[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":934},["ShallowReactive",2],{"guide-renovation-cost-by-region":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"author":6,"body":7,"category":903,"description":904,"extension":905,"faq":906,"meta":922,"navigation":928,"path":929,"publishedAt":930,"seo":931,"stem":932,"updatedAt":930,"__hash__":933},"guides\u002Fen\u002Farticles\u002Frenovation-cost-by-region.md","Renovation Cost by Region in the US: How Much More You Pay by Market","Home Renovation Calculator Editorial Team",{"type":8,"value":9,"toc":880},"minimark",[10,14,17,20,25,30,33,36,43,47,50,53,57,60,63,67,70,74,172,176,286,290,408,412,480,484,490,496,502,507,523,528,542,546,550,637,641,719,723,785,789,795,801,807,813,816,822,824,827,860],[11,12,13],"p",{},"A mid-range kitchen remodel costs $50,000 on average nationally. In San Francisco, the same kitchen costs $75,000–$85,000. In rural Mississippi, it costs $30,000–$38,000.",[11,15,16],{},"Those are not outliers — they are the normal range of regional cost variation in US renovation markets. Using a national average figure to budget a renovation in your specific market can leave you underprepared by tens of thousands of dollars, or make you think a contractor's reasonable quote is inflated.",[11,18,19],{},"This guide breaks down renovation costs by US region, city, and state — with adjustment factors you can apply to any national estimate before talking to a contractor.",[21,22,24],"h2",{"id":23},"why-regional-costs-differ-so-much","Why Regional Costs Differ So Much",[26,27,29],"h3",{"id":28},"labor-wages-are-the-dominant-variable","Labor wages are the dominant variable",[11,31,32],{},"A licensed plumber in San Francisco earns $95–$130 per hour. The same trade in rural Alabama earns $40–$60 per hour. That 2x–3x difference in hourly wages directly translates to project cost, since labor represents 30–50% of most renovation budgets.",[11,34,35],{},"Trade wages follow local cost of living and market demand. Cities with high tech-sector employment, union labor markets, and high general cost of living have correspondingly higher trade wages.",[11,37,38,42],{},[39,40,41],"strong",{},"Source:"," BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics provides metro-level wage data for construction trades. These are the primary input for regional cost adjustment calculations.",[26,44,46],{"id":45},"code-complexity-and-permit-requirements","Code complexity and permit requirements",[11,48,49],{},"Some jurisdictions require more inspections, more detailed documentation, and stricter code compliance than others. California's Title 24 energy code, New York City's building regulations, and Chicago's specific code requirements all add compliance cost that simpler-code jurisdictions do not.",[11,51,52],{},"More permit complexity means more contractor administrative time, more inspections (each requiring site presence), and sometimes longer project timelines — all of which cost money.",[26,54,56],{"id":55},"market-demand-and-contractor-availability","Market demand and contractor availability",[11,58,59],{},"High-demand renovation markets — where construction activity is strong and homeowners are competing for available contractor schedules — support higher contractor margins. In these markets, contractors have more work than they can take and price accordingly.",[11,61,62],{},"In slower markets, competitive pressure keeps margins tighter. This demand-driven premium adds 5–15% in high-activity markets beyond the pure wage differential.",[21,64,66],{"id":65},"regional-cost-adjustment-table","Regional Cost Adjustment Table",[11,68,69],{},"The adjustment factors below are benchmarked against the national median (0%). These are planning tools — actual quotes in your specific market are the definitive source.",[26,71,73],{"id":72},"high-cost-metros-35-to-65-above-median","High-cost