Table of Contents
- Average Cost of a Kitchen Remodel in Connecticut
- Kitchen Renovation Budget Breakdown: Labor and Materials
- Factors That Influence the Cost of Kitchen Remodel in Connecticut
- Permitting, Local Regulations, and What CT Homeowners Must Know
- ROI and Resale Value: Does a Kitchen Remodel Pay Off in CT?
- Kitchen Remodel Timeline: How Long Will Your Project Take?
- How to Save Money on Kitchen Renovation Without Cutting Corners
- Conclusion
Last Updated: May 27, 2026
Understanding the cost of kitchen remodel in Connecticut is the first step any homeowner should take before committing to a project. Tony’s Home Improvement LLC has worked with Connecticut homeowners across the state and seen firsthand how dramatically costs vary based on scope, location, and material choices. A modest refresh can run well under what most people assume, while a full gut renovation in Fairfield County can reach figures that surprise even experienced homeowners. Below, we break down exactly what drives those numbers, where the money actually goes, and how to make smarter decisions before you sign a single contract.
Here’s what most guides get wrong: they quote national averages that have almost no bearing on Connecticut’s labor market, permitting environment, or the premium that New England-style craftsmanship commands. This guide is different. We focus specifically on Connecticut conditions, from the Connecticut shoreline to the Westchester border.
Average Cost of a Kitchen Remodel in Connecticut
A kitchen remodel in Connecticut is a project where costs span a genuinely wide range, and the tier you land in depends almost entirely on the decisions you make before a single cabinet is removed. Minor cosmetic updates, think new hardware, a fresh coat of paint, and updated fixtures, sit at the low end of the spectrum. A full gut renovation with custom cabinetry, quartz countertops, and high-end appliances occupies an entirely different financial category.

Connecticut homeowners should expect to pay meaningfully more than national averages. The state’s construction labor costs are among the highest in the Northeast, and material delivery to certain areas, particularly coastal towns along the Connecticut shoreline, adds logistical costs that contractors build into their estimates. According to Remodeling Magazine’s Cost vs. Value Report, kitchen projects consistently rank among the top home improvement investments for resale return, though regional multipliers vary significantly.
Mid-Range vs. High-End Kitchen Remodel Pricing
The table below reflects realistic cost ranges for Connecticut specifically, not national averages. These figures account for Connecticut labor rates, permit fees, and the material cost environment as of 2025-2026. Treat them as planning benchmarks, not fixed quotes: your actual number will depend on kitchen size, existing condition, and the specific materials and contractor you select.
| Remodel Tier | Typical Scope | Estimated Cost Range (CT) |
|---|---|---|
| Minor Cosmetic Update | Paint, hardware, fixtures, lighting swap | $5,000 – $15,000 |
| Mid-Range Remodel | Semi-custom cabinets, new countertops, standard appliances, tile backsplash | $40,000 – $75,000 |
| High-End Remodel | Custom cabinetry, premium stone counters, pro appliances, updated layout | $80,000 – $150,000 |
| Full Gut Renovation | Structural changes, all-new mechanical systems, custom everything | $150,000 – $250,000+ |
These ranges reflect a typical Connecticut kitchen of roughly 150-250 square feet. Larger kitchens, complex layouts, or projects in Fairfield County, where contractor rates and client finish expectations are highest, will trend toward the upper end of each range or exceed it.
A mid-range remodel in Connecticut typically involves replacing existing cabinetry with semi-custom units, installing granite or quartz countertops, adding a ceramic tile backsplash, and upgrading to mid-tier appliances. The layout usually stays intact, which keeps labor costs manageable and avoids the permit complexity that comes with moving plumbing or electrical.
A high-end luxury remodel is a different animal entirely. Custom cabinetry built to exact specifications, imported stone, professional-grade appliances from brands like Wolf, Sub-Zero, or Thermador, and often a reconfigured floor plan all push costs substantially higher. In Fairfield County, high-end projects routinely exceed $150,000 for a moderately sized kitchen, purely due to local contractor rates, finish expectations, and the premium that New England-style craftsmanship commands.
The single most reliable way to understand where your project lands in these ranges is to get three detailed, itemized bids from licensed Connecticut contractors. Bid spreads of $15,000-$30,000 on the same scope are common, and you cannot evaluate them without line-item detail.
