When we first started planning our project, I had no idea where to start. I didn’t have a clue how much anything cost or how long each process would take. I took careful notes throughout the entire home remodeling process so I could share what we learned with all of you! First, I’ll share with you our general timeline so you can see how long each part of the process took, but be aware that much of this is dependent on the schedule of your sub-contractors and may change if when you encounter any problems. After we talk about home renovation timelines, I’ll share with you our construction and remodel budget so you can see where all the money went. Yes, this is our REAL budget! If you’re just joining us, be sure to check out this post on how I inherited this house, and this post on how to begin planning a remodel.
Timeline
You may be wondering what order to do home renovations. Here’s why it is important to do it in this order:
- Planning: hopefully you understand the importance of planning everything out before you get started! Determine your scope of work, and do what you can to get rough estimates from sub-contractors to help solidify your budget. Make a list of what can be put off and what needs to be done now. Acquire any plans and permits necessary to complete the work.
- Demolition: Things have to get worse before they get better! Get all of that old crap OUT of the house. You may want to rent a dumpster. Once you get all of the old cabinets and vanities out of the way, have your cabinet makers drop by to measure. It will take a few weeks for them to build and stain the cabinets, so you better get going on them early.
- Electrical and Plumbing Rough-In: First of all, rough-in refers to the work that is done behind the walls or beneath the floors. This should be done before you take care of drywall, paint, and flooring so you don’t have to damage anything by trying to re-wire electrical or bring plumbing up through the floor. You’ll need to have a schematic of your kitchen and bath plans (and any other room requiring plumbing or electrical work) available to your sub-contractors so they know what the end goal is. Your electrical won’t know where to put light switches or outlets if he doesn’t know where your cabinets or fridge will be! Your sub-contractors can also help give you direction towards purchasing the right products. You don’t want to buy a bath tub that won’t work in the space!
- Framing & Drywall: You might use the same sub-contractors for framing and drywall, or you might have one outfit do the framing and another come in to take care of putting up the drywall and texturizing the walls. Once the drywall is done, you’re done with all of the nasty work and now you get to put all the pretty new stuff into the space!
- Paint: If you had any drywall work done, they likely put down plastic and taped off the areas where they were working. Check to make sure the seals are still good, then you can tape off anything else that needs to be protected from paint. For large projects, professionals use paint sprayers and the residue gets just about anywhere that isn’t taped off!
- Cabinets & Fixtures: Ready for the fun stuff? This is when it really starts coming together! Get those cabinets installed so you can sort out your countertops. Work with your electrician and plumber to install fixtures and finish work. For example, we installed a new free-standing bath tub, so the plumber did the rough-in work of making sure we had water/drain access in the right places before the drywallers came in. At this stage, we had the plumber come back to actually set the tub and hook up the faucet. This is also when we had our fireplace refinished with cultured stone.
- Doors & Window Surrounds: If you are installing any carpet in any of your rooms, you’ll want to have the interior and closet doors hung in those rooms prior to installation. You can usually install laminate flooring before the doors are hung.
- Clean House & Air Vents: Sweep or use a shop vacuum to remove any remaining debris from the house. Hire professionals to come clean out your air vents and furnace. There’s likely a lot of construction debris in the vents!
- Flooring: Install carpet, tile, and any remaining laminate flooring. Cover the air vents if you are cutting any flooring in the house.
- Trim & Finish Work: The last thing to do before you move on in is install the trim and finish work. Most of the dirty work was done in step 7, but the baseboards and door frames will probably be nailed up at this stage.
Here’s how this worked out with our timeline (remember, we also had to work around all the crazy holidays!):
Budget
Our budget for the entire project was $100,000. Holy CRAP, right?! That’s a LOT of money.
I won’t lie; it was a little freaky blowing through that much money in just 3 months. I tried to remind myself that we weren’t really “blowing” money, but we were just sort of transferring it from our bank account into our home equity. Just remember, all that hard work and investment creates additional equity in the house! (If you do it right, that is.) Here’s a breakdown of where that money went:
Demolition: $0 (we did it ourselves!) New appliances: $8,833 Fridge: $1,849 Oven: $1,388 Gas Range: $0 (repurposed) Dishwasher: $999 Microwave: $809 Washing Machine: $989 Dryer: $799 TV: $2,000 Electrical: $4,599 Labor: $1,700 Supplies: $419 Fixtures: $1,806 Bath fan: $110 Pantry Lighting: $80 Studio Lighting: $24 7 Flush mount Ceiling Light for Bedrooms, Closets, Hall: $154 Stairway Sconce: $55 Living Room Sconce: $55 New Globes for Downstairs Fan: $23 Master Bedroom Ceiling Fan: $75 Tub Area Lighting: $60 Vanity Lighting in Bathrooms (2): $229 Kitchen Floodlighting: $88 Master Bath Can Light: $24 Track Lighting for Kitchen: $200 Track Lighting for Living Room: $200 Under Cabinet LED Lighting: $151 Dining Room Lighting: $80 Entry Way Chandelier: $198 Smoke Detector Alarms: $50 Carbon Monoxide Alarm: $40 New Switches, Receptacles, Dimmers, and Covers: $584 Plumbing: $6,443 Labor: $1,680 Fixtures: $1,445 Tub Filler: $638 