Wet Bar Plumbing Cost Estimator
A wet bar is a small entertainment-area sink — living room, game room, pool/patio-adjacent room, or a kitchenette — usually a compact bar sink with a faucet, a trap, a drain, and a vent, plus optional rough-ins for a bar fridge, an ice maker, or an under-counter dishwasher. The supply and faucet are straightforward; the drain and vent are what decide the cost. In Florida's common slab-on-grade homes, if a drain wasn't roughed in, getting one to the bar can mean cutting and patching the concrete slab — the single biggest price driver. Tucking the bar near an existing wet wall keeps it affordable.
A dry bar is just cabinetry and a counter — no plumbing. A wet bar has running water: at minimum a small bar sink with a faucet, a trap, a drain, and a vent. Many wet bars also add a water line for an ice maker or a bar fridge with a dispenser, and some add an under-counter dishwasher or beverage center.
Where They Go
Family and game rooms, home theaters, kitchenettes, in-law suites, and rooms off a Florida lanai or pool area. The location relative to existing plumbing matters a lot for cost.
A bar sink needs three things to work right.
Supply
Cold (and usually hot) water lines to the faucet. Adding hot means running a second line, a small adder. An ice maker or fridge line is a single cold tap.
Drain & Trap
Waste leaves through a P-trap to a drain line that ties into the home's drain system. Getting that drain to the bar is the main job.
Vent
Every trap needs a vent so it drains smoothly and the trap seal isn't siphoned (which would let sewer gas in). The vent ties into the existing vent system, runs up through the roof, or in some cases uses an air admittance valve.
Most Florida homes are slab-on-grade — no basement or crawlspace under the floor. If a drain stub wasn't roughed in where you want the bar, the drain line has to get there somehow.
Best Case
The bar backs up to an existing wet wall (kitchen, laundry, bathroom) and the drain ties in nearby, run through the wall or cabinetry — no concrete work.
Harder Case
The bar is far from any drain, so reaching it means cutting the slab, trenching for the new drain, tying in, then patching the concrete and flooring. That is the biggest single cost driver for a wet bar.
Plan Ahead
In new construction or a remodel with the slab exposed, roughing in the bar drain is cheap insurance.
The fun add-ons each need their own rough-in, best planned before the cabinets go in.
Ice Maker / Bar Fridge
A single 1/4-inch cold-water line with a shut-off feeds an ice maker or a fridge's ice/water dispenser.
Under-Counter Dishwasher
Needs a hot supply, a drain connection (with a high loop or air gap), and power. It shares the bar's drain and vent.
Leak Awareness
These appliance lines sit in a cabinet, often unwatched. Accessible shut-offs and quality supply lines reduce the chance of a slow leak going unnoticed.
Watch For
(1) A gurgling bar drain or a sewer smell — classic signs of a venting problem or a dry/siphoned trap; (2) slow drainage from the small bar sink; (3) dampness in the bar cabinet from a supply, drain, or appliance-line leak; (4) water pooling near an ice maker or fridge line.
Vent Issues Are Common
Because wet bars are often added later, the vent is sometimes undersized or improvised. A gurgle or odor usually points to venting — worth correcting so the trap holds its seal.
How the bar gets its vent is a real decision in Florida retrofits.
Tie to an Existing Vent
Cleanest when an existing vent is close enough to connect to. No roof penetration.
Air Admittance Valve (AAV)
A one-way valve under the sink that lets air in to break a vacuum without a roof vent. Convenient for an island or a spot far from existing vents — but AAV acceptance varies by jurisdiction, so confirm with your AHJ before relying on one.
New Vent Through the Roof
The most involved option — running new vent pipe up and through the roof — used when neither a tie-in nor an AAV will do.
A bar sink near existing plumbing is affordable; distance and the slab are what add up. These are planning estimates for the work plus professional labor in the FL market.
Drain Reach
Tying to a nearby drain is cheapest; a new accessible run costs more; a slab cut and patch is the biggest driver.
Fixtures & Supply
Sink-and-faucet-only is the base. Adding hot water, an ice-maker/fridge line, or an under-counter dishwasher each add. A full bar with all three is the high end.
Venting
A tie-in is least; an AAV adds a little (where allowed); a new roof vent adds the most. Use the calculator to combine drain, supply, fixtures, and venting.
Keep the Trap Wet
A rarely used bar sink can have its trap dry out, letting sewer gas in. Run water periodically to refill the trap seal.
Florida Hard Water
Hard water scales faucets, ice makers, and dishwasher parts. Whole-home softening or filtration helps; otherwise expect periodic descaling.
Watch the Cabinet
Because supply, drain, and appliance lines live inside a closed cabinet, check occasionally for dampness. Accessible shut-offs let you isolate a leak fast — cheap protection against a slow under-counter leak and a water-damage claim.
FL Permit Requirements
- Replacing a bar faucet or bar sink on existing connections
- Adding a shut-off to an existing ice-maker / fridge line
- Swapping an under-counter appliance using existing rough-ins
- Adding a new bar sink with new supply, drain, and vent
- Cutting the slab to run a new drain line
- Adding new venting or an air admittance valve
- New water and drain rough-ins for an ice maker or dishwasher
FL County Permit Fee Reference
A like-for-like fixture swap on existing connections is usually minor. Adding a new bar sink (new supply, drain, and vent) or cutting the slab for a drain is regulated plumbing work and is typically permitted. Fees and timelines are approximate — verify with your local building department / AHJ before starting work.
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FL Code References
Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?
Adding a wet bar means new supply, drain, trap, and vent connections — regulated plumbing work under the FL Building Code (Plumbing). Drain sizing and slope, trap and vent requirements, and the acceptability of an air admittance valve follow the adopted code and any local amendments, and the work is generally permitted. Cutting a slab for a new drain is part of that permitted work. A simple fixture swap on existing connections is usually minor. Per FL Statute 489.105, regulated plumbing work is performed by the appropriate licensed contractor.
Verify any contractor's license at myfloridalicense.com and confirm drain, vent, and AAV requirements with your local building department before work begins.
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Licensed FL Contractor - Wet Bars, Bar Sinks & Rough-ins
We plumb wet bars and bar sinks — supply, drain, and vent — plus rough-ins for ice makers, bar fridges, and under-counter dishwashers, including slab work when the drain has to reach a new spot.