Small Kitchen Updates vs. Full Gut Renovation Costs
The difference between a small kitchen update and a full gut job is not just financial, it is conceptual, and the cost gap between them is larger than most homeowners expect going in.
A small update preserves the existing layout and infrastructure, swapping out cosmetic elements while leaving plumbing, electrical, and structural components untouched. Cabinet refacing, replacing door fronts and drawer faces while keeping the existing box structure, typically runs $8,000-$20,000 for a standard Connecticut kitchen and delivers a dramatically refreshed appearance at a fraction of full replacement cost. New countertops alone, without any cabinet work, commonly run $3,000-$8,000 depending on material and square footage. These targeted investments are the fastest and most cost-effective path to a refreshed space.
A full gut renovation, by contrast, strips the kitchen to the studs. Everything comes out: cabinets, flooring, drywall, sometimes even load-bearing walls if the homeowner wants an open-concept layout. This approach triggers permitting requirements, longer timelines, and significantly higher labor costs. The payoff is a kitchen built entirely to your specification, a genuine culinary haven rather than an inherited layout you’ve learned to tolerate.
The common mistake is underestimating the hidden costs of a gut job. Older Connecticut homes, particularly those built before 1980, frequently contain surprises behind the walls: outdated knob-and-tube wiring, galvanized pipes that need full replacement, or asbestos-containing materials in floor tile or pipe insulation that require licensed abatement. These discoveries can add $5,000-$20,000 or more to a project budget depending on scope and severity, and they are not rare in Connecticut’s older housing stock.
Never skip a pre-renovation inspection in an older Connecticut home. Discovering knob-and-tube wiring or asbestos tile mid-project can halt work for weeks and add significant unplanned costs to your construction estimate. Budget a contingency of at least 15% for any gut renovation in a home built before 1980.
What Drives the Wide Range Within Each Tier
Two projects that both qualify as ‘mid-range remodels’ can differ by $25,000 or more depending on a handful of specific decisions. Understanding these levers helps you control your number before the first contractor walks through the door.
Cabinet selection: The gap between stock cabinets from a big-box retailer ($3,000-$8,000 installed for a standard kitchen) and semi-custom cabinetry from a regional manufacturer ($15,000-$35,000 installed) is the single largest variable in most mid-range budgets. True custom cabinetry from a Connecticut millwork shop can run $40,000-$80,000 or more for a full kitchen.
Countertop material: Laminate countertops run $1,500-$3,500 installed. Granite and quartz, the most common mid-range choices in Connecticut, typically run $4,000-$10,000 installed depending on slab selection and edge profile. Marble and quartzite at the premium end can reach $15,000-$25,000 for a full kitchen.
Appliance package: A mid-tier appliance suite (refrigerator, range, dishwasher, microwave) from brands like Samsung, LG, or Bosch commonly runs $4,000-$8,000. A professional-grade package from Wolf, Sub-Zero, or Miele can run $20,000-$50,000 or more for the same four appliances.
Layout changes: Keeping the existing layout is the most effective cost-control decision available. Moving a sink requires a licensed plumber to reroute supply and drain lines, commonly $1,500-$4,000 in added cost. Moving a gas range requires a licensed gas fitter. Adding an island with a cooktop requires both electrical and potentially gas work. Each relocation decision has a real dollar cost that compounds quickly.
The practical takeaway: budget generously using the ranges above, then add a contingency of roughly 15% for surprises uncovered during demolition. A project that starts with a realistic number and a contingency buffer is far less stressful, and far less likely to stall mid-construction, than one that is priced to the optimistic edge of the range.
Kitchen Renovation Budget Breakdown: Labor and Materials
Labor typically represents the largest single line item in any kitchen renovation budget. Connecticut’s construction workforce is skilled and in demand, which means general contractor rates here run higher than in many other states. For a mid-range remodel, labor commonly accounts for roughly one-third to nearly half of the total project budget, though the exact split shifts depending on how complex the scope is.
Materials make up the remainder, and this is where homeowners have the most control over their final number. The decision between stock cabinets and custom cabinetry alone can move the budget by tens of thousands of dollars. Similarly, choosing quartz countertops over laminate, or hardwood flooring over vinyl plank, compounds quickly across a full kitchen renovation.
