In this guide, I’ll walk you through planning, safety, the different ways to take out steel, acrylic, and cast‑iron tubs, what to check in the walls and under the floor, and how to prep the space for a new shower system.
Start with a Plan (and a Tape Measure)
Before any demolition, make a quick plan:
- Decide what’s replacing the tub. A shower pan? A tiled receptor? A one‑piece unit? Each has a specific drain location. Tubs typically drain at one end; many showers center the drain. That difference decides how much plumbing you’ll move.
- Know your tub type.
- Acrylic/Fiberglass tubs are the lightest and usually cuttable with a reciprocating saw.
- Steel tubs are heavier and require metal‑cutting blades or a grinder.
- Cast iron is the tank of the tub world—beautiful, durable, and heavy. You’ll either cut it with a diamond blade or break it into pieces with a sledge.
- Confirm clearances. Measure doorways and hallways. If you’re pulling a tub out in one piece, you need a path. If not, plan to cut it into sections.
- Check codes and permits. In many areas, switching a tub to a shower means upsizing to a 2‑inch drain and trap, and you may need a permit and inspection. Plan for that now rather than after the floor is open.
- Assess for hazards. In homes built before 1978, tile mastic or wall textures can contain asbestos, and paints can contain lead. If you suspect either, bring in a pro for testing before you disturb those surfaces.
Tools and Materials Checklist
Having the right tools on hand makes this smoother and safer.
Safety: heavy gloves, safety glasses, hearing protection, respirator/dust mask, long sleeves, knee pads.
Protection & Prep: drop cloths, plastic sheeting, painter’s tape, cardboard/plywood for floor protection, shop vacuum, magnet-on-a-stick for metal shards.
Demo & Cutting: utility knife, pry bars, flat bar, hammer, cold chisel, reciprocating saw with demolition and metal blades, angle grinder with diamond/metal wheels, sledgehammer (8–10 lb), oscillating multi‑tool, screwdrivers, socket set.
Plumbing: adjustable wrenches, tongue‑and‑groove pliers, pipe wrench, drain removal tool (or pliers for crossbars), test plug or mechanical plug for the toilet flange, new supply line(s), caps for temporary shut‑offs, PEX/copper tools if you’re rerouting lines.
Masonry (if on slab): rotary hammer with chisel, wheelbarrow/buckets.
Shut Down Water and Clear the Work Area
1) Turn Off the Water
Locate the main shut‑off and close it. Open a sink at a lower level to depressurize the lines. If you have individual stops for the tub, close those as well.
Pro move: Plan on replacing old flexible supplies and cheap push‑to‑connect stops while you’re in here. Quarter‑turn angle stops with braided stainless supplies are inexpensive upgrades that pay off in reliability.
2) Remove Fixtures and Trim
Take off the showerhead, tub spout (many tub spouts are set‑screw types or thread-on), valve trim, and the overflow cover. Set hardware aside in labeled bags so you can find screws during reassembly or for reference when you install the new shower system.
3) Remove the Toilet (If Space Is Tight)
In a lot of bathrooms, pulling the toilet first gives you elbow room to work the tub out. Shut off the toilet supply, flush and sponge out the tank and bowl, disconnect the supply line, and lift the toilet onto a towel or cardboard.
- Cap or plug the flange. Use a mechanical test plug or at least a tightly stuffed towel to block sewer gas. Don’t leave the flange open while you work; it’s both a smell and a health issue.
- Inspect the flange. If the back edge is sunk below the finished floor or looks like it’s been leaking, note it—you’ll fix that during the rebuild.
Open the Walls: Tile and Backer Removal
The tub’s top edge (the “flange”) sits behind the wall finish. To free it, remove at least 2–3 rows of tile around the tub and the wall backer (drywall or cement board). If you’re converting to a shower with new waterproofing, go higher—often to the showerhead height or the full wall—so you have a clean substrate to rebuild.
- Score the caulk line at the tub and at the tile edges with a utility knife.
- Pop off tile with a putty knife or flat bar; don’t try to save the tile you plan to replace—it’s usually faster to work decisively.
- Cut out the backer. Use an oscillating tool to cut the panel seams. Remove screws/nails. You’ll expose studs, any ledger board the tub rests on, and the tub flange.
Tip: Cover the tub surface with cardboard while you work to prevent flying shards from scuffing or ricocheting.
Disconnect the Drain and Overflow
Inside the tub, remove the drain. Most tub drains have crossbars down in the drain body—use a drain removal tool or angle pliers to unscrew it counterclockwise. Remove the overflow cover and pull the stopper linkage if present. Under the tub (or from an access panel), loosen the slip nuts or cut the waste-and-overflow assembly if you’re replacing it.
