Small bathrooms are their own specialty — and Redwood City has thousands of them. We remodel compact baths, powder rooms, and tight hall bathrooms across the Peninsula, using space-planning tricks that make a small room feel twice its size without moving a single wall.
Built for Redwood City’s older homes
Many homes in Friendly Acres, Mount Carmel, and Woodside Plaza were built between the 1950s and 1970s with 5×7 or 5×8 bathrooms. These are some of the most common remodels we do. The challenge is always the same: fit a usable shower, vanity, and toilet into a tight footprint while making the room feel open and modern. After hundreds of these projects, we know exactly what works in a Peninsula bungalow bathroom.
Space-saving strategies that actually work
- Wall-hung (floating) vanity — seeing the floor underneath makes the room read bigger.
- Pocket or barn door — reclaims the floor space a swinging door wastes.
- Curbless shower with clear glass — removes visual barriers so the eye travels.
- Large-format tile — fewer grout lines means a calmer, larger-looking space.
- Recessed niches — storage built into the wall instead of bulky shelves.
Powder rooms and half baths
A powder room is small but high-impact — it is the bathroom your guests actually see. A bold vanity, a statement tile, and good lighting turn the smallest room in the house into the most memorable one. These projects are quick and a great way to test a designer look before a larger remodel.
Permits and code
Even a small bathroom needs permits if you move plumbing or electrical. We handle Redwood City and San Mateo County permits and inspections, and every job is completed by a CSLB-licensed, insured crew built to California code.
Got a small bathroom you have been putting off? Request a free in-home consultation and a fixed written quote.