Cost Per Square Foot Estimates in CT
Cost per square foot is a useful benchmarking tool, but it has real limitations. A 200-square-foot kitchen with a complex layout, an island, and specialty finishes will cost far more per square foot than a simple galley kitchen of the same size. Use per-square-foot figures as a sanity check, not a precise estimate.
That said, Connecticut kitchen remodels generally run higher per square foot than the national average, reflecting the state’s labor market and material costs. Smaller kitchens often show a higher per-square-foot cost because fixed expenses, like permitting fees, design fees, and equipment rental, get spread across fewer square feet.
Custom Cabinetry, Countertops, and Appliance Pricing
Custom cabinetry is where budgets most often expand beyond initial expectations. Stock cabinets from big-box retailers sit at the low end of the pricing spectrum and work well for straightforward layouts. Semi-custom cabinets offer more flexibility in sizing and finish options. True custom cabinetry, built by a local millwork shop to exact dimensions and specifications, commands a significant premium but produces results that stock units simply cannot match.
Countertops follow a similar tiered logic. Laminate is the most affordable option. Granite countertops and quartz countertops occupy the mid-to-upper range, with quartz increasingly preferred for its consistency and low maintenance. Marble and quartzite sit at the top of the market.
Appliances deserve their own budget line. A standard suite of appliances, refrigerator, range, dishwasher, and microwave, from a mid-tier brand runs considerably less than a professional-grade package from brands like Wolf, Sub-Zero, or Miele. The functionality difference is real, but so is the price gap.
Appliance lead times in Connecticut can run 8-16 weeks for specialty or professional-grade units. Order appliances before demolition begins, not after, to avoid costly project delays.
Factors That Influence the Cost of Kitchen Remodel in Connecticut
The cost of kitchen remodel in Connecticut does not follow a simple formula. Several interconnected variables push the final number up or down, and understanding them helps homeowners make informed trade-offs rather than being surprised by a contractor’s estimate.
The most impactful factors are project scope, material selection, labor market conditions, and the condition of the existing kitchen. A kitchen that has been well-maintained with updated electrical and plumbing will cost less to renovate than one with deferred maintenance baked into the walls.
Location Within CT: Fairfield County vs. Connecticut Shoreline
Location within Connecticut matters more than most homeowners realize. Fairfield County, which borders New York and includes towns like Greenwich, Westport, and Darien, consistently commands the highest renovation costs in the state. Contractor rates are higher, permit fees are steeper, and client expectations for finish quality drive material costs up across the board.
The Connecticut shoreline, covering towns like Madison, Guilford, and Old Saybrook, sits in a middle tier. Labor costs are meaningful but generally below Fairfield County levels. However, coastal towns can introduce additional considerations around moisture-resistant materials and specific building code requirements tied to proximity to water.
Inland markets like Hartford, Waterbury, and Meriden tend to offer more competitive contractor rates, though material costs remain largely consistent statewide since most suppliers serve the entire Connecticut market.
Design Elements, Material Selection, and Project Scope
Design decisions compound. Choosing a layout change that requires moving a sink adds plumbing costs. Adding an island requires electrical work if you want outlets or a cooktop. Selecting a ceramic tile backsplash that requires intricate pattern work increases tile-setter labor hours. None of these decisions are wrong, but each one has a downstream cost effect that should be understood before the project begins.
Project scope is the single biggest lever homeowners control. A rip-and-replace project, where the layout stays identical and only the surfaces change, is dramatically less expensive than a reconfigured kitchen with relocated appliances and new mechanical runs. The aesthetic appeal of an open-concept kitchen is real, but so is the structural and mechanical cost of achieving it.
Permitting, Local Regulations, and What CT Homeowners Must Know
Permitting is the part of a kitchen renovation that most homeowners underestimate, both in cost and in timeline impact. Connecticut requires building permits for any structural work, electrical upgrades, or plumbing modifications. A cosmetic refresh that leaves walls, wiring, and pipes untouched may not require a permit at all. A gut renovation almost certainly will.
Permit fees vary by municipality. Greenwich and other Fairfield County towns charge fees that reflect their higher property values and inspection overhead. Smaller towns may charge less, but the inspection timeline can be equally unpredictable.
The practical implication: factor permit timelines into your project schedule. Inspections in some Connecticut towns are scheduled weeks out, and a failed inspection can halt work until the next available slot. A reputable general contractor will pull permits on your behalf and manage the inspection schedule, but you should ask about this explicitly before signing a contract.
