Walk-in shower installation in Florida means building a barrier-free or low-threshold shower — one you step into without climbing over a tub wall or a tall curb — engineered so the open entry still contains every drop of water. In a Florida home, the walk-in shower has become the default upgrade because it suits the state's large aging-in-place population and pairs perfectly with the open, modern look homeowners want. But the part that matters is invisible: a curbless shower only works when the slab is recessed, the floor is sloped on a planned pitch to a linear or trench drain, and the entire pan and walls are sealed with a bonded waterproof membrane. Get the slope or the waterproofing wrong and an open shower sends water across the whole bathroom and steam into the framing. We design the drainage and waterproofing first, then finish with slip-rated tile and frameless glass — and we quote with a free written estimate after an in-home visit, never a number sight unseen.
What Is a Walk-In Shower, and Why Does Florida Love It?
A walk-in shower is a permanent, tiled shower with an easy, low or no-step entry — distinct from a prefab insert or a tub-shower combo. It can be fully curbless (the floor runs flat into the shower) or low-threshold (a small, ankle-height curb), and it is finished with tile, glass, and a drain matched to the layout. Florida's climate and demographics make it the most-requested bathroom upgrade in the state.
- Curbless / barrier-free — no step at all; the floor pitches into the shower, ideal for wheelchair access and aging-in-place
- Low-threshold — a short, easy-step curb where a fully recessed slab is not practical
- Linear or trench drain — a long slot drain that allows a single-direction slope and large-format tile, a clean look that drains fast
- Center point drain — the traditional option, with a four-way slope and smaller floor tile
- Frameless glass or open entry — a glass panel or a fully open walk-in design that feels larger and dries faster in humidity
Want a Curbless Shower Without the Water Problem?
Free in-home visit, a slope and drain plan, and a waterproofing scope matched to your bathroom — written estimate, no pressure.
Slope, Drainage & Waterproofing: The Three Things That Make Curbless Work
A barrier-free shower removes the curb that used to hold water in — so the slope, the drain, and the membrane have to do that job instead. This is the difference between a curbless shower that performs for decades and one that wets the whole bathroom floor. In humid Florida it also has to manage steam, not just splash.
- Recessed slab or built-up floor — the shower area sits slightly lower than the bathroom floor so water flows in, not out, at the open entry
- Planned slope to drain — the pan is pitched on a consistent pitch (a single plane to a linear drain, or four planes to a center drain) so water always reaches the outlet
- Bonded waterproof membrane — a continuous sheet or liquid membrane across the pan and walls, the layer that keeps water out of the slab and framing
- Linear drain for large tile — a slot drain lets you use large-format, low-grout tile on a single-direction slope, which both looks clean and resists mildew
- Ventilation for steam — an open walk-in still loads the room with humidity, so an exhaust fan sized to the bath clears the steam an enclosed door used to trap
Why Florida Walk-In Shower Installs Are Different
Florida builds for aging-in-place on a wet slab. The state's retiree population drives heavy demand for barrier-free entry, and most bathrooms sit on slab-on-grade, which shapes how a curbless pan is recessed and waterproofed. Add coastal HVHZ rules for any glass and the install carries Florida-specific requirements.
- Slab recessing or a built-up curbless pan engineered for slab-on-grade homes, where you cannot simply drop the floor between joists
- Aging-in-place detailing — barrier-free entry, in-wall grab-bar blocking, a built-in bench, and a handheld shower set at an accessible height
- Slip-rated floor tile (DCOF ≥ 0.42) and small-format or textured tile in the wet zone for safe footing
- Exhaust ventilation sized to clear the steam an open Florida walk-in produces, ducted to the outside
- FBC-compliant slope and waterproofing, with HVHZ product-approved glass where coastal South Florida requires it
Brands & Systems We Build With
The pan and waterproofing system carry the performance. We build walk-in showers on bonded membrane and pre-sloped pan systems with real ratings and Florida distribution, and we register the system warranty on your behalf. The glass and fixtures are chosen for humidity and accessibility.
- Schluter KERDI pan & membrane
- Wedi curbless shower systems
- Laticrete HYDRO BAN & linear drains
- Infinity Drain / QuickDrain linear drains
- Daltile / MSI slip-rated porcelain
- DreamLine frameless shower glass
- Moen / Delta handheld & valve trim
- Panasonic / Broan humidistat exhaust fans
Can Your Bathroom Take a Curbless Shower?
Not every Florida bathroom can go fully curbless without slab work, and that is fine — we assess it during the visit. On slab-on-grade homes, a curbless pan usually means recessing the slab or building up the surrounding floor; where that is impractical, a low-threshold design gives nearly the same easy entry with less structural work.
We measure the space, check the slab and drain location, and recommend curbless or low-threshold based on what your bathroom and budget actually support — then fold any slab prep into the same crew and schedule. Tub-to-Shower Conversion Estimate →
Florida Building Code, HVHZ, and Permits for Walk-In Showers
A walk-in shower install in Florida generally requires a permit, because it touches plumbing (the drain), the wet-area assembly, and often the slab — all governed by the Florida Building Code, which sets the slope-to-drain and waterproofing requirements. If your shower includes a glass enclosure in a coastal High-Velocity Hurricane Zone, that glazing carries product-approval requirements as well.
