Replace a Bathroom Faucet in Under an Hour
I paid a plumber $180 to replace a bathroom faucet once. He was done in 25 minutes. I stood there watching him, realizing most of that 25 minutes was him unpacking and repacking his tools. The actual work took maybe 15.
I have done three faucet replacements myself since then. If you can operate a wrench and lie on your back under a sink for five minutes, you can do this.

Buy the Right Faucet First
Measure before you shop. Most bathroom sinks have 4-inch centerset or 8-inch widespread hole spacing. Centerset means the handles and spout are in one unit with three holes 4 inches apart. Widespread means separate handles and spout with 8-inch spacing.
Take a photo of your sink from underneath with your phone. It will save you a trip back to the store when you need to show someone what the connections look like.
The One Tool You Cannot Skip
A basin wrench costs $12-20 and it is the difference between a 15-minute job and a 2-hour swear-fest. The nuts holding faucets to the sink are recessed up behind the basin where a regular wrench cannot reach. A basin wrench has a long handle and a spring-loaded jaw that grabs those nuts at an angle.
Everything else — adjustable wrench, channel-lock pliers, screwdriver — you probably already own.
The Steps
- Turn off the water. Valves are under the sink. Turn them clockwise until they stop. Turn on the faucet to confirm no water and release pressure.
- Disconnect the supply lines from the old faucet — have a small bowl ready for drips.
- Use the basin wrench to remove the nuts holding the old faucet. They are usually plastic and hand-tight plus a quarter turn.
- Lift the old faucet out and clean the sink surface — old plumber’s putty and mineral buildup will prevent the new faucet from sealing correctly.
- Follow the new faucet’s instructions. Most come with a rubber gasket that eliminates the need for putty.
- Tighten everything, reconnect supply lines, turn water back on slowly, check for leaks.
The gasket that comes with the new faucet is enough. I used plumber’s putty on my first install because a YouTube video told me to and it squeezed out around the base. The rubber gasket alone works fine.
When to Call a Plumber
If the shutoff valves under your sink are corroded or will not turn, stop. Forcing a stuck valve can snap the pipe inside the wall. That is when a $180 faucet job turns into a $500 wall repair. A plumber can replace the valves at the same time.
📋 Quick Summary: Buy a basin wrench, turn off water, disconnect old, clean surface, install new with rubber gasket — most people finish in 45 minutes.