metros (+35% to +65% above median)",[75,76,77,93],"table",{},[78,79,80],"thead",{},[81,82,83,87,90],"tr",{},[84,85,86],"th",{},"Metro Area",[84,88,89],{},"Typical Adjustment",[84,91,92],{},"Notes",[94,95,96,108,119,130,140,151,162],"tbody",{},[81,97,98,102,105],{},[99,100,101],"td",{},"San Francisco Bay Area (SF\u002FOakland\u002FSan Jose)",[99,103,104],{},"+50% to +65%",[99,106,107],{},"Highest labor costs nationally",[81,109,110,113,116],{},[99,111,112],{},"New York City metro (NYC\u002FLong Island\u002FNJ near NYC)",[99,114,115],{},"+45% to +60%",[99,117,118],{},"Strong union market; high permit complexity",[81,120,121,124,127],{},[99,122,123],{},"Seattle \u002F Bellevue",[99,125,126],{},"+35% to +50%",[99,128,129],{},"Fast-growing market; high tech wages",[81,131,132,135,137],{},[99,133,134],{},"Boston metro",[99,136,126],{},[99,138,139],{},"Strong union presence; high cost of living",[81,141,142,145,148],{},[99,143,144],{},"Washington DC metro (DC\u002FArlington\u002FAlexandria)",[99,146,147],{},"+30% to +45%",[99,149,150],{},"High wages; complex permit environment",[81,152,153,156,159],{},[99,154,155],{},"Honolulu",[99,157,158],{},"+40% to +55%",[99,160,161],{},"Island logistics add material and shipping costs",[81,163,164,167,169],{},[99,165,166],{},"Anchorage",[99,168,126],{},[99,170,171],{},"Remote logistics; short building season",[26,173,175],{"id":174},"above-average-cost-metros-10-to-35-above-median","Above-average-cost metros (+10% to +35% above median)",[75,177,178,188],{},[78,179,180],{},[81,181,182,184,186],{},[84,183,86],{},[84,185,89],{},[84,187,92],{},[94,189,190,201,212,223,234,245,256,266,276],{},[81,191,192,195,198],{},[99,193,194],{},"Los Angeles \u002F Orange County",[99,196,197],{},"+25% to +40%",[99,199,200],{},"High wages; California code requirements",[81,202,203,206,209],{},[99,204,205],{},"San Diego",[99,207,208],{},"+20% to +35%",[99,210,211],{},"California code; high demand",[81,213,214,217,220],{},[99,215,216],{},"Denver \u002F Boulder",[99,218,219],{},"+15% to +30%",[99,221,222],{},"Fast-growing market; labor tightening",[81,224,225,228,231],{},[99,226,227],{},"Portland, OR",[99,229,230],{},"+15% to +25%",[99,232,233],{},"Oregon prevailing wage; strong union market",[81,235,236,239,242],{},[99,237,238],{},"Austin metro",[99,240,241],{},"+10% to +25%",[99,243,244],{},"Rapid growth; labor cost acceleration",[81,246,247,250,253],{},[99,248,249],{},"Chicago metro",[99,251,252],{},"+10% to +20%",[99,254,255],{},"Mixed union\u002Fnon-union; moderate overall",[81,257,258,261,263],{},[99,259,260],{},"Miami \u002F Fort Lauderdale",[99,262,241],{},[99,264,265],{},"Hurricane-grade requirements; hot market",[81,267,268,271,273],{},[99,269,270],{},"Sacramento",[99,272,230],{},[99,274,275],{},"California code; lower than SF Bay Area",[81,277,278,281,283],{},[99,279,280],{},"Minneapolis \u002F St. Paul",[99,282,252],{},[99,284,285],{},"Above-median wages; winter logistics",[26,287,289],{"id":288},"near-average-cost-metros-0-to-10-above-median","Near-average-cost metros (0% to +10% above median)",[75,291,292,302],{},[78,293,294],{},[81,295,296,298,300],{},[84,297,86],{},[84,299,89],{},[84,301,92],{},[94,303,304,315,325,335,346,357,368,378,387,398],{},[81,305,306,309,312],{},[99,307,308],{},"Atlanta metro",[99,310,311],{},"0% to +10%",[99,313,314],{},"Large competitive market; moderate wages",[81,316,317,320,322],{},[99,318,319],{},"Dallas \u002F Fort Worth",[99,321,311],{},[99,323,324],{},"Large market; competitive contractor base",[81,326,327,330,332],{},[99,328,329],{},"Houston metro",[99,331,311],{},[99,333,334],{},"Large market; competitive pricing",[81,336,337,340,343],{},[99,338,339],{},"Phoenix metro",[99,341,342],{},"-5% to +10%",[99,344,345],{},"Large market; varies by project type",[81,347,348,351,354],{},[99,349,350],{},"Charlotte",[99,352,353],{},"0% to +8%",[99,355,356],{},"Growing