The minimum door width required for a bathroom is typically 32 inches to allow for accessibility and ease of use.
Yes, an ADA bathroom should be 36". Other doors that are not required acess doors, closets ect, have no minimum.
36" door, to have access for the handicapped.
There is not a quote "standard" door width as doors can be purchased in 2" increments. There are a few building code restrictions for minimum width of certain doors. Like an egress door is required to be 36 inches in width for a residence. There can also be minimum widths for handicap accessibility. These doors in a house need to have a clear opening width of 30 inches.
I think 18" is the smallest production interior door you can buy.
The smallest door I have seen on house building plans is 2'0". The smallest door I have framed for and installed is a 2'4" door. That is the smallest size door I recommend anyone put in. For the handicapped or wheelchair bound the minimum size required is 3'0". sawkerfs
Minimum 32 inch. Maximum width of a swinging door leaf is 48 inch. Typically 36 inch installed.
24 inches from the door
Probably a little more than the width of the bath so that it can get in and out if it needs replacing. Baths are usually wider than they are tall so you could turn a bath on its side and fit it through even the narrowest of doors. Smallest door for a bathroom is probably 2ft (610mm) imperial door size or 626mm metric door size.
The minimum door height required for accessibility compliance in public buildings is typically 80 inches or 6 feet 8 inches.
There should be about 1 1/2" under the door before flooring.
It depends on the weight and width of the door. Three would be a standard amount.
The rough opening required for a 30-inch door is typically 32 inches in width and 82 inches in height.