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Rough-in dimension

Short definition

Rough-in dimensions are the specific measurements (typically distance from a finished wall to the center of a drain or supply stub-out) that define where rough-in pipes terminate so a finish fixture can be installed correctly. Get them wrong and the fixture doesn’t fit.

What it is

The standard residential rough-in dimensions:

Fixture Rough-in spec
Toilet flange 12 inches from finished back wall (modern standard); 10 or 14 also exist
Bathroom lavatory water 21 to 24 inches above floor; 4 inches off drain center
Bathroom drain stub-out 16 to 24 inches above floor (vanity-dependent)
Kitchen sink water 18 inches above floor; 8-inch spread
Kitchen drain 16 inches above floor (minimum)
Tub valve 28 inches above floor
Tub spout 22 inches above floor (6 below valve center)
Showerhead 76 inches above floor (preferred); 72 older standard
Shower valve 48 inches above floor
Laundry standpipe 36 inches above floor
Laundry shutoffs 42 inches above floor

Toilet rough-in is the most likely to surprise: WA pre-1950 stock often has 10-inch flanges. Modern construction is 12-inch. Some specialty wall-hung systems use 14-inch or fully custom. Buying the wrong-rough-in toilet for an existing flange is a common DIY mistake that costs either a return shipment or a $200–$500 flange-conversion job (plus tile work).

Why it matters to a homeowner

Two scenarios cost real money:

  • 1920s Seattle bungalow with a 10-inch flange and a new 12-inch toilet ordered. Either swap the toilet (buying a 10-inch-rough-in specialty model, $400–$700), or convert the flange ($200–$500 corrective plus tile rework).
  • Showerhead at 72 inches in a new build for tall homeowners. The lookahead failed. 76 or 80 inches is now standard. Reframe is a $1,500 to $5,000 corrective once tile is in.

When you’re designing a remodel, print a rough-in spec sheet for every fixture and give it to the framer and plumber before they start. Most expensive rough-in mistakes come from missing this step.

Common variants and not the same as

  • Rough-in dimension vs. rough-in (the phase). Dimension is the specific number; rough-in is the construction phase.
  • Toilet rough-in 10 vs. 12 vs. 14. Three distinct toilet form factors. Re-check before ordering.
  • Comfort-height vs. standard vanity. 36-inch (comfort) vs. 32-inch (standard) — homeowner preference, set during rough-in.

Common failure modes

  • Wrong toilet rough-in. 10-inch flange, 12-inch toilet. Swap toilet or swap flange.
  • Showerhead too low for tall users. 76+ inches is the modern recommendation.
  • Tub valve at non-standard height. Finish trim doesn’t reach.
  • Vanity height set without owner consult. Homeowner preference matters; some prefer 36-inch comfort vanities.