Bathroom mirror rough estimate

Replace Bathroom Mirror Estimate

Estimate mirror size, mounting hardware, removal risk, wall repair allowance, rough material cost, and DIY time.

Planning layer later

Start with a rough estimate

This free tool gives rough cost, material, handling, wall repair, and pro-warning decision help. Full planning features are planned later.

Rough estimate only

This tool is for bathroom mirror replacement. It does not include medicine cabinets, electrical work, tile work, countertop work, or professional labor.

Bathroom mirror inputs

Estimate one bathroom mirror replacement, including mounting hardware, removal risk, wall repair allowance, and DIY time.

Saved project beta

Save this estimate

Save this rough estimate to a DIY project area so you can come back to it later.

We will also email the saved project link. Keep the link shown after saving as a backup.

DIY planning notes

Replace Bathroom Mirror planning guide

Use this quick guide with your rough bathroom mirror estimate to think through mirror size and weight, mounting type, old mirror removal, glued mirror risk, wall patching, helper needs, and glass safety.

What affects this estimate

  • Mirror size, weight, and whether a helper is needed
  • Clip, bracket, framed, or adhesive mounting type
  • Old mirror removal and broken glass risk
  • Wall patching, anchor condition, and nearby electrical fixtures

Basic materials/tools

Materials

  • Replacement bathroom mirror
  • Mirror clips, brackets, anchors, or mounting hardware
  • Patch and touch-up supplies for old holes or wall marks

Tools

  • Tape measure and level
  • Drill or driver with suitable anchors
  • Gloves, eye protection, and helper support for larger mirrors

Before you start

  1. 1Check the mirror size, weight, and whether one person can handle it safely.
  2. 2Confirm the mounting type before assuming the old hardware can be reused.
  3. 3Decide whether glued glass, broken edges, or wall damage make removal a pro-level risk.

Watch out for

  • Trying to remove a glued mirror without accounting for glass breakage and wall damage.
  • Using anchors that are not rated for the mirror weight.
  • Skipping a helper for large, heavy, or awkward mirrors.