Finished Vanities

Bathroom Vanities at Builders Surplus YeeHaa

A bathroom vanity is the centerpiece of any bathroom remodel. It defines the storage, the sink, and most of the visual weight of the room, all in one piece. Factory-finished vanities arrive ready to install, with the cabinet, hardware, and finish complete, often with a vanity top and sink included.

Builders Surplus YeeHaa carries finished bathroom vanities across sizes, styles, and price points, with most common configurations available to take home the same day.

Common Bathroom Vanity Sizes

Bathroom vanities are sold in standard widths to match common bathroom layouts. The size you choose drives storage, counter space, and which sink configuration works.

  • 24 inches: Half baths, powder rooms, and tight guest baths. Single sink. Best when floor space is limited.
  • 30 inches: The most common full-bath single-sink size. Balances storage and counter space without dominating the room.
  • 36 inches: Master bath single-sink vanity. Extra counter for grooming tools and more drawer storage.
  • 48 inches: Single sink with generous storage, or the threshold size for a comfortable double-sink configuration.
  • 60 inches: Almost always a double-sink configuration. Standard size for two-user master baths.
  • 72 inches: Spacious double vanity for large master baths with plenty of personal storage on each side.
  • Depths typically run 21 inches (standard) or 18 inches (compact). Heights run 32 inches (traditional, matches kitchen base cabinets) or 36 inches (counter-height, easier on the back for adults and tall users).
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Single vs. Double Vanity

The decision depends on bathroom width and how the room is used.

Single vanity works in any vanity-size opening. It maximizes counter space relative to sink count, which matters more than people expect for grooming.

Double vanity needs at least 48 inches of width, ideally 60 inches or more for real elbow room. It works best for shared master baths where two users get ready at the same time. Below 48 inches, the sinks crowd each other and the counter loses its usefulness.

Sink Configurations

Three main options come on finished vanities.

Drop-in sinks sit in a cut-out hole in the vanity top with the rim resting on the surface. The simplest configuration, easy to install, and easy to replace. Cleaning around the rim takes a little more effort.

Undermount sinks mount below the vanity top, creating a continuous surface without a visible rim. Easier to clean (wipe debris straight into the sink) and more premium-looking. Requires a vanity top cut for an undermount, which most stone and quartz tops support.

Vessel sinks sit on top of a flat vanity surface like a bowl. Decorative and modern but require a taller-than-standard faucet and a flat top with only a drain hole. Less practical for daily-use bathrooms because of the height.

Door Styles and Finishes

Finished vanities come in a focused range of popular styles.

Shaker

A clean, square-edged panel door with a flat center. The most popular style today, works in modern, traditional, and farmhouse bathrooms.

Raised Panel

A profiled center panel raised from the frame. Traditional and transitional bathrooms.

Slab

A flat, single-piece door with no detailing. Modern and minimalist.

Open Shelf

No doors at the bottom, just open storage. Visually lighter but exposes everything to dust and bathroom humidity.

Finishes typically include warm whites, espresso and dark walnut, natural and golden oak, and gray or charcoal paint colors. The exact selection rotates based on what’s in stock.

How To Choose the Right Bathroom Vanity

A few practical considerations before you commit.

  • Measure the bathroom carefully. Width, depth, and any obstructions like door swings, baseboard heaters, or plumbing chases. A vanity that bumps into a swung door is a daily frustration.
  • Plan around the existing plumbing. Vanities are designed to hide the supply lines and drain behind the back panel. If you’re keeping the existing plumbing in place, confirm the rough-in matches the vanity’s interior layout.
  • Coordinate the finish with the rest of the bathroom. Lighter vanities expand small bathrooms. Darker vanities anchor larger ones with strong lighting. Bring samples home to check against your floor and tile.
  • Match the vanity top. Most finished vanities come with the top included, but some are sold without. If you’re selecting separately, confirm the vanity width matches the top width exactly (a 36-inch vanity typically pairs with a 37-inch top).
  • Don’t forget the mirror, sconces, and faucet. These are usually purchased separately. Plan their style and finish at the same time so everything coordinates.
  • Verify the storage works for you. Some vanities use all-drawer storage; others use door-and-shelf. Drawers are more useful for daily-use bathroom items; doors hide the look of pipes and waste baskets.

Shopping Finished Vanities at Builders Surplus YeeHaa

We carry finished bathroom vanities in popular sizes, door styles, and finishes, with most standard sizes ready to take home the day you visit. Many vanities come with a granite or quartz vanity top included, or we can pair the cabinet with a separate top in your preferred material.

For custom colors or matching to an existing bathroom, see our unfinished bathroom vanities.

Our design team can plan a full bathroom layout, coordinate the vanity with tile, fixtures, and finishes, and work within your budget, free of charge. Professional installation can be arranged for any vanity purchased from us.

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Stock finished vanities typically run $250 to $1,200 for a 30 to 36-inch single-sink size, often including the top and sink. 48 to 60-inch single or double vanities run $700 to $2,500. Premium finishes, custom door styles, and higher-end materials push prices higher.

A 30 or 36-inch single-sink vanity is the most common in full bathrooms. 24 inches is standard for half baths. 60 inches is the most common double-vanity size in master bathrooms.

Sometimes. Many stock vanities come as a package with the cabinet, top, and undermount or drop-in sink included. Others sell the cabinet separately so you can choose the top material. Confirm before purchase.

Yes, with basic plumbing skills. The installation involves securing the vanity to wall studs, connecting the supply lines and drain, and setting the top. Most installs take three to five hours. Cast iron and large double vanities benefit from professional help.

32 inches matches kitchen base cabinets, traditional bathroom standard. 36 inches is counter-height, easier on the back for adults and taller users. Counter-height has become the more common choice in newer construction.

Installation can be arranged for any vanity purchased from us. Our team can also help with the design and layout before you commit to a vanity line.

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