Installing a New Bathtub

Installing a New Bathtub: A Step-by-Step Guide

Installing a new bathtub can be straightforward-or it can turn into a slow leak nightmare if the tub isn’t supported, leveled, and sealed correctly. In this guide, you’ll learn how to install a new bathtub the professional way, including how to handle common real-world problems like uneven subfloors, misaligned drains, out-of-square walls, and different tub materials.

You’ll also see the “why” behind each step, so you don’t just install a tub-you Install Bathtub Right.

Safety + Reality Check (Before You Start)

A bathtub installation touches multiple systems: structure, waterproofing, drainage, and sometimes the supply lines. If you’re not comfortable with any of these, you can still do most of the work and hire a plumber for final tie-ins.

Shutoffs & power:

  • Shut off water to the bathroom (or home) if you’re changing valves or supplies.
  • Turn off power to any nearby outlets if you’ll be opening walls and working near wiring.

Weight warning: Cast iron tubs are extremely heavy. Acrylic/fiberglass is lighter but still awkward. Always plan for safe lifting.

Tools + Materials (Choose What Applies)

Common tools

Materials (varies by tub type)

  • New tub (alcove, drop-in, freestanding)
  • Waste & overflow kit (matched to tub depth and drain location)
  • Tub drain (toe-touch, lift-and-turn, etc.)
  • Silicone (100% silicone for wet areas)
  • Plumber’s putty (only where allowed-some tub finishes require silicone instead)
  • Construction adhesive (some installs)
  • Mortar bed or foam support (acrylic/fiberglass often needs support)
  • Cement board + waterproofing system (if walls are open/remodeling)
  • New P-trap/pipe fittings as needed
  • Access panel material (for freestanding or pump tubs, if required)

Step 1: Confirm You Bought the Correct Tub (Don’t Skip)

Before you demo anything, confirm these match your space:

  1. Tub type
    • Alcove: 3 walls, most common.
    • Drop-in: sits in a framed deck.
    • Freestanding: stands alone; often requires floor access and special drain routing.
  2. Rough dimensions
    • Standard alcove tubs are often 60″ long, but widths and depths vary.
    • Measure your existing opening: stud-to-stud, not just finished wall to finished wall.
  3. Drain location
    • Left-hand drain vs right-hand drain matters.
    • If your new tub drain is on the opposite side, you may need significant plumbing changes.
  4. Integral flange vs no flange
    • Many alcove tubs have a tile flange that the wallboard overlaps.
    • If your tub has no flange, you’ll need a flange kit or a different waterproofing approach.

If anything is mismatched now, this is the best time to exchange the tub-before walls are open and plumbing is cut.

Step 2: Plan Your Installation Style (Three Common Paths)

Pick the path that matches your project:

Path A: “Replace tub, keep walls mostly intact”

  • Best when tile/surround can be removed cleanly and replaced.
  • Risk: you may discover hidden rot behind walls.

Path B: “Full remodel” (best long-term result)

  • Open walls, redo waterproofing, set tub properly, then rebuild.
  • Most reliable.

Path C: “Tub only, plumbing adjustments”

  • Works only if plumbing and walls align perfectly and subfloor is solid.
  • Least forgiving.

Step 3: Remove the Old Tub (Demo Without Creating More Work)

3A) Remove the tub surround/wall finish

  • Remove trim, caulk lines, and any panels.
  • If tiled: cut drywall/cement board above the tub (often 8–12″ or more) to access the flange and plumbing.
  • If a fiberglass surround: remove fasteners and gently pry.

Goal: Expose the tub flange and fasteners without destroying framing unnecessarily.

3B) Disconnect the drain and overflow

  • Locate the overflow faceplate and drain.
  • Place a bucket under the trap area if accessible.
  • Remove the overflow cover and the linkage (if present).
  • Remove the tub drain using a drain wrench/key.

Common scenario: You can’t access the plumbing from below.

  • You’ll typically need to open a wall behind the tub (often the back wall) to reach the waste/overflow and trap.

