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Bathroom vanity replacement planning guide

How to plan a bathroom vanity replacement: size, plumbing, countertop, paint, flooring, and fixture coordination in Lexington, KY.

April 1, 2026 6 min read | Bluegrass Finish | Updated April 1, 2026
Painter rolling paint on an interior wall.

Replacing a bathroom vanity sounds simple until the new piece arrives and the room details do not line up. The best vanity replacements are not just “old cabinet out, new cabinet in.” They are measured around plumbing, wall condition, countertop overhangs, mirror height, lighting, and the finish lines left behind when the old unit comes out.

This guide covers the planning details that make a vanity replacement look intentional instead of improvised.

Quick takeaways

  • Measure the room and the old vanity carefully. Width, depth, plumbing locations, and door swing matter more than the catalog photo.
  • Like-for-like is the easiest path. The estimate usually changes when the new vanity changes sink position, countertop depth, storage style, or the visible footprint.
  • Wall, floor, and trim cleanup are part of the job. Paint lines, flooring patch needs, and base or shoe details often show up after removal.
  • Mirror, light, faucet, and hardware choices should be planned at the same time. Those decisions affect spacing and the final look.

1. Start with fit, not style

A vanity can look perfect online and still be wrong for the room.

Measure:

  • overall width
  • cabinet depth
  • countertop overhang
  • sink centerline
  • distance to toilet, tub, shower, or doorway
  • wall space for mirror and lighting above

If the room is tight, even a small depth increase can change how the bathroom feels. If the vanity is going into an alcove, wall conditions matter too because out-of-square walls can create visible gaps.

2. Plumbing location is one of the first constraints

Plumbing decides a lot more than people expect.

Check:

  • whether the drain is centered where the new sink wants it
  • whether shutoffs are accessible once the vanity is installed
  • whether the new drawers or shelves conflict with plumbing
  • whether the faucet holes match the sink and top you selected

A like-for-like swap is usually simpler because the plumbing can often stay close to where it is. The more the new vanity changes the sink position or cabinet interior, the more coordination the install needs.

3. Countertop, sink, and faucet choices affect the whole assembly

Think of the vanity as a system, not just a cabinet.

Questions to answer before ordering:

  • Is the top included or separate?
  • Does the sink come pre-installed or does it need to be cut in?
  • Are you using a widespread faucet, centerset, or single-hole faucet?
  • Is there a backsplash piece, side splash, or none?
  • Does the countertop material need special handling?

The finished look depends on all of those pieces working together. If you are changing mirror, light, or faucet finish too, decide that early so the room reads as one coordinated update.

4. Plan for the wall and floor details the old vanity may hide

Old vanities often cover finish issues that only show up once they are removed.

Common examples:

  • missing paint behind the old mirror or backsplash
  • flooring that stops short under the vanity
  • caulk buildup or water staining at the wall line
  • damaged drywall around the old top or side splash
  • base trim that needs to be patched or reset

This is one reason a vanity replacement can be quick in one bathroom and more involved in another. The visible finish around the new piece matters just as much as the cabinet installation itself.

Helpful related guide: Bathroom remodel cost drivers in Lexington, KY.

5. Storage and door swing matter in daily use

A vanity should fit the room and the way you use the room.

Ask:

  • Do you need drawers more than open cabinet space?
  • Will doors clear the toilet or shower glass?
  • Do you want one sink or two?
  • Is a floating vanity or furniture-style vanity realistic for the room?
  • Will the top and sink height feel comfortable?

The right answer is not always the biggest vanity that fits the wall. Sometimes a slightly smaller vanity improves the walkway, the mirror spacing, and the overall balance of the room.

6. Mirror, light, and hardware should be planned together

Vanity updates feel unfinished when the upper half of the wall is an afterthought.

Coordinate:

  • mirror width vs. vanity width
  • light fixture width and placement
  • faucet finish vs. cabinet hardware finish
  • towel bars, hooks, and accessories
  • paint touch-up or full repaint around the new layout

If the old mirror or light leaves scars, mismatched holes, or paint lines, build that into the plan from the start.

7. Vanity replacement is often part of a larger bathroom sequence

Even if the vanity is the main change, think about the surrounding sequence:

  • wall repairs before paint
  • flooring patches before final trim
  • vanity set before faucet trim and mirror placement
  • caulk and touch-ups after everything is aligned

If the room also needs flooring, paint, tile, or fixture work, it is better to describe the full bathroom scope up front instead of treating each item like an unrelated mini project.

Helpful companion page: Bathroom updates.

8. What to send for a faster vanity quote

Usually this is enough:

  • one wide photo of the whole vanity wall
  • one straight-on photo of the vanity itself
  • one close-up of the plumbing area if visible
  • rough width of the vanity space
  • product links for vanity, top, sink, faucet, mirror, and light if selected
  • notes about anything else changing in the room

If you have not selected the vanity yet, photos and the rough width still help.

FAQs

Can you replace just the vanity and leave the rest of the bathroom alone?

Often, yes. But the cleaner question is whether wall, floor, trim, mirror, or light details also need to be addressed so the finished room still looks intentional.

Does a vanity replacement always require plumbing changes?

Not always. A like-for-like swap is usually the easiest. Plumbing adjustments become more likely when sink position, cabinet design, or faucet setup changes.

What slows down vanity projects the most?

Fit issues, wall repair after removal, flooring gaps, missing product details, and discovering that the mirror, light, or plumbing setup no longer works with the new vanity.

What if I am not sure what size vanity fits best?

Start with room photos and the wall width. That is usually enough to narrow the practical range before ordering.

Next steps

If the vanity is part of a broader bathroom refresh, review Bathroom updates first.

If you want to compare the bigger estimate drivers before selecting products, read Bathroom remodel cost drivers in Lexington, KY.

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