Instant Hot Tap: $213 2 Toilets: $420 2 rain shower heads: $52 1 tub/shower fixture replacement kit: $122 New Bathtub: $1,343 Bath and shower refinishing: $1,525 Kitchen Sink, faucet, and bathroom faucets: $0 (provided by Kraus!) Bathroom sinks (2): $263 Downstairs Tub Surround: $187 Bathroom Accessories: $145 Shower Rod: $50 2 toilet paper holders: $37 2 hand towel holders: $26 1 towel bar): $32 Framing: $2,275 Materials: $225 Labor: $2,000 Drywall Labor & Materials: $4,600 Doors, Window Surrounds and Trim: $18,706 Installation for Doors, Trim, and Window surrounds: $3,200 Door Stops: $23 Keyless Entry System: $233 Door Locks and Hardware: $550 Manufacturing & Staining: $14,700 Paint: $926 Behr Marquee Paint: $0 (Provided by Behr!) Paint Labor: $800 Supplies: $126 Tile & Labor (kitchen and bathrooms): $900 Carpet, pad, and installation: $1,713 Laminate and pad: $6,506 Cabinets (Kitchen, both bathrooms, laundry): $15,400 Cabinet Hardware: $750 Kitchen: $500 Bathrooms: $200 Laundry: $50 Concrete Countertops (kitchen, both bathrooms, laundry room): $6,240 Masonry + Glass Fireplace Doors: $3,100 Supplies: $303 Chip Board: $254 Underlayment Paper: $36 Protective Plastic: $13 Pantry Storage: $180 Kitchen Eating Bar Slab: $800 New Fireplace Mantle: $800 Air duct cleaning: $450 Expenses related to maintain dual residences: $3,000
GRAND TOTAL: $86,669 Well, there you have it! A complete rundown of our remodel construction timeline and budget.
You’re probably wondering how I knew how much to spend on each of these items without having a budget to work from to begin with, right? I mean, I didn’t just contract for all this stuff and happen to come out at a grand total under my maximum budget. I’m awesome, but I’m not that awesome.
Where Do I Start?
Basically, I put together a spreadsheet in Microsoft Excel and just started coming up with categories. I didn’t really know where to start, so I just started adding line items for the things I knew I wanted and took a guess at how much they would cost. For example, I knew I wanted one of those cool, ultra-modern free standing bath tubs and I though they probably cost about $600. WRONG! Try $1,300 on sale! I also knew we wanted to replace all of the electrical switches, receptacles, and covers in the house. With the cost of product and labor, I thought we’d be looking at close to $1,500. Wrong again! All in, we spent about $585 and I installed all of that stuff myself (with the help of my parents, of course!). You have to start somewhere, so just start making a list and then do some online research or call around to ask about costs. Because I’m a freakishly-over-prepared type person, I also included the cost associated with maintaining two residences (property taxes, insurance, etc.) into our budget so I could keep track of what the “real” cost of the project would be.
What about Labor Costs?
The most difficult thing to budget for is the cost of labor. Sometimes I hear people say that labor will account for 30% of your total budget. For us, the total cost of our labor was close to $15,000. Granted, it is sometimes hard to determine if a line item counts as labor or materials. Take our concrete countertops for example. Our contractor isn’t charging us “x” amount for materials and “x” amount for labor; the cost is simply determined by square footage. Our contractor is “laboring” to make our counters, but in the end he is simply delivering us with a “product.” I didn’t count our countertops as “labor” for this reason. Generally speaking, if you can breakdown a cost “by the hour”, it’s probably a labor expense. Budgeting for actual labor costs (like when you are paying an electrician or plumber for their time on the job) is made even more difficult by the fact that you don’t know how long a given project will take. You have no idea what kind of electrical nightmares may be lurking behind your walls, or how difficult it might be to move plumbing around to get your ideal kitchen layout. If you are working with a general contractor, your contractor should be able to give you an idea of how much labor costs should be for a given project. Of course, in order to do so you will have to know exactly what needs to be done so your general can estimate the time that it would take a subcontractor.
The Dreaded Contingency Budget
The best thing I did in our budgeting and planning process was build a contingency budget into our plan. Most people will tell you to budget for 10-20% contingency depending on the complexity of your project. If you are just installing new flooring, updating fixtures, painting, etc., a 10% contingency budget will do just fine. If you are moving walls, changing any plumbing or electrical, or pretty much doing anything in the kitchen, I’d plan for a 20% contingency budget. I know that this sounds CRAZY because you need every penny you have to do the remodel, right? Well, here’s the fun part: Plan everything like you only have 80% of your total budget to get it done. Once the walls are closed up, you get to consider spending that money again. Generally speaking, the vast majority of things that could go wrong will happen or be discovered between demolition and drywall. This is the time when you find faulty wiring, leaky pipes, black mold, termites, cracked foundations, etc. Once you get through that stage, you can use what you have left of your contingency budget to do the fun stuff and splurge for that awesome chandelier you love instead of going with the boring pendant light. It’s like finding surprise money! You may have noticed that while our renovation budget was $100,000, our total came out to $86,669. What are we going to do with the leftover $13,331, you ask?
Well, we have a few ideas!
I’d love to get your opinion on what we should spend it on: Who knows… if I budget it correctly, maybe we could do all three! I’d love for you to keep in touch! You can enter your email address below to get new recipes (and remodel updates!) sent to you. Join me on Facebook and Pinterest!! Special thanks to Behr and Kraus for sponsoring this series!