ADA-guideline remodeling that follows your therapist’s recommendations to the letter — without ever looking institutional. Trusted by Omaha healthcare professionals.
The ADA was written for public buildings, but its specifications — grab bar heights, clearances, reach ranges, transfer spaces — represent decades of research into what actually keeps people safe and independent. We use those guidelines as our baseline, then tailor everything to the specific person using the bathroom: their mobility, their equipment, their therapist's recommendations, and their home.
Healthcare professionals refer to us. Occupational therapists, discharge planners, and home-health coordinators across Omaha send patients to Level Access Baths because we follow clinical recommendations precisely and report back when the work is done.
Not every project needs every element. At your consultation we'll walk the space together, review any clinical recommendations you have, and scope exactly what your situation calls for — then quote it as one all-in number.
Here's a detail that separates specialists from generalists: a grab bar is only as strong as what it's screwed into. Drywall anchors fail exactly when they're needed most. We install solid wood blocking inside the wall behind every grab bar location — and behind future locations too, so bars can be added later without opening the wall. It costs us a little more time. It's non-negotiable.
We regularly build for veterans using VA adaptive housing grants, patients transitioning home from rehab on a discharge deadline, and families modifying a home for a parent moving in. Fast scheduling matters in these situations, and because our own team does the work, we control the calendar.
No — the ADA legally applies to public and commercial buildings, not private homes. But ADA guidelines are the best-tested accessibility playbook in existence, so we use them as the design baseline and then adapt to the person actually using the bathroom. Your needs, your therapist's recommendations, and your space matter more than checking boxes.
Typical elements: a zero-entry or low-threshold shower with handheld wand, grab bars anchored into reinforced blocking, comfort-height toilet, clear floor space for wheelchair turning, accessible storage heights, slip-resistant flooring, and lever-style hardware. Your project includes whichever of these your situation calls for — quoted as one all-in price.
Yes, constantly. If your OT, PT, or discharge planner has written specs — grab bar heights, transfer clearances, seat placement — we build to them exactly and never substitute without approval. Healthcare professionals across the Omaha metro refer patients to us for precisely this reason.
Often, yes. Qualifying veterans can use HISA, SAH, or SHA grants. Nebraska and Iowa Medicaid HCBS waiver programs sometimes fund home modifications, and some long-term-care policies do too. We're familiar with the documentation these programs need and can support your application.
It depends heavily on scope. A shower-focused project starts around $6,000 all-in; full-bathroom accessibility remodels run higher based on the work involved. Either way, you get one comprehensive number at your free consultation — never an estimate that grows mid-project.
One visit, one all-in price, no pressure. We serve Omaha, Council Bluffs, and surrounding communities.
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