Choosing a bathroom fitter is one of the most important decisions in any bathroom renovation. Unlike some trades where the skill set is narrow (a painter paints, a carpet fitter lays carpet), a bathroom installation combines plumbing, tiling, electrical work, carpentry, and often plastering — all in a small, water-exposed space where mistakes are expensive to fix.

The problem is that anyone can call themselves a bathroom fitter. There is no single mandatory licence or registration in the UK. That means the burden falls on you to separate the skilled professionals from the cowboys. Here are the eight things you should check before handing over your bathroom — and your money.

1. Plumbing Qualifications

A common misconception is that a bathroom fitter needs to be Gas Safe registered. Gas Safe only applies to gas appliances (boilers, gas fires) — it has nothing to do with bathroom plumbing unless your bathroom has a gas boiler in it.

What you should look for instead:

Not every brilliant bathroom fitter will have all of these, but they should have at least one recognised qualification or membership. If they cannot tell you what qualifications they hold, that is a concern.

2. Do They Subcontract Tiling and Electrical?

Many bathroom fitters are primarily plumbers who subcontract the tiling and electrical work to specialist tradespeople. This is perfectly normal and often results in better quality work — a specialist tiler will usually produce better tiling than a plumber who tiles as a secondary skill.

What matters is:

3. Public Liability Insurance

Public liability insurance protects you if the fitter causes damage to your property during the work — a burst pipe flooding the floor below, a dropped tool cracking your bath, or any other accidental damage.

Red flag: If a fitter says they are insured but cannot produce a certificate, or says they will "sort it out before starting," walk away. No certificate means no verified cover.

4. Portfolio of Previous Work

Every experienced bathroom fitter should have photos of completed work. In the age of smartphones, there is no excuse for not having a portfolio.

5. References from Previous Customers

Online reviews are useful but can be gamed. Direct references are harder to fake.

  1. Did they start and finish on the dates they promised?
  2. Were they on site every day, or did they juggle multiple jobs?
  3. How was their communication — did they explain what they were doing and flag any problems early?
  4. Were there any snags? How did they handle them?
  5. Would you use them again?

The timekeeping and communication questions are often more revealing than asking about quality. Most fitters produce decent work — it is the reliability and professionalism that separates the good ones from the rest.

6. Written Contract with Timeline, Scope, and Payment Schedule

Never proceed without a written agreement. It does not need to be a formal legal document — a detailed email or letter covering the key points is sufficient. It should include:

Never pay 100% upfront. No reputable fitter will ask for full payment before starting. If they do, consider it a major red flag. The final payment is your leverage to ensure snagging issues are resolved.

7. How They Handle Snagging

Every bathroom installation has snags. Even the best fitters will leave something that needs attention — a silicone line that is not quite right, a tile that has a small chip, a tap that drips, or an accessory that is not level. These are normal.

What separates a good fitter from a bad one is how they handle them:

How to protect yourself: Include a snagging clause in your written agreement — something like "final payment of [amount] to be made after a walkthrough and completion of any snagging items within [7/14] days of the initial completion." This gives you leverage without being unreasonable.

8. Waste Disposal Included?

A bathroom strip-out generates a surprising amount of waste: old tiles, plasterboard, the old suite, packaging from new products, offcuts, and general debris. Disposing of this costs money.

Red Flags: When to Walk Away

Over the years, certain patterns have emerged that reliably predict a bad experience:

Questions to Ask Before Hiring

When you meet a prospective fitter (ideally at your property so they can see the space), ask these questions:

  1. How long will the job take? (And what happens if it overruns?)
  2. Will you be on site every day? (Some fitters juggle two jobs at once — you need to know.)
  3. What happens if you find hidden problems? (Asbestos, rotten joists, old lead pipe, damp.) How do they communicate these and agree additional costs?
  4. Who does the tiling and electrical? (Do they do it themselves or subcontract?)
  5. Can I see your insurance certificate?
  6. What is your payment schedule?
  7. What guarantee do you offer on your workmanship?

Getting Multiple Quotes

Always get at least three quotes for a bathroom renovation. This is not just about finding the cheapest price — it is about calibrating what the job should cost and assessing the professionalism of different fitters.

When comparing quotes:

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