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Download our full price list for residential and commercial renovation services.
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
Ready to Renovate?
We’ll call you back to discuss the details
What Affects Remodeling Costs in Phoenix?
There is no single number that fits every remodeling project. The biggest differences usually come from scope, layout complexity, finish level, and how many parts of the home are affected.
Service includes:
- Dismantling of old coatings
- Installation of drywall
- Leveling of walls
- Priming of walls
- Leveling of ceilings
- Priming of ceilings
- Replacing electrical wiring
- Replacing of hot water, hot water and sewage pipes
- Installation of utility lines
Service includes:
- Painting walls
- Wallpapering
- Painting the ceiling
- Installation of suspended structures
- Laminate laying
- Flooring
- Replacing windows, doors
- Finishing work
Service includes:
- Dismantling of old coatings
- Floor screed
- Wall leveling
- Wall priming
- Ceiling leveling
- Ceiling priming
- Replacement of electrical wiring
- Replacement of DHW, DHW and sewage pipes
- Installation of utility lines
- Painting of walls
- Wallpapering
- Painting of ceilings
- Installation of suspended structures
- Laminate laying
- Flooring flooring
- Replacement of windows, doors
- Finishing work
Service includes:
- Architectural and planning solutions
- Engineering projects for air conditioning, heating, alarm systems
- Replacement of electrical wiring
- Replacement of HVS, DHW and sewage pipes
- Installation of engineering routes
- Plastering
- Putting
- Ceiling decoration
- Wall decoration
- Flooring
- Bathroom decoration
- Installation of plumbing
- Installation of the “smart home” system
- Installation of furniture, accessories
Start with a Smarter Budget Conversation
Remodeling costs can vary widely based on project type, layout changes, material selections, and how much of the home is involved.
Remodeling costs can vary more than many homeowners expect. The biggest differences usually come from project scope, layout changes, finish level, and how much of the home is involved. Before comparing numbers too literally, it helps to understand what those prices are actually meant to represent.
A price list can help you understand general cost levels, but it cannot fully define the cost of every project on its own. Final pricing usually depends on scope, layout changes, finish level, and how much of the home is involved. The more clearly the project is defined, the more useful a price-based estimate becomes. “Price from” usually refers to a starting point rather than a universal final number. It can help show how a project category begins, but the actual price may change depending on the size of the space, the amount of work involved, the materials selected, and the overall complexity of the remodel. Two projects may sound similar at a glance but involve very different levels of work. Layout changes, finish choices, space size, existing conditions, and the number of affected areas can all shift the cost. That is why broad price comparisons are helpful for planning, but not always enough to define a final project budget. Project pricing can change if the scope changes, if selections change, or if the project turns out to involve more work than expected once details are reviewed more closely. Clearer scope and better planning early on usually make pricing conversations more accurate and easier to understand. Scope affects almost everything in remodeling, including how much work is involved, how many spaces are affected, and how detailed the planning needs to be. A clearer scope helps turn a broad price question into a more useful estimate conversation. Usually not. A single number may be useful as a rough reference point, but it rarely reflects the real differences between smaller updates, larger remodels, and broader multi-space projects. Remodeling prices make more sense when they are tied to the actual type and scope of the work. The estimate usually becomes more useful when the project goals are clearer. It helps to know which space is involved, what is not working well, whether layout changes are likely, and how broad the project may be before pricing is discussed in more detail.Is it possible to estimate the cost of remodeling based on the price list?
What does “price from” mean?
Why can remodeling prices vary so much from one project to another?
Does the price change during the remodeling process?
Why does project scope matter so much before asking for pricing?
Can one average price apply to every remodeling project?
What helps make a remodeling estimate more accurate?