According to Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection contractor licensing requirements, all home improvement contractors in Connecticut must be registered with the state. Verify your contractor’s registration before work begins.
Skipping permits to save time or money is a serious risk in Connecticut. Unpermitted work can complicate a home sale, void homeowner’s insurance claims, and require costly demolition and re-inspection if discovered.
ROI and Resale Value: Does a Kitchen Remodel Pay Off in CT?
Most kitchen remodeling guides stop at ‘kitchens have great ROI’ and move on. That framing is too blunt to be useful for a Connecticut homeowner deciding whether to spend $45,000 or $120,000. The honest answer is that return on investment in Connecticut is highly market-dependent, scope-dependent, and, critically, threshold-dependent. Spending past the right threshold for your neighborhood produces diminishing returns that no amount of quartz countertop can reverse.
How CT Compares to National ROI Benchmarks
According to Remodeling Magazine’s Cost vs. Value Report, mid-range kitchen remodels nationally recoup roughly 50-60% of their cost at resale, while major upscale remodels recoup a lower percentage, often in the 30-40% range, because the investment outpaces what buyers in most markets will pay for. Connecticut’s high median home prices in markets like Fairfield County and the shoreline shift these numbers favorably for mid-range projects, because the baseline home value is high enough to absorb and reflect a quality kitchen renovation. In lower-price inland markets, the same math is less forgiving.
The mechanism matters: ROI on a kitchen remodel is not a direct dollar-for-dollar return. It works through two channels. First, a renovated kitchen can support a higher asking price. Second, and often more valuable in competitive markets, an updated kitchen reduces days on market and the likelihood of a buyer negotiating a price reduction. In Fairfield County towns like Westport, Darien, and New Canaan, where buyers frequently waive inspection contingencies and move quickly, a dated kitchen is one of the few features that reliably triggers a price conversation. An updated kitchen removes that friction entirely.
The Neighborhood Ceiling Problem
The single most important ROI concept Connecticut homeowners need to understand is the neighborhood ceiling: the maximum price the market will support for homes on your street, regardless of interior finish quality. Over-improving relative to your neighborhood ceiling is the most common way homeowners destroy kitchen renovation ROI.
A practical example: if comparable homes in your neighborhood sell in a consistent price band, installing a $90,000 custom kitchen in a home that sits at the lower end of that band will not push your sale price above the ceiling. Buyers use comparables, not your renovation invoice, to anchor their offers. The strategic implication is straightforward, before committing to a remodel scope, pull recent sold comps for your specific street and town. If the ceiling is tight, a well-executed mid-range remodel will outperform a luxury renovation on ROI every time.
In contrast, if your home is already positioned in the upper tier of its market, as many Fairfield County and shoreline properties are, a high-end kitchen renovation is more likely to be priced into the sale because buyers at that price point expect it and will discount a home that lacks it.
Market-by-Market ROI Patterns in Connecticut
Fairfield County (Greenwich, Westport, Darien, New Canaan): The highest-ROI market in Connecticut for kitchen renovations, particularly at the mid-to-high end. Buyers in this market are sophisticated and compare finishes directly. A kitchen that reads as dated or builder-grade in a $1.5M+ home will be used as a negotiating lever. A well-executed renovation here is more likely to be priced into the sale than anywhere else in the state.
Connecticut Shoreline (Madison, Guilford, Old Saybrook, Westbrook): Strong ROI for mid-range renovations, particularly in towns with active second-home and relocation buyer pools. Buyers moving from higher-cost markets bring elevated finish expectations. A clean, functional kitchen with quality materials performs well here even without luxury-tier finishes.
Greater Hartford and New Haven: More price-sensitive markets where ROI is strongest for mid-range renovations that bring a kitchen to a modern, functional standard without over-investing in premium finishes. The ceiling effect is more pronounced here, and the gap between a $40,000 and $90,000 renovation is unlikely to produce a proportional difference in sale price.
Inland and rural markets (Litchfield County, Windham County): Lower median prices mean the neighborhood ceiling constrains ROI more aggressively. Functional, clean, and well-maintained outperforms luxury here. A $25,000-$40,000 mid-range update is typically the highest-ROI investment in these markets.