We tell you during the estimate exactly which permits and inspections apply, pull them, and detail the slope, drain, and membrane to code so the shower performs and the waterproofing warranty holds.
Our 6-Step Walk-In Shower Process
Every Pro Work walk-in shower follows the same six-step framework — built for a barrier-free, fully waterproofed, warranty-valid result on a Florida slab.
- Free in-home consultation. We measure, check the slab and drain location, and recommend curbless or low-threshold. You see tile, drain, glass, and accessibility options. No commitment.
- Written estimate. Line-item breakdown — slab prep, pan, waterproofing, tile, glass, fixtures, and timeline — delivered after the visit so you see exactly what you are paying for.
- Slab prep & pan build. Recess the slab or build up the floor, then form the pre-sloped pan on a planned pitch to the linear or center drain.
- Waterproofing & flood test. Bonded membrane across the pan and walls, then a flood test to confirm the pan is watertight before any tile goes down.
- Tile, glass & fixtures. Slip-rated floor tile, wall tile, the bench and niche, grab-bar blocking, frameless glass, and the valve and handheld trim. Daily cleanup, single point of contact.
- Final walkthrough & warranty registration. We register the waterproofing-system warranty on your behalf and activate the Pro Work 5-year workmanship guarantee.
Skip the Prefab Insert Gamble
Fast reply. Engineered slope and drain. Fully waterproofed. A tiled walk-in shower built to last, the first time.
How to Identify a Qualified Florida Walk-In Shower Installer
The tile matters less than the pan beneath it. A curbless shower over a flat or under-waterproofed pan will flood the bathroom. Verify all of the following before signing anything:
- Engineered slope and drain plan
- A qualified installer plans the recess, slope, and drain location before tiling. If the scope does not address how a curbless pan keeps water in, the shower will leak onto the bathroom floor.
- Bonded membrane and a flood test
- The pan and walls must get a bonded membrane, and the pan should be flood-tested before tile. Skipping the test means a hidden pan leak is discovered only after the tile is set.
- Slip-rated tile in the wet zone
- An aging-in-place shower needs slip-resistant floor tile (DCOF ≥ 0.42). A glossy floor tile in a barrier-free shower is a safety hazard, especially for the older Floridians these showers serve.
- Grab-bar blocking built into the walls
- Accessible grab bars need solid in-wall blocking installed during framing. Bars screwed into tile or drywall later will not hold weight. Confirm blocking is in the scope.
- Written line-item estimate after a site visit
- A reputable installer measures, checks the slab and drain, and itemizes pan, waterproofing, tile, glass, and labor. A phone quote with no slab inspection is a red flag.
- Insurance and a workmanship guarantee
- Liability and workers' comp insurance plus a written workmanship guarantee protect you if anything installed needs attention. Documentation should be available on request.
Florida Walk-In Shower Case Study
Our 4-Layer Warranty
Every Pro Work walk-in shower is backed by four layers of coverage:
- Manufacturer warranty
- Full coverage on the waterproofing system, pan, tile, glass, and fixtures, registered on your behalf. Waterproofing-system warranties hold only with certified installation — which is what we provide.
- Pro Work workmanship guarantee
- 5 years on installation labor. If a tile, seam, drain, or waterproofing detail we installed needs attention within the guarantee period, we return at no cost.
- Florida Building Code compliance
- Slope-to-drain, wet-area waterproofing, and the assembly built to FBC requirements, with HVHZ product-approved glass where coastal South Florida requires it.
- Flood-tested pan
- Every shower pan is flood-tested before tile to confirm it is watertight — the step that prevents a hidden pan leak from surfacing after the shower is finished.
Why Florida Homeowners Choose Pro Work for Walk-In Showers
Most crews tile a shower; we engineer one. The same crew that designs your barrier-free entry also recesses the slab, slopes the pan, waterproofs it, and flood-tests it — so the open, easy-entry shower you paid for keeps water exactly where it belongs.
- Engineered for curbless. Slab recess, planned slope, and a linear drain so a barrier-free shower actually contains water.
- Florida-grade waterproofing every job. A bonded, flood-tested pan — the step that separates a lasting walk-in from a leaking one.
- Built for aging-in-place. Barrier-free entry, a bench, grab-bar blocking, and slip-rated tile designed in from the start.
- Free in-home estimate. On-site measurement, slab and drain check, line-item breakdown, no high-pressure sales tactic.
- One crew, slab to glass. Slab prep, pan, waterproofing, tile, and glass under one schedule — no bouncing between contractors.
- 5-year workmanship guarantee. If something we installed needs attention, we come back.
Related Bathroom Work We Coordinate
A walk-in shower often anchors a larger bathroom update. We hold it all under one crew so the room comes together waterproofed, accessible, and finished:
- Tub-to-Shower Conversion — removing an unused tub and building the walk-in in its footprint.
- Accessible Bathroom Remodel — full aging-in-place detailing around the new shower.
- Shower Door Installation — frameless glass panels and enclosures sealed for humidity.
- Shower Tile Installation — slip-rated tile set over the bonded membrane with proper movement joints.