Investigate the trap. Confirm there’s a P‑trap beneath the tub and that it’s connected. A disconnected drain would have been dumping water under the floor—bad news for framing and foundations. Make a note of pipe size; you’ll likely upgrade to a 2‑inch trap for the new shower.
Free the Tub from the Framing
- Remove fasteners. Look for screws or nails through the tub flange into studs. Cut them with an oscillating tool or back them out.
- Check the front apron. Some tubs are set in a mortar bed; some have clips. If it doesn’t budge, you haven’t found all the fasteners yet.
At this point, you’ll choose your removal method based on tub type.
Removal Method 1: Acrylic or Fiberglass
These can often come out in one piece if the path is clear. If not:
- Cut the apron vertically with a reciprocating saw.
- Cut the deck into manageable sections.
- Pry and peel sections away from the wall, avoiding stud damage.
This is the cleanest, least dusty method. Wear a respirator; fiberglass dust is nasty on lungs and skin.
Removal Method 2: Steel
Steel tubs are thin metal with a porcelain coating. They’re stubborn but lighter than cast iron.
- Score the corners with an angle grinder or metal blade.
- Cut a “V” or centerline from the front edge toward the back, stopping before you nick the back wall.
- Bend and fold the halves inward with a flat bar to pop it free.
- Watch for sharp edges. Wrap cut edges in duct tape to save your hands and clothes.
Removal Method 3: Cast Iron
Cast iron is heavy—often 200 pounds or more—and removal is either cut or break.
Option A: Cut into Halves
Use an angle grinder with a diamond wheel. Mark a centerline and cut a “V” groove along the deck. Cutting cast iron creates black dust and sparks; full PPE is non‑negotiable. Score deep enough to weaken the tub, then pry to separate. Lift out one half at a time with a helper.
Option B: Controlled Break
Lay moving blankets over the tub and wear full protective gear. Use a sledgehammer to break the tub starting in the center, working outward. Keep pieces small enough to carry safely. The blanket controls shards; a magnet helps collect slivers. Clear debris frequently so you don’t slip.
Which is faster? Time tends to be a wash. Cutting is tidier but dusty; breaking is loud with shrapnel risk. Choose the method that best fits your space and comfort.
Handling and Disposal
- Protect the floors. Slide pieces out on plywood or a dolly.
- Recycle when possible. Scrap yards often take cast iron and steel. Acrylic/fiberglass usually goes to construction debris disposal.
- Sweep and vacuum thoroughly. Metal specks and tile chips hide everywhere.
What You’ll Find Under the Tub (and What to Do About It)
This is where good removal pays off—you get to fix what’s been hidden for years.
1) The Drain and Trap
- Disconnected or loose? Rebuild it. For a shower, plan on a 2‑inch trap and riser.
- Wrong location? Mark your new drain centerline now. Showers need the trap directly under the drain to avoid S‑traps or long, unvented runs.
2) Venting and Slope
- Keep ¼ inch per foot fall on horizontal drain lines.
- Ensure your trap arm is properly vented per code—often within a few feet of the trap. If you’re moving the drain significantly, you may need to adjust the vent tie‑in.
3) Subfloor or Slab
- Wood subfloor: Repair any rot. Replace sections that are soft, dark, or punky. Add blocking as needed to support the new pan or mud bed.
- Concrete slab: If you’re relocating the drain, you’ll bust concrete—usually a neat trench from the tub end to the new shower center. After rerouting, compact the soil, backfill with sand or fine gravel, and patch with concrete. Keep the riser plumb and at the right height for your drain body.
4) Studs and Framing
- Plumb and straighten. Shim or plane to create a flat, vertical plane for wall board.
- Add blocking. Install horizontal blocking for future shower door hinges, grab bars, and the shower pan flange or sheet membrane termination. You’ll thank yourself later.
Preparing Rough Plumbing for the New Shower
Water Lines
- Remove the old tub valve and stub‑outs. Tubs often have a diverter spout and a lower rough‑in height. Showers want the mixing valve higher, with the shower arm about 78–80 inches off the finished floor (adjust for user height).
- Choose your valve. Pressure‑balancing or thermostatic. If you’re adding a rain‑style head, plan for adequate flow and possibly a separate control/diverter.
- Use quality fittings. Whether copper or PEX, avoid burying sketchy push‑to‑connect fittings in walls. If you must, follow manufacturer guidelines and local code.
Drain and Pan
- Set the drain location precisely. Shower receptors and linear drains have little tolerance for “close enough.”