What Buyers Actually Notice
According to National Association of Realtors Remodeling Impact Report, the kitchen is consistently the room buyers cite most when explaining why they made an offer. But the features they respond to are not always the most expensive ones. Buyers notice layout functionality, storage, lighting quality, and countertop condition before they evaluate appliance brands. This has a direct implication for ROI: investments in layout improvement, lighting, and countertop quality tend to produce stronger buyer responses than equivalent spending on appliance upgrades alone.
A common pattern among Connecticut real estate professionals is that a kitchen with good bones, updated countertops, fresh cabinet faces, and strong lighting will outperform a kitchen with older layout and premium appliances in a buyer walkthrough. The visual and functional first impression matters more than the spec sheet.
Sustainable and Energy-Efficient Upgrades That Add Value
Energy-efficient upgrades are increasingly relevant to Connecticut buyers, both for their environmental appeal and their long-term utility cost savings, a meaningful consideration given Connecticut’s consistently high electricity rates.
INDUCTION COOKTOPS AND ENERGY STAR APPLIANCES: Induction cooktops, ENERGY STAR-rated refrigerators, and efficient dishwashers reduce ongoing utility costs and are increasingly requested by buyers who ask about monthly operating costs during showings. These upgrades also qualify for rebates through Connecticut’s utility programs.
Connecticut’s two major electric utilities, Eversource and United Illuminating, both administer rebate programs for qualifying appliance upgrades and insulation improvements through the Connecticut Energy Efficiency Fund programs. Rebate amounts and qualifying product lists change periodically, so confirm current eligibility before purchasing. A general contractor familiar with Connecticut’s rebate landscape can identify which planned upgrades qualify before the project begins, potentially offsetting a meaningful portion of the premium cost of energy-efficient products.
LED LIGHTING SYSTEMS: Recessed LED lighting and under-cabinet LED strips are low-cost upgrades relative to their visual impact and efficiency benefit. They are also among the easiest upgrades to point to during a showing as a tangible, ongoing cost savings.
INSULATION BEHIND NEW WALLS: A gut renovation that opens walls creates an opportunity to upgrade insulation, particularly relevant in older Connecticut homes where kitchen exterior walls are frequently under-insulated. This upgrade has no visible presence but contributes to energy performance scores that increasingly appear in listing data.
Before finalizing your renovation scope, check current rebate availability through Energize CT (energizect.com). Qualifying appliance and insulation upgrades can reduce your net project cost and become a documented selling point when you list the home.
The highest-ROI kitchen renovation in Connecticut is not the most expensive one, it is the one calibrated to your neighborhood ceiling, executed to a quality standard that matches buyer expectations in your specific market, and completed without over-investing in features that buyers in your price tier will not pay for.
Kitchen Remodel Timeline: How Long Will Your Project Take?
A kitchen remodel timeline in Connecticut depends heavily on project scope, permit processing speed, and material availability. A minor update with no permit requirements can be completed in one to two weeks. A mid-range remodel with new cabinetry, countertops, and appliances typically runs four to eight weeks once materials are on-site. A full gut renovation with structural changes can take three to six months from demolition to final inspection.
The planning phase before demolition often takes as long as the construction itself. Design decisions, material selection, contractor bidding, and permit submission all happen before a single cabinet is removed. Homeowners who rush this phase consistently report regret about choices made under time pressure.
Supply Chain and Lead Times Affecting CT Renovations
Supply chain conditions in 2026 remain an important planning consideration for Connecticut kitchen renovations. Custom cabinetry lead times from domestic manufacturers commonly run eight to sixteen weeks. Imported tile and specialty stone can take longer, particularly if sourced from European suppliers. Professional-grade appliances from premium brands frequently have extended lead times that catch homeowners off guard.
The strategic response is simple: finalize all material selections and place orders before demolition begins. A kitchen sitting in mid-renovation with no cabinets arriving for ten weeks is a genuinely disruptive situation. A well-organized general contractor will build a material procurement timeline before the first tool touches the kitchen.
According to National Kitchen and Bath Association industry outlook, supply chain normalization has improved since 2022 but specialty items still carry extended lead times that require proactive project planning.
How to Save Money on Kitchen Renovation Without Cutting Corners
Saving money on a kitchen renovation is not about choosing the cheapest option at every decision point. That approach produces a kitchen that looks budget-constrained and may require replacement sooner than a well-considered mid-range build. The smarter approach is strategic: spend where it shows, save where it doesn’t.

