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ADU and Garage Conversion Plumbing Costs for Nashville Investors

ADU and garage conversion plumbing lives or dies on sewer route, slab work, and permit sequencing. The fixture package is the easy part.

Plumbing rough-in for a Nashville garage conversion bathroom and kitchenette before concrete patching
ADUs and garage conversions can be strong Nashville investor plays, but plumbing can make or break the pro forma. The expensive part is not the toilet or the faucet. It is getting water, sewer, venting, and sometimes gas to the new living space legally and cleanly.

Metro Nashville's rules for detached accessory dwelling units, zoning, building permits, and inspections require planning before trenching. Davidson County investors also need to think about Metro Nashville Water Services reviews, sewer capacity, stormwater impacts, and whether the existing lateral can handle the added load.

The plumbing plan should be built before architectural drawings are finalized.

The Three Plumbing Questions

Every ADU or garage conversion starts with three questions:

1. Where is the nearest usable sewer connection? 2. Can we route water supply without destroying finished space? 3. Does the layout allow proper venting and code-compliant fixture placement?

If the answer to any of these is unclear, your budget is not real yet.

2026 Nashville ADU Plumbing Cost Table

Scope | Typical cost range | Notes |---|---:|---| Garage half-bath rough-in | $3,500-$8,500 | Depends on slab and sewer proximity Garage full bath rough-in | $6,000-$14,000 | Shower drain raises complexity Kitchenette plumbing | $2,500-$7,500 | Sink, drain, vent, water lines Detached ADU water/sewer trench | $5,000-$18,000 | Distance and depth drive price Sewer lateral upgrade | $6,000-$20,000+ | If existing line is bad/undersized Ejector pump system | $3,500-$8,500 | When gravity sewer is not available Gas line for ADU appliance | $900-$3,500 | Load sizing required Full ADU plumbing package | $14,000-$35,000+ | Bathroom, kitchen, laundry, water heater

These are plumbing numbers only. Concrete, framing, electrical, HVAC, drywall, and finishes are separate.

Garage Conversion Plumbing

Garage conversions often look cheaper than detached ADUs because the structure already exists. Plumbing can change that quickly.

Most garages were not built with drains in the right place. If the slab has to be cut for a toilet, shower, and kitchenette, you are paying for layout, concrete cutting, excavation, pipe installation, inspection, backfill, and concrete patching.

The cheapest garage conversion bathroom is one that backs up to an existing wet wall. The most expensive is one across the slab from any drain.

Detached ADU Plumbing

A detached ADU has more utility-route cost. You need water service and sewer from the main house, a shared lateral, or a permitted connection strategy. The route may cross driveway, patio, trees, retaining walls, or expansive clay soil.

Before design, confirm:

- Zoning eligibility

  • Sewer availability
  • Existing lateral condition
  • Cleanout locations
  • Water service size
  • Meter implications
  • Stormwater constraints
  • Easements and tree conflicts

    Do not assume the old sewer lateral can take another dwelling unit. Camera it.

    Sequencing That Saves Money

    The correct sequence:

    1. Zoning feasibility check.

  • 2. Sewer camera and utility locate. 3. Plumbing concept plan before final layout. 4. Permit drawings with fixture locations. 5. Underground plumbing before slab work. 6. Inspection before covering pipe. 7. Supply, vent, and gas rough-in. 8. Pressure tests. 9. Insulation/drywall. 10. Fixture trim and final inspection.

    The expensive version is designing a beautiful ADU bathroom where gravity drainage will not work.

    Gravity vs Pumped Drainage

    Gravity is better when available. It is simpler, quieter, and lower-maintenance.

    #

    Ejector pump tradeoff

    An ejector pump may be needed when the new fixtures sit below the available sewer elevation or too far from a gravity route. Pumps work, but investors need to treat them as mechanical equipment, not invisible plumbing.

    Ejector pump considerations:

    - Basin access

  • Alarm
  • Dedicated electrical circuit
  • Maintenance access
  • Tenant education
  • Backup plan if power fails

    For rentals, gravity is worth paying for when the cost difference is reasonable.

    Nashville Soil and Trenching

    Davidson County clay can make trench work messy. Wet clay collapses, dry clay gets hard, and utility routes need proper bedding and backfill. Poor trench work settles later and can create pipe slope problems.

    For ADUs in East Nashville, Madison, and older urban lots, expect mature roots and old utility surprises. For Brentwood and Franklin lots, longer utility runs and landscape restoration often drive cost. For Murfreesboro, distance and newer subdivision layouts matter.

    Water Heater Decisions

    ADUs need hot water. Options include:

    - Small electric tank

  • Shared system from main house
  • Gas tankless
  • Electric point-of-use

    For rentals, a small dedicated electric tank is often the simplest. Shared systems can create billing and maintenance disputes. Tankless can work, but gas sizing and maintenance must be planned.

    Fixture Count and Drain Sizing

    A typical ADU plumbing package includes:

    - Toilet

  • Lavatory sink
  • Shower or tub/shower
  • Kitchen sink
  • Dishwasher connection
  • Laundry box
  • Water heater
  • Hose bib or exterior connection

    Each fixture affects drainage, venting, and water sizing. Moving one fixture on the plan can change the entire rough-in route.

    Investor Mistakes

    The first mistake is pricing the ADU by square foot only. Plumbing does not scale neatly by square foot. A 500-square-foot ADU can have almost the same plumbing cost as an 850-square-foot ADU if fixture count is the same.

    The second mistake is skipping the sewer camera. If the existing lateral is failing, adding load is asking for backups.

    The third mistake is putting plumbing on the schedule after concrete. Underground plumbing comes first.

    The fourth mistake is treating a garage conversion as cosmetic. The moment you add a bathroom or kitchen, it is a real mechanical project.

    Budget the Utility Path, Not Just the Unit

    Two ADUs with the same floor plan can have very different plumbing budgets. One may tie into a clean sewer route 18 feet away. The other may cross a driveway, run through tree roots, and need a pump basin. Price the utility path before comparing contractor bids, because that is where the hidden spread usually sits.

    Bottom Line

    ADU and garage conversion plumbing in Nashville is all about route, elevation, access, and sequencing. Get those right and the project can pencil. Get them wrong and the plumbing line item can double.

    Before you finalize an ADU or garage conversion layout in Davidson, Williamson, or Rutherford County, call Luke Lays Pipe at (734) 748-4831. We will walk the site, camera the sewer if needed, and price the rough-in before the design traps you.

  • ADU plumbinggarage conversionNashville investorsrough-in costsMetro permits

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