How Is a Vanity Budget Split Between Material and Labor?
Material cost covers the cabinet, countertop, sink (if not separate), and hardware. Labor cost covers removal of the old vanity, setting and leveling the new cabinet, connecting or relocating plumbing, sealing the countertop, and disposal. The split between the two shifts depending on the tier of vanity: cheaper vanities have a lower material share because labor tasks cost roughly the same regardless of vanity price, while expensive custom vanities have a higher material share because premium cabinetry and stone tops add cost faster than labor does.
This is a useful thing to understand before requesting quotes, because it explains why two vanities that differ in price by a factor of five do not necessarily differ in total installed cost by the same factor. A plumber charges roughly the same to reconnect supply lines to a $200 vanity as to a $2,000 one. That means the cheaper vanity's labor cost, as a percentage of the total, is much higher. Understanding this split helps you decide where your money actually moves the needle: spending more on the cabinet and countertop changes the finished look and durability, while labor cost is largely fixed by the complexity of your plumbing, not by which vanity you chose.
Material Cost: Cabinet Construction
Cabinet material typically breaks into three tiers. Particleboard or MDF with a laminate or thermofoil finish is the least expensive and most common in stock vanities, typically adding $100 to $400 to a vanity's base cost for a standard single-sink width. Plywood boxes with solid wood face frames sit in the mid-range, typically adding $300 to $900. Furniture-grade solid hardwood or marine-grade plywood construction, common in semi-custom and custom vanities, typically adds $700 to $2,000 or more depending on wood species and finish quality.
Bathroom humidity is the reason cabinet construction matters more here than in, for example, a kitchen. Particleboard swells and delaminates when it absorbs moisture repeatedly, which is why the cheapest vanities are also the ones most likely to show swelling at the base or around the sink cutout within a few years, especially in bathrooms with poor ventilation. Plywood resists moisture better because it does not absorb water the same way particleboard does, and marine-grade plywood is specifically engineered for wet environments. Solid hardwood looks and feels premium but still needs a quality moisture-resistant finish to hold up long-term in a humid bathroom.
Expert Take
If your bathroom has a working exhaust fan and you run it during and after showers, a mid-range plywood-box vanity will typically outlast a comparable particleboard unit by years, not months. If your bathroom has poor ventilation or a history of humidity issues, spending the extra material cost to move up to plywood construction is one of the better-value upgrades available in this project, because water damage to a cheap cabinet box is a common reason vanities get replaced well before their expected lifespan.
Material Cost: Countertop by Material Type
Countertop cost varies significantly by material. Laminate typically runs $15 to $35 per square foot installed, cultured marble and cultured granite typically run $25 to $50 per square foot, quartz typically runs $50 to $100 per square foot, natural granite typically runs $40 to $90 per square foot, and natural marble typically runs $60 to $150 or more per square foot. A standard vanity top might be 5 to 8 square feet, while a wide double vanity top can be 12 to 20 square feet, which is why countertop choice can swing total cost by hundreds of dollars.
Cultured marble and cultured granite are engineered materials, resin combined with stone particles, molded into a single piece that includes the integrated sink bowl. This is why they are common on budget and mid-range vanities: no separate sink installation is needed, which also saves labor. Quartz and natural granite are cut from slabs and typically require a separately installed sink, either drop-in, undermount, or vessel, which adds labor cost beyond the material itself. Marble is the most premium and most porous option here, and it etches when exposed to acidic products common in a bathroom, such as some skincare products and cleaning solutions, which is a maintenance tradeoff worth knowing before choosing it for a heavily used vanity.
If you are choosing between an integrated sink top and a separate sink installation, our guides to undermount sink installation and vessel sink installation cover the added labor and material considerations for each approach in more detail.
Labor Cost: What Each Task Typically Costs
Labor for a vanity installation typically breaks into removal and disposal of the old unit ($50 to $150), setting and leveling the new cabinet ($100 to $300), connecting supply and drain lines when plumbing lines up with the existing rough-in ($100 to $250), and sealing and finishing ($50 to $150). These tasks together typically total $150 to $500 for a standard installation, rising toward $500 to $1,200 when plumbing needs to be relocated or when the vanity is a double-sink or vessel-sink configuration.
Regional labor rates are the biggest variable within this bucket. A licensed plumber in a major metro area commonly charges $75 to $150 per hour, while the same work in a lower-cost region might run $50 to $100 per hour. A vanity swap that takes two to three hours of skilled labor therefore costs meaningfully more in some markets than others, independent of the vanity chosen. Our bathroom plumber cost guide covers regional plumbing labor rates in more depth.
Complexity multiplies labor cost quickly. A vessel sink requires precise leveling and a specific drain assembly that sits above the countertop rather than through it, which typically adds 30 to 60 minutes of labor over a standard drop-in sink. A double vanity requires duplicating the supply and drain connection work, roughly doubling that portion of the labor even though the cabinet-setting task does not double. An offset or relocated drain requires opening a wall or floor section, which is where labor cost climbs from a routine task into a more involved plumbing job.
Expert Take
When comparing quotes from different contractors, ask each one to break out material and labor separately rather than accepting a single lump-sum number. This makes it possible to see whether one quote is higher because of a pricier vanity recommendation or because of a higher labor rate, and it gives you a clean way to compare apples to apples if you decide to source the vanity yourself and hire only the labor separately.
Where Does Spending More Actually Pay Off?
Spending more on cabinet construction and countertop material generally pays off in longevity and appearance, since these are the components most exposed to daily wear and bathroom humidity. Spending more on labor beyond what your project's complexity requires generally does not pay off, since a straightforward installation is a straightforward installation regardless of which contractor performs it, as long as the work is done correctly.
The practical takeaway is to shop labor on qualifications and reviews rather than price alone, since a poorly executed installation, especially a poor seal at the wall or an improperly leveled cabinet, can lead to water damage that costs far more to fix than the labor savings were worth. Meanwhile, it is reasonable to shop materials more aggressively for value, since a well-built mid-range cabinet with a durable countertop can perform nearly as well as a premium option at a meaningfully lower price. For a full comparison of vanity tiers by budget, see our budget vs custom bathroom vanity cost comparison.
If you are trying to decide whether to handle any of the labor yourself, our DIY vs professional vanity installation cost comparison looks specifically at which labor tasks are reasonable for a confident homeowner to take on and which are worth paying a professional for. And for the full picture of how material and labor combine into a total project budget, our cost to install a bathroom vanity guide covers the complete range by project scope.