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FigureCalc

Renovation Cost Calculator

By Uzair Arshad , Senior Civil and Structural Engineer

Last updated: April 20, 2026

Use this home improvement cost estimator to build a realistic budget before you request contractor bids. Select your scope of work and finish quality, then enter renovation area, labor market factor, and contingency reserve. You get a clear low-to-high budget, cost per square foot, and line-item allowances for demolition, permits, design, and contingency.

What level of work are you planning?

What quality level of materials and fixtures?

How to use this calculator

This home improvement cost estimator helps you set a realistic budget before you meet contractors. Whether you need a whole house renovation cost calculator or want to estimate a single floor, select your scope of work and finish quality, enter three numeric values, and get a total range, cost per square foot, and line-item allowances that match how real bids are structured.

  1. Measure the renovation area in square feet. Include only the space you plan to remodel now. If your project has separate phases, run each phase separately to avoid under-budgeting labor and permit carryover.
  2. Select your scope of work from the dropdown. Choose cosmetic refresh for paint, flooring, and fixture swaps. Choose standard full remodel for kitchen and bath replacements. Choose heavy systems or gut renovation if the work touches framing, plumbing, electrical, or structural elements.
  3. Select your finish quality. Basic covers stock finishes and builder-grade fixtures. Mid-grade covers standard packages from home centers. Premium and luxury selections apply when you are using custom cabinets, stone counters, high-end appliances, or imported tile.
  4. Set the labor market factor based on your area. Many suburban markets sit near 1.00. Major metro labor markets often land near 1.15 to 1.30. This one input can move the final estimate more than material choices.
  5. Set contingency reserve. Use 10% for newer homes with limited risk, and 15% to 20% for older homes where hidden plumbing, electrical, or moisture damage might appear after demolition.
  6. Click Estimate renovation cost and compare results to itemized quotes. Match each bid line against base work, demolition, permits, design, and contingency so you are comparing equal scope.

Pro tip: ask each contractor for the same allowance assumptions before they price. I have seen two bids differ by 35% on the same house because one contractor included permit corrections and finish carpentry punch work while another left them out.

Common mistake: homeowners choose finish level first and ignore labor and contingency. In practice, local labor and hidden-condition risk often change the final number more than tile or fixture upgrades. Use this renovation cost calculator as a home improvement cost estimator before you lock in financing, so your loan amount covers the full project scope.

How the calculation works

Base Scope:
Base scope (low) = Area (sq ft) × $25 × Scope factor × Finish factor × Labor factor
Base scope (high) = Area (sq ft) × $70 × Scope factor × Finish factor × Labor factor

Demolition:
Demolition (low) = Area (sq ft) × $2.50 × Scope factor × Labor factor
Demolition (high) = Area (sq ft) × $7.50 × Scope factor × Labor factor

Soft Costs:
Permits = 2% to 5% of base scope
Design fees = 4% to 8% of base scope

Total Budget:
Subtotal = Base scope + Demolition + Permits + Design fees
Contingency = Subtotal × Contingency reserve %
Total budget = Subtotal + Contingency
Cost per sq ft = Total budget / Area (sq ft)
Area (sq ft)
Total renovation area in square feet
Scope factor
Multiplier for work complexity: cosmetic refresh 0.90, standard remodel 1.00, heavy systems 1.40, gut renovation 1.75
Finish factor
Multiplier for material quality: basic 0.90, mid-grade 1.00, premium 1.30, luxury 1.55
Labor factor
Regional labor market multiplier (1.00 = national average)
Contingency reserve %
Reserve percentage for hidden conditions and change orders (typically 10% to 20%)

This renovation cost calculator combines base renovation pricing with the allowances homeowners usually miss. It starts with area and multiplies by scope, finish, and labor factors, then adds demolition, permit, design, and contingency layers for a more complete budget model.

The model is transparent, so you can adjust one assumption at a time and see how the total changes. This helps when you compare bids from contractors who include different line items in their proposals. Use it as a house renovation budget calculator before finalizing financing or signing contracts.