market; near-median labor",[81,358,359,362,365],{},[99,360,361],{},"Columbus",[99,363,364],{},"-5% to +5%",[99,366,367],{},"Near-median Midwest market",[81,369,370,373,375],{},[99,371,372],{},"Indianapolis",[99,374,364],{},[99,376,377],{},"Near-median market",[81,379,380,383,385],{},[99,381,382],{},"Kansas City",[99,384,364],{},[99,386,377],{},[81,388,389,392,395],{},[99,390,391],{},"Nashville",[99,393,394],{},"+5% to +15%",[99,396,397],{},"Fast growth pushing costs up",[81,399,400,403,405],{},[99,401,402],{},"Raleigh \u002F Durham",[99,404,311],{},[99,406,407],{},"Growth market; near-median labor",[26,409,411],{"id":410},"below-average-cost-metros-and-rural-markets-10-to-30-below-median","Below-average-cost metros and rural markets (-10% to -30% below median)",[75,413,414,425],{},[78,415,416],{},[81,417,418,421,423],{},[84,419,420],{},"Market Type",[84,422,89],{},[84,424,92],{},[94,426,427,438,449,459,470],{},[81,428,429,432,435],{},[99,430,431],{},"Rural Midwest (IA, KS, NE, SD, ND)",[99,433,434],{},"-15% to -25%",[99,436,437],{},"Lowest trade wages; lower demand",[81,439,440,443,446],{},[99,441,442],{},"Rural South (MS, AL, AR, LA rural areas)",[99,444,445],{},"-20% to -30%",[99,447,448],{},"Lowest labor costs nationally",[81,450,451,454,456],{},[99,452,453],{},"Rural Appalachia (WV, eastern KY, eastern TN)",[99,455,434],{},[99,457,458],{},"Low labor costs; potential access challenges",[81,460,461,464,467],{},[99,462,463],{},"Southeast secondary cities (non-metro)",[99,465,466],{},"-10% to -20%",[99,468,469],{},"Below-average wages; competitive market",[81,471,472,475,477],{},[99,473,474],{},"Midwest secondary cities (non-metro)",[99,476,466],{},[99,478,479],{},"Below-average wages; adequate supply",[21,481,483],{"id":482},"how-to-apply-these-adjustments","How to Apply These Adjustments",[11,485,486,489],{},[39,487,488],{},"Step 1:"," Find the national median estimate for your project type from our cost guides or calculators.",[11,491,492,495],{},[39,493,494],{},"Step 2:"," Identify your market's approximate adjustment factor from the tables above.",[11,497,498,501],{},[39,499,500],{},"Step 3:"," Calculate your adjusted range.",[11,503,504],{},[39,505,506],{},"Example calculation — San Francisco kitchen remodel:",[508,509,510,514,517,520],"ul",{},[511,512,513],"li",{},"National median: $30,000–$55,000 (mid-range)",[511,515,516],{},"SF adjustment: +55%",[511,518,519],{},"Adjusted range: $46,500–$85,250",[511,521,522],{},"Round to: $45,000–$85,000",[11,524,525],{},[39,526,527],{},"Example calculation — Rural Mississippi bathroom remodel:",[508,529,530,533,536,539],{},[511,531,532],{},"National median: $15,000–$30,000 (mid-range)",[511,534,535],{},"Rural South adjustment: -25%",[511,537,538],{},"Adjusted range: $11,250–$22,500",[511,540,541],{},"Round to: $11,000–$22,500",[21,543,545],{"id":544},"regional-cost-examples-by-project-type","Regional Cost Examples by Project Type",[26,547,549],{"id":548},"kitchen-remodel-mid-range-scope","Kitchen remodel (mid-range scope)",[75,551,552,565],{},[78,553,554],{},[81,555,556,559,562],{},[84,557,558],{},"Market",[84,560,561],{},"National Median: $30,000–$55,000",[84,563,564],{},"Adjusted Range",[94,566,567,577,587,597,607,617,627],{},[81,568,569,572,574],{},[99,570,571],{},"San Francisco Bay Area (+55%)",[99,573],{},[99,575,576],{},"$46,500–$85,250",[81,578,579,582,584],{},[99,580,581],{},"New York City metro (+50%)",[99,583],{},[99,585,586],{},"$45,000–$82,500",[81,588,589,592,594],{},[99,590,591],{},"Seattle (+40%)",[99,593],{},[99,595,596],{},"$42,000–$77,000",[81,598,599,602,604],{},[99,600,601],{},"Denver (+20%)",[99,603],{},[99,605,606],{},"$36,000–$66,000",[81,608,609,612,614],{},[99,610,611],{},"Atlanta (near median)",[99,613],{},[99,615,616],{},"$30,000–$55,000",[81,618,619,622,624],{},[99,620,621],{},"Rural Midwest (-20%)",[99,623],{},[99,625,626],{},"$24,000–$44,000",[81,628,629,632,634],{},[99,630,631],{},"Rural South (-25%)",[99,633],{},[99,635,636],{},"$22,500–$41,250",[26,638,640],{"id":639},"bathroom-remodel-mid-range-scope","Bathroom remodel (mid-range scope)",[75,642,643,654],{},[78,644,645],{},[81,646,647,649,652],{},[84,648,558],{},[84,650,651],{},"National Median: $15,000–$30,000",[84,653,564],{},[94,655,656,665,674,683,692,701,710],{},[81,657,658,660,662],{},[99,659,571],{},[99,661],{},[99,663,664],{},"$23,250–$46,500",[81,666,667,669,671],{},[99,668,581],{},[99,670],{},[99,672,673],{},"$22,500–$45,000",[81,675,676,678,680],{},[99,677,591],{},[99,679],{},[99,681,682],{},"$21,000–$42,000",[81,684,685,687,689],{},[99,686,601],{},[99,688],{},[99,690,691],{},"$18,000–$36,000",[81,693,694,696,698],{},[99,695,611],{},[99,697],{},[99,699,700],{},"$15,000–$30,000",[81,702,703,705,707],{},[99,704,621],{},[99,706],{},[99,708,709],{},"$12,000–$24,000",[81,711,712,714,716],{},[99,713,631],{},[99,715],{},[99,717,718],{},"$11,250–$22,500",[26,720,722],{"id":721},"roof-replacement-mid-range-2000-sq-ft-home-equivalent","Roof replacement (mid-range, 2,000 sq ft home equivalent)",[75,724,725,735],{},[78,726,727],{},[81,728,729,731,733],{},[84,730,558],{},[84,732,651],{},[84,734,564],{},[94,736,737,745,753,761,769,777],{},[81,738,739,741,743],{},[99,740,571],{},[99,742],{},[99,744,664],{},[81,746,747,749,751],{},[99,748,581],{},[99,750],{},[99,752,673],{},[81,754,755,757,759],{},[99,756,591],{},[99,758],{},[99,760,682],{},[81,762,763,765,767],{},[99,764,601],{},[99,766],{},[99,768,691],{},[81,770,771,773,775],{},[99,772,611],{},[99,774],{},[99,776,700],{},[81,778,779,781,783],{},[99,780,621],{},[99,782],{},[99,784,709],{},[21,786,788],{"id":787},"important-caveats","Important Caveats",[11,790,791,794],{},[39,792,793],{},"These are planning benchmarks, not quotes."," Regional adjustment factors are derived from BLS trade wage data and Cost vs. Value regional data. They represent typical market-level differences, not every contractor's individual pricing.",[11,796,797,800],{},[39,798,799],{},"Within-metro variation is real."," A quote for the same project in Manhattan versus Staten Island will differ. Urban core versus outer suburbs often shows 10–20% within-metro price variation.",[11,802,803,806],{},[39,804,805],{},"Current market conditions override historical averages."," If your local market is experiencing a construction surge (post-disaster rebuild, major development boom), prices may temporarily exceed historical benchmarks.",[11,808,809,812],{},[39,810,811],{},"Get 3+ quotes in your specific market."," Regional benchmarks are starting points. Three contractor quotes in your specific market are the only way to know what the actual current market is paying for your type and scope of project.",[814,815],"hr",{},[11,817,818],{},[819,820,821],"em",{},"Regional cost data in this guide uses BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (construction trades, metro-level) and Zonda Cost vs. Value metro data as primary inputs. Last reviewed: April 2, 2026.",[814,823],{},[11,825,826],{},"Get adjusted estimates for your project type and scope:",[508,828,829,836,842,848,854],{},[511,830,831],{},[832,833,835],"a",{"href":834},"\u002Fcalculators\u002Fkitchen-remodel-cost","Kitchen Remodel Cost Calculator",[511,837,838],{},[832,839,841],{"href":840},"\u002Fcalculators\u002Fbathroom-renovation-cost","Bathroom Renovation Calculator",[511,843,844],{},[832,845,847],{"href":846},"\u002Fcalculators\u002Froof-replacement-cost","Roof Replacement Calculator",[511,849,850],{},[832,851,853],{"href":852},"\u002Fcalculators\u002Fwhole-house-remodel-cost","Whole House Remodel Calculator",[511,855,856],{},[832,857,859],{"href":858},"\u002Fcalculators\u002Fsiding-replacement-cost","Siding Replacement Calculator",[11,861,862,863,867,868,867,872,867,876],{},"Also see: ",[832,864,866],{"href":865},"\u002Fguides\u002Fhow-regional-cost-adjustments-work","How Regional Cost Adjustments Work"," | ",[832,869,871],{"href":870},"\u002Fguides\u002Frenovation-cost-by-home-size","Renovation Cost by Home Size",[832,873,875],{"href":874},"\u002Fguides\u002Frenovation-scope-levels-explained","Renovation Scope Levels Explained",[832,877,879],{"href":878},"\u002Fguides\u002Fmethodology","Our Methodology",{"title":881,"searchDepth":882,"depth":882,"links":883},"",2,[884,890,896,897,902],{"id":23,"depth":882,"text":24,"children":885},[886,888,889],{"id":28,"depth":887,"text":29},3,{"id":45,"depth":887,"text":46},{"id":55,"depth":887,"text":56},{"id":65,"depth":882,"text":66,"children":891},[892,893,894,895],{"id":72,"depth":887,"text":73},{"id":174,"depth":887,"text":175},{"id":288,"depth":887,"text":289},{"id":410,"depth":887,"text":411},{"id":482,"depth":882,"text":483},{"id":544,"depth":882,"text":545,"children":898},[899,900,901],{"id":548,"depth":887,"text":549},{"id":639,"depth":887,"text":640},{"id":721,"depth":887,"text":722},{"id":787,"depth":882,"text":788},"guide","Real renovation cost differences by US region — with adjustment factors by city and state, why labor drives most of the variance, and how to use regional benchmarks before requesting quotes.","md",[907,910,913,916,919],{"question":908,"answer":909},"Which US cities have the most expensive renovation costs?","San Francisco, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and Washington DC consistently rank as the most expensive renovation markets nationally. Projects in these metros typically run 40–65% above the national median. The primary driver is trade labor wages, which are 50–80% higher than national averages in these markets.",{"question":911,"answer":912},"Which US states have the lowest renovation costs?","Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, West Virginia, and rural areas of the Midwest consistently show the lowest renovation labor costs — typically 20–30% below the national median. However, material costs do not vary as dramatically, so total project savings compared to a national median estimate are typically 15–25%, not 30%.",{"question":914,"answer":915},"How do I apply regional cost data to a renovation estimate?","Take the national median estimate from a cost guide or calculator, find your region's adjustment factor, and multiply. A $50,000 national median project in a market with a +40% adjustment costs approximately $70,000. A $50,000 project in a market with a -20% adjustment costs approximately $40,000. Then validate with 3 contractor quotes in your specific market.",{"question":917,"answer":918},"Does renovation cost vary within a single city?","Yes. Urban core versus suburbs can see 10–20% differences even within the same metro area. Permit jurisdiction, contractor density, traffic and access constraints, and neighborhood demand patterns all create within-metro variation. The metro-level adjustments on this page are directional; actual quotes in your specific zip code are the definitive source.",{"question":920,"answer":921},"Why does the same project cost so much more in California?","Multiple factors combine: among the highest trade wages nationally, strong prevailing wage and licensing requirements, relatively strict building codes and permit complexity, high cost-of-living affecting contractor overhead, and consistently high demand for renovation services. Material costs are modestly higher due to California's environmental and building code requirements for materials.",{"related_tools":923},[924,925,926,927],"kitchen-remodel-cost","bathroom-renovation-cost","whole-house-remodel-cost","roof-replacement-cost",true,"\u002Fen\u002Farticles\u002Frenovation-cost-by-region","2026-04-02",{"title":5,"description":904},"en\u002Farticles\u002Frenovation-cost-by-region","Ffn8ZipVdUTXJ9SU5v1Vq6FWg12wgsuLMDLYqjra7aA",1775510400464]