3C) Remove any tub fasteners

  • Alcove tubs are often screwed or nailed through the flange into studs.
  • Remove all of them.

3D) Pull the tub

  • Slide the tub straight out if possible.
  • Some tubs must be lifted slightly to clear flooring or nails.
  • For cast iron: many pros break them out with controlled methods-but that’s risky. Safer is manpower and careful removal.

Step 4: Inspect and Repair the Subfloor and Framing (The Step That Prevents Failure)

With the tub out, inspect everything:

Look for:

  • Soft or dark subfloor areas (water damage)
  • Mold/mildew, rotted studs, damaged plates
  • Loose flooring layers
  • Previous “patch” plumbing work

Fix it now:

  • Replace rotted subfloor sections.
  • Add blocking between studs where the tub flange will land.
  • Ensure studs are plumb-ish; at minimum they must allow the tub to sit tight and the wall to finish flat.

Pro tip: A tub installation is only as good as the structure under it. If the subfloor flexes, grout and caulk fail.

Step 5: Check the Rough Plumbing (Drain, Trap, Vent Reality)

Confirm:

  • P-trap location lines up with new tub drain.
  • Trap size and piping type are correct for your system.
  • Venting is present and functional (slow drains and gurgling are clues).

If the drain doesn’t line up:

  • You may need to move the trap arm or re-route the drain.
  • Avoid forcing the tub shoe to “reach” the drain-this creates stress and leaks later.

If you see an S-trap or weird configuration:

  • Correct it now. Improper trapping causes siphoning, sewer odor, and slow drainage.

Step 6: Dry-Fit the Tub (The Most Important “Practice Run”)

Before mortar, before final plumbing, do a dry fit.

6A) Set the tub in the opening

  • Slide it into place.
  • Confirm it contacts the studs and sits where it should.

6B) Check level in two directions

  • Level left-to-right across the front.
  • Level front-to-back along the rim.

If it’s not level:

  • Minor adjustments: composite shims under the tub’s support points.
  • Major issues: fix the subfloor or add a leveled ledger/support.

6C) Mark reference lines

  • Mark the tub top edge height on studs.
  • Mark flange position.
  • These marks help you install ledgers and fasteners precisely.

Step 7: Install Ledger Support (Most Alcove Tubs Need This)

Many alcove tubs require a ledger board on the back wall (and sometimes ends) to support the rim.

How:

  1. Measure from the tub underside of the rim to the floor.
  2. Transfer that height to the studs.
  3. Install a straight, level ledger (commonly 1×3 or 2×4 depending on tub specs).
  4. Fasten securely into studs.

Why it matters: The ledger prevents rim sag and keeps the tub rigid and quiet.

Step 8: Decide on a Support Bed (Mortar vs No Mortar)

This depends on tub material:

Acrylic/Fiberglass (common)

  • Often recommended to set in mortar for support and noise reduction.
  • Without support, tubs can flex, squeak, and crack around the drain.

Cast Iron

  • Usually does not require mortar because it’s rigid and heavy.
  • Still needs a flat, solid floor.

Steel/Enamel

  • May benefit from extra support depending on manufacturer.

Always follow the tub manufacturer instructions-they override general advice.

Step 9: Install the Waste & Overflow on the Tub (Easier Before Final Set)

Most installs go smoother if you attach the waste/overflow to the tub before final placement-unless access is limited.

Steps:

  1. Install the drain flange into the tub drain opening
    • Use plumber’s putty or silicone based on finish/manufacturer guidance.
  2. Install the tub shoe and gasket from below.
  3. Install the overflow elbow and gasket.
  4. Connect the tee between overflow and shoe.
  5. Tighten carefully-snug, not “gorilla tight.”

Common leak scenario: Gaskets installed backwards or mis-seated.

  • Rubber gaskets usually taper; orientation matters.
  • Tighten evenly and re-check alignment.