- Pick your system:
- Pre‑formed receptor: Fastest. Set it in a bed of mortar per instructions so it’s fully supported and doesn’t flex.
- Tiled pan: Use a proven waterproofing system (sheet membrane or liquid applied) with proper pre‑slope, clamping drain (or bonded flange drain), and weep hole protection.
Don’t shortcut waterproofing. The wall board in the wet zone should be cement board or foam backer—not regular drywall. If using cement board, add a surface‑applied membrane or a behind‑the‑board vapor barrier (not both).
Wall Rebuild and Waterproofing Sequence (High‑Level)
- Install the pan or build your mud bed with a pre‑slope where required.
- Set the drain body and test for leaks.
- Hang backer board with corrosion‑resistant screws; leave gaps where specified by the system.
- Tape seams with alkali‑resistant mesh and thinset (cement board), or use proprietary seam tapes for foam boards.
- Apply waterproofing (if using liquid) or install sheet membrane per manufacturer instructions—inside corners, niches, and penetrations are common failure points.
- Flood test the pan if your jurisdiction requires it (many do).
- Tile and grout, then seal as recommended.
- Install trim, set glass, and reinstall the toilet with a new wax (or wax‑free) ring and solidly anchored flange at finished floor height.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Skipping PPE. Cutting or breaking cast iron coats your lungs and shops in fine black dust. Wear a respirator, eye and ear protection, and gloves.
- Not blocking the toilet flange. Sewer gas is no joke—plug it immediately after removing the toilet.
- Leaving the trap too far from the drain. A shower drain should drop straight into a P‑trap. Long offset “S” bends, gurgles, smell, and fail inspection.
- Using a greenboard in the shower. It’s not a waterproof system. Use a cement board or a foam backer with a proper membrane.
- Forgetting slope. Shower floors must slope consistently to the drain—no bird baths.
- Relying on caulk for waterproofing. Caulk is the last line of defense at plane changes of plane, not the waterproofing system.
- Half‑repairs. If you uncover a loose drain, rotten subfloor, or a hacked vent, fix it right now—future you (and your foundation) will be grateful.
Pro Tips from the Field
- Two‑person rule for cast iron. Even in halves, cast‑iron sections are awkward. Use lifting straps or a dolly and communicate every move.
- Control dust at the source. Have a helper hold a shop vac near the grinder blade. It won’t catch everything, but it helps.
- Protect finishes. Lay down sheets of plywood over floors and threshold transitions; tubs and debris chew up flooring fast.
- Label everything. When you remove trim, screws, and small parts, bag and label by wall (“north,” “valve wall,” etc.). This avoids fasteners migrating into the ether.
- Think ahead for glass. Add solid blocking where shower door hinges or panels will mount—even if you haven’t chosen the door yet.
- Upgrade while you’re open. Now’s the time to add a niche, upgrade the exhaust fan, or run a dedicated GFCI circuit if your local code requires one near the shower lighting.
Step‑by‑Step Summary
- Plan: choose your new shower, verify drain location, pull permits if required.
- Protect: shut off water, cover floors, isolate the workspace.
- Clear area: remove toilet (plug flange) and fixtures.
- Open walls: remove tile and backer 2–3 rows (often more for shower height).
- Disconnect drain/overflow and verify a P‑trap exists.
- Free the tub: remove fasteners and ledger support as needed.
- Remove the tub: cut or break into manageable sections based on material.
- Inspect and repair: drain, trap, vent, subfloor/slab, studs; plan for a 2‑inch drain for the shower.
- Rough‑in water and drain at proper heights and locations.
- Rebuild walls and waterproof, flood test if required.
- Tile or set the receptor, install trim, reinstall the toilet, and finish.
When to Call a Pro
If you find structural rot, suspect asbestos or lead, need to relocate drains through a slab, or you’re unsure about venting and code compliance, bring in a licensed plumber or qualified contractor for those pieces. You can still handle the demo and save money while ensuring the critical parts are done right.
Conclusion
Removing a tub isn’t just demolition; it’s detective work, planning, and careful execution. You learned how to remove a bathtub safely, identify your tub type, open the walls without wrecking the framing, choose the right removal method for steel, acrylic, or cast iron, and correct the hidden problems that often show up—like loose drains, missing traps, or water‑damaged framing. With solid prep, proper protection, and a clear plan for the new shower’s drain and water lines, you can turn a cramped alcove into a comfortable, modern walk‑in without surprises. Take your time, protect yourself and your home, fix what you uncover, and the next phase—building the new shower—will go smoothly.