Usually included
- Fan allowance, route logic, grilles, discharge point and startup check.
- Typical residential bathroom ventilation assumptions.
Regional model
Bathroom exhaust is often treated as a minor line item, but poor planning here creates smell complaints, humidity damage and ceiling rework. The cost depends on route length, discharge quality, noise expectations and whether maintenance access is preserved after finishes.
| Scenario | Area / basis | Specification | Planning range | Unit range | Important note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single bathroom exhaust | 1-2 bathrooms | Short route, simple fan and clear discharge point. | IDR 4M-8M | Per bathroom cluster | Best when the route reaches a valid outdoor discharge with minimal bends. |
| Multi-bathroom villa exhaust | 3-6 bathrooms | Longer routes, multiple fans or branches, stronger coordination and commissioning checks. | IDR 10M-18M | Per bathroom group | Upper band applies when access, noise control and discharge hygiene matter. |
Budget the route and discharge point, not only the fan box.
Use the higher band when several bathrooms are tied into longer concealed routes.
The cost guide is useful only when it is tied back to stage pages, checklists, mistakes, and the work sequence for execution control.
Fan-assisted supply or extract air system used when natural airflow is not enough.
Floor fall geometry directing water to drains.
Integrated testing and handover readiness checks.
Because the project pays for the hidden route, discharge logic, fixings, coordination and access, not only for the visible fan unit.
Check that the air is really discharged to an acceptable outdoor point rather than into a hidden void or facade pocket.