Step 10: Final Set the Tub (Mortar Method Detailed)

If using mortar:

  1. Lay plastic sheeting or roofing felt on the floor where mortar will go (optional but helpful).
  2. Mix mortar to a thick, workable consistency (not watery).
  3. Place mortar piles or a continuous bed where the tub base will land.
  4. Lower the tub into place carefully.
  5. Press down until the tub rim meets the ledger and the tub sits firm.
  6. Re-check level immediately.

Important: Don’t let mortar push the tub up out of level. Adjust before it cures.

If not using mortar:

  • Set tub on its designed support points.
  • Shim only where manufacturer allows (typically under feet/support rails).

Step 11: Secure the Tub to the Studs (Flange Fastening Done Right)

For alcove tubs with a flange:

  • Fasten the flange to studs using approved fasteners (often roofing nails or screws with washers).
  • Do not overdrive and crack the flange.
  • Fasteners should be snug and consistent.

Common mistake: Screwing through the tub deck instead of the flange.
That can ruin the tub and compromise waterproofing.

Step 12: Connect the Drain to the Trap (And Make It Serviceable)

Now connect the tub drain assembly to the existing drain/trap.

Best practice goals:

  • No stress on the tub shoe
  • Proper slope on horizontal runs
  • Access for future repair when possible

If you’re using slip joints:

  • Ensure washers face the correct direction.
  • Hand-tighten, then snug slightly-don’t strip.

If you’re solvent-welding PVC/ABS:

  • Dry-fit first.
  • Prime/cement (PVC) as required.
  • Align quickly-solvent sets fast.

Step 13: Leak Test Like a Pro (Two Tests, Not One)

Test 1: Drain-only test

  • Run water and watch every joint.
  • Check below/behind (access panel, open wall, or ceiling below).

Test 2: Standing water test

  1. Close the drain.
  2. Fill tub to overflow level.
  3. Let it sit 10–15 minutes.
  4. Inspect every connection.
  5. Then pull the drain and watch the system under full flow.

If any leak appears:

  • Stop, drain, dry everything, and re-seat gaskets or re-do the sealing method.
  • Never “hope it stops later.” It won’t.

Step 14: Waterproof the Walls and Tub Flange (Where Installations Win or Fail)

If walls are open or you’re redoing finishes:

The correct concept:

Waterproofing must route water into the tub, not behind it.

Common methods:

  • Cement board + waterproof membrane
  • Waterproof backer board systems
  • Surround kits with proper flange overlap

Key rule: Wallboard should overlap the flange correctly (or use manufacturer-approved furring/shimming to prevent the board from bowing).

Step 15: Finish the Surround and Seal the Tub Edge Correctly

After walls/tiles/surround are installed:

  • Leave a small gap at the tub-to-wall transition (as required by your finish system).
  • Use 100% silicone at tub-to-wall joints in wet areas.

Pro move: Fill the tub halfway with water before final caulking.
This loads the tub slightly so the silicone cures under “real use” conditions, reducing future cracking.

Troubleshooting: Common Problems and Fixes

Tub won’t sit flat

  • Subfloor uneven → level/patch subfloor
  • Ledger too high/low → reset ledger to correct height
  • Mortar bed too thick → remove and re-set before cure

Drain doesn’t align

  • Wrong drain-side tub → confirm you didn’t buy left vs right drain
  • Trap location off → re-route trap arm properly (don’t force alignment)

Slow drain or gurgle

  • Venting issue or partial blockage → clear line and verify vent connection

Squeaks or flex

  • Acrylic/fiberglass not supported → add mortar/approved support method

Repeated caulk failure

  • Movement from poor support or framing flex → correct structural support first, then re-caulk

Final Checklist (Use This Before Closing Walls)

  • Tub is level in both directions
  • Rim is fully supported (ledger where required)
  • Base is fully supported (mortar/support method where required)
  • Flange fastened correctly without cracks
  • Waste/overflow gaskets seated correctly
  • Drain connection is stress-free and aligned
  • Leak test passed (standing + flowing)
  • Waterproofing routes water into the tub
  • Silicone sealed after finish work