Most bathroom vanities fall between $300 and $3,500, with the practical sweet spot for a pre-assembled, quality-construction single vanity sitting between $600 and $1,500 depending on width, top material, and cabinet construction tier.

What you actually get at each price point varies significantly. Below $400, expect particleboard cabinet boxes, basic laminate finishes, and RTA assembly — materials that struggle in high-humidity bathrooms over time. The $600–$1,500 range is where pre-assembled vanities with engineered wood cabinet boxes, soft-close hardware, and cultured marble or quartz tops become accessible. Above $1,500, you're typically paying for solid wood face frames, quartz countertops, and premium finish options — construction details that hold up in a bathroom used daily for 15 or more years.

  • Budget vanities (under $400): typically RTA particleboard construction with basic laminate tops.
  • Mid-range vanities ($600–$1,500): pre-assembled cabinets with soft-close hardware and cultured marble or quartz tops.
  • Premium vanities ($1,500–$3,500): solid wood door and drawer faces, ¾-inch plywood sides, and engineered quartz countertops.
  • Width is a major cost driver: a 24-inch single vanity runs $300–$700; a 60-inch double vanity runs $900–$2,500 in the same quality tier.
  • Top material adds $150–$500 to vanity cost: cultured marble integrated tops cost less; quartz tops with undermount porcelain sinks cost more.