Shower Doors & Glass in Easley, SC
Frameless glass that makes the bathroom read bigger. Local crew based in Pendleton, real photos and references from your neighborhood, and a firm written price before we start.
The right shower door does more work than any other single finish in a bathroom. Frameless glass makes a 5×8 hall bath in Easley, SC read like a 6×10. Low-iron glass eliminates the green tint that cheap doors carry. We install every shower door ourselves — measured after tile or panel install, fabricated to those exact dimensions, and set by the same crew that built the shower. No third-party glass company, no missed silicone, no four-week scheduling gap.
We serve every neighborhood in Easley, including Downtown Easley, Brushy Creek, Dacusville, Pickens, Liberty.
What's included in a shower doors project
Every Easley shower doors project we quote covers the items below in writing — no "we'll deal with that on the day of" surprises.
Materials we install
- 1/2" tempered glass (frameless)
- 3/8" tempered glass (semi-frameless)
- Low-iron (ultra-clear) glass option
- Clip-mounted or hinge-mounted frameless hardware
- Bypass and single-track barn-style sliders
- ClearShield-style protective coatings
What it costs in Easley
Sliding or pivot doors run $900–$1,500 installed. Semi-frameless $1,400–$2,200. Frameless single-panel $1,600–$2,800. Full frameless inline + return enclosures $2,400–$3,500. Low-iron glass adds $200–$400.
Every Easley estimate is free, in-home, and presented line by line so you see exactly where every dollar goes. Financing options are available through our lending partners — approval terms depend on credit, project size, and lender.
What's different about shower doors projects in Easley
The local housing stock
Easley's housing reflects three building waves. The original downtown core, Doodle Trail corridor, and older Pelzer Highway neighborhoods have 1940s–1970s brick ranches and mill-village cottages with small 5×7 hall baths, one-piece fiberglass tub-shower units, and 1980s vinyl floors that homeowners typically gut entirely. The Brushy Creek, Powdersville, and Glenwood area is dominated by 1990s–2000s subdivisions where the original builder-grade master baths had cultured-marble vanity tops, garden tubs no one uses, and standard 36×36 fiberglass corner showers — the most common project here is removing the unused garden tub to expand a custom-tile walk-in shower. Newer construction along Highway 153 and the Liberty side of Easley is 2010s–2020s production homes where homeowners want to upgrade past builder-grade tile and fixtures without changing the layout.
Permits, HOAs, and scheduling
Easley falls under Pickens County permitting, which typically clears bathroom plumbing-and-electrical permits in 5–10 business days. Easley city projects inside city limits go through the city building department on a similar timeline. Brushy Creek and Powdersville subdivisions occasionally have HOA architectural-review requirements for contractor insurance documentation — we handle that paperwork during the estimate. For homes built before 1980 along the original Easley downtown and mill-village streets, we always recommend a quick shut-off-valve and supply-line inspection during demo because original galvanized supply lines are still common and are the leading cause of post-remodel leaks in this area.
Why it matters
Cheap doors with the wrong glass thickness or undersized hinges are the #1 cosmetic failure in a 5-year-old shower. Hinge sag, silicone discoloration, and the dreaded green tint on cheap glass all make an otherwise beautiful tile shower look tired faster than anything else in the room.
See our shower doors work
Real photos, real homeowners, real results — not stock images.
