. It is available in sizes from 4-inch mosaics to 48×96-inch slabs and in virtually every aesthetic from natural stone looks to concrete and wood-look finishes. See our full range of bathroom tile options in Fort Lauderdale. Ceramic tile is a solid budget-friendly alternative for walls, though it is softer and more porous than porcelain — suitable for walls and low-traffic floor areas. Natural stone (marble, travertine, limestone) is beautiful but requires sealing, is susceptible to moisture over time, and has higher maintenance requirements in South Florida's climate. We recommend it for feature applications — a shower niche, an accent wall — rather than full floor coverage. Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP) is an excellent waterproof flooring option for bathrooms, particularly in renovation budgets where full porcelain floor installation is cost-prohibitive.
Quartz is the top countertop choice for Fort Lauderdale bathrooms and represents over 70% of our countertop installations. Engineered quartz is non-porous, requires no sealing, resists staining and moisture, and is available in an enormous range of colors and patterns — from pure white to Calacatta marble look to concrete and terrazzo styles. Explore our quartz countertop options in Fort Lauderdale. Granite remains popular and durable but requires periodic sealing. Marble is luxurious but high-maintenance — beautiful in low-use bathrooms, but not our first recommendation for busy master baths. Porcelain slab countertops are a growing trend: UV-stable, heat-resistant, non-porous, and available in extra-large format sizes that eliminate seams on wide vanity tops. See all options on our countertops page.
For Fort Lauderdale's humidity levels, vanity construction quality is critical. We specify plywood box construction over particleboard — plywood is moisture-resistant and holds screws far more reliably over time. A solid wood face frame adds strength and a clean finished edge. Soft-close door and drawer hardware is standard on all Vision Bathroom installations. Available finishes range from painted white and navy to stained wood looks in walnut, oak, and whitewashed finishes. Visit our custom vanity page for the full range of available configurations and finishes.
Brushed brass and unlacquered brass are the dominant fixture trends for 2025 Fort Lauderdale bathrooms — warm, rich, and distinctive, they pair beautifully with both neutral and moody palettes. Matte black hardware remains a strong choice for contemporary and dark-palette bathrooms and photographs exceptionally well. Satin nickel is the classic choice — understated, durable, and versatile across every design style. Polished chrome is timeless and pairs particularly well with white Hampton and transitional designs. We recommend choosing one dominant fixture finish per bathroom and applying it consistently across faucets, showerhead, towel bars, toilet paper holder, and cabinet pulls.
Backlit LED mirrors have dominated bathroom mirror selections since 2023 and remain the most popular choice today. They provide even, flattering light for grooming tasks, eliminate the shadowing caused by overhead-only lighting, and lend a modern, spa-quality feel to any bathroom. Framed statement mirrors — arched, brass-trimmed, oversized rectangular — are the top choice for Hampton and Mediterranean revival styles. Medicine cabinets are often underutilized in Fort Lauderdale bathrooms, but for smaller spaces, a recessed medicine cabinet with a mirrored face delivers significant storage without consuming any floor or counter space.
No travel fees across Broward County. Click your city to learn more.