Here’s the framework that experienced renovators use:
Spend on: Cabinetry (it defines the kitchen’s character), countertops (high-traffic surfaces show wear quickly), and appliances you’ll actually use daily.
Save on: Interior cabinet hardware (easy to upgrade later), cabinet interiors (no one sees them), and decorative elements that follow trends rather than timeless design.
Specific tactics that deliver real savings without compromising quality:
- Keep the existing layout. Moving plumbing and electrical is expensive. If the current layout functions reasonably well, preserve it.
- Choose semi-custom over full custom cabinetry. The quality gap has narrowed considerably, but the price gap remains significant.
- Source appliances during major sale events. Appliance pricing fluctuates meaningfully around holidays and model-year transitions.
- Get three competitive bids. Connecticut’s contractor market is active enough that bid spreads on the same scope can be substantial.
- Reface rather than replace cabinets when the existing box structure is sound. This delivers a dramatically updated look at a fraction of full replacement cost.
What most guides miss is the value of a detailed scope of work before bidding. Vague scopes produce wide bid ranges that make comparison impossible. A detailed written scope, down to specific materials and brands, produces bids you can actually compare.
Tony’s Home Improvement LLC approaches every kitchen renovation project with meticulous attention to detail and economical sourcing of materials, ensuring clients get the best possible outcome at a realistic budget. The firm’s clear communication process means homeowners understand exactly what they’re paying for before work begins, eliminating the budget surprises that plague poorly managed renovation projects.
Planning a kitchen renovation in Connecticut means navigating real complexity: fluctuating material costs, local permitting requirements, and a labor market that rewards contractors who deliver quality. Tony’s Home Improvement LLC brings professional expertise, efficient project management, and cost-effective material sourcing to every project, whether you’re refreshing a small galley kitchen or undertaking a full gut renovation. Contact Tony’s Home Improvement LLC to get a detailed, honest estimate for your Connecticut kitchen project.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average cost of a kitchen remodel in Connecticut?
The cost of a kitchen remodel in Connecticut typically ranges from around $15,000 for minor cosmetic updates to $80,000 or more for a high-end luxury renovation. A mid-range remodel in CT generally falls between $25,000 and $50,000 depending on kitchen size, materials chosen, and labor rates in your area. Fairfield County and shoreline towns tend to sit at the higher end of these ranges due to elevated contractor rates and material costs.
How long does a kitchen remodel take in Connecticut?
A typical kitchen remodel timeline in Connecticut runs 6 to 12 weeks for a mid-range project, though a full gut renovation can take 3 to 6 months. Planning, permitting, and material lead times add weeks before construction even begins. Custom cabinetry alone can have 6 to 10 week lead times. Mapping out your kitchen remodel timeline early, including permit approvals from your local CT building department, helps avoid costly delays.
Does a kitchen remodel increase home value in Connecticut?
Yes, a kitchen remodel can meaningfully increase home value in Connecticut, especially in competitive markets like Fairfield County and shoreline towns. Mid-range kitchen renovations are generally considered one of the stronger home investments for resale return. While exact ROI percentages vary by town and project scope, updated kitchens with quality countertops, modern appliances, and functional layouts consistently attract buyers and support higher listing prices in CT's real estate market.
What factors most influence kitchen renovation costs in CT?
Several factors drive the cost of a kitchen remodel in Connecticut: kitchen square footage, the extent of the renovation (cosmetic refresh vs. full gut job), material choices like granite or quartz countertops and custom cabinetry, labor costs from your general contractor, and your town's permitting fees. Location matters too, Fairfield County and coastal Connecticut towns typically carry higher labor and material pricing than inland areas. Project scope and design complexity are usually the biggest cost drivers.
How can I save money on a kitchen renovation in Connecticut?
To save money on a kitchen renovation in CT, consider keeping the existing layout to avoid costly plumbing and electrical rerouting. Opt for semi-custom cabinetry instead of fully custom, and compare quartz versus granite countertops for value. Getting multiple bids from licensed Connecticut contractors helps ensure competitive pricing. Scheduling your project during slower winter months may also yield better rates. Reusing appliances or fixtures in good condition is another practical way to reduce your overall renovation budget.
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