Example: 1,200 sq ft standard renovation with mid-grade finishes

Given:

  • Area = 1,200 sq ft
  • Scope factor = 1.15 (between standard remodel and heavy systems)
  • Finish factor = 1.05 (slightly above mid-grade)
  • Labor factor = 1.10 (moderate metro area)
  • Contingency reserve = 12%

Calculations:

  • Base scope (low) = 1,200 × $25 × 1.15 × 1.05 × 1.10 = $39,848
  • Base scope (high) = 1,200 × $70 × 1.15 × 1.05 × 1.10 = $111,574
  • Demolition allowance = $3,796 to $11,385
  • Permit and inspection allowance = $797 to $5,579
  • Design and project management = $1,594 to $8,926
  • Subtotal = $46,034 to $137,464
  • Contingency at 12% = $5,524 to $16,496
  • Total estimated budget = $51,558 to $153,960
  • Cost per sq ft = $43 to $128

You can shift the range fast by adjusting scope and labor factors, then rerunning the home remodeling budget calculator to compare scenarios.

Labor typically accounts for 30% to 50% of the base renovation scope in most residential projects. To estimate labor cost for a home renovation separately, multiply the base scope estimate by 0.35 as a starting point, then adjust for your local labor factor. High-cost metros like San Francisco or New York run closer to 0.45 to 0.50 of base scope.

Typical planning ranges by project size (2026)

These examples use scope 1.00, finish 1.00, labor 1.00, and 12% contingency. Use them as a baseline before you apply local factors.

Renovation area Estimated total range Cost per sq ft range Typical use case
400 sq ft$11,546 to $32,536$29 to $81Two-room refresh or kitchen and bath upgrade
800 sq ft$23,093 to $65,072$29 to $81Partial first-floor renovation
1,200 sq ft$34,639 to $97,608$29 to $81Main-level whole-home remodel
1,800 sq ft$51,958 to $146,412$29 to $81Whole-house renovation in moderate condition
2,500 sq ft$72,165 to $203,350$29 to $81Large home renovation with bundled trades

Assumptions and limitations

This cost calculator for renovation of a house uses 2026 US national averages. Your actual cost of renovations depends on local material prices, contractor availability, and site conditions that the calculator cannot measure remotely.

  • Base rates assume standard residential construction. Commercial or mixed-use buildings require separate estimates.
  • Demolition allowances cover interior selective demo, not structural teardown or hazardous material abatement.
  • Permit costs vary widely by municipality. Some jurisdictions charge flat fees, others charge a percentage of project value.
  • Hidden conditions behind walls (mold, outdated wiring, failing plumbing) can push actual costs 15% to 30% above the high estimate.
  • The calculator does not include temporary housing costs, storage rental, or landscaping restoration after construction.

Treat results as a planning range, not a guaranteed price. The cost of renovating a home shifts once contractors inspect the structure and provide itemized bids.

Another common mistake is treating permit and inspection corrections as optional. Local code comments can force extra labor and material late in the schedule. Keep those allowances in your first budget so financing stays stable when the project moves from planning to execution.

Use this renovation cost calculator as a starting benchmark, then request two or three itemized bids. If one proposal is far lower, ask what was excluded before you sign a contract.

For a full breakdown of how each budget category adds up, see our home renovation cost breakdown by category.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a home renovation cost per square foot?

Most whole-home renovation projects in 2026 land around $30 to $115 per square foot after permits, design, and contingency. Cosmetic updates often stay near the low end. Structural changes, premium finishes, and high-cost labor markets push totals higher. Use this renovation cost calculator to compare scope levels before bidding.

How do you calculate renovation costs for a house?

Multiply your renovation area by a cost-per-square-foot range based on scope and finish level. Add demolition, permits, design fees, and a contingency reserve on top. This home renovation cost calculator automates that stack so you can compare contractors on equal assumptions and catch missing line items before signing.

How much contingency should I include in renovation costs?

Use at least 10% contingency for straightforward remodeling and 15% to 20% for older homes or projects with plumbing, electrical, or structural work. Hidden conditions behind walls are common. A reserve protects your schedule and cash flow when changes appear after demolition starts.

What renovation costs are most often missed?

Permits, inspection corrections, demolition disposal, and temporary living costs are often under-budgeted. Homeowners also miss panel upgrades, HVAC balancing, and finish carpentry touch-ups. Missing these items can shift a project by thousands of dollars, so include them early in your renovation budget baseline.

Is it cheaper to renovate room by room or all at once?

Room-by-room work lowers short-term spending but often raises total project cost because crews mobilize repeatedly and permits are duplicated. Bundled renovation phases usually reduce setup waste and shorten total duration. If your financing allows, coordinated scopes often deliver better overall value.

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