If one contractor quotes $95,000, another quotes $120,000, and a third quotes $145,000 for the same remodel, you're often not comparing the same project. Differences in planning, allowances, materials, project management, warranty support, and scope can dramatically affect pricing. Understanding what's included in each proposal is far more important than comparing the final number alone.
One of the most common questions homeowners ask during the remodeling process is:
“How can multiple contractors look at the same project and come back with prices that are tens of thousands of dollars apart?”
It’s a fair question.
If you’re considering a kitchen remodel, addition, bathroom remodel, or whole-home renovation, it’s not unusual to receive proposals that vary significantly in price.
Does that mean one contractor is overcharging?
Does it mean another is cutting corners?
Not necessarily.
In many cases, the real issue is that you may not be comparing the same project at all. After helping hundreds of homeowners evaluate remodeling investments, we've found that proposal differences are often less about overcharging and more about differences in planning, assumptions, and project management.
Here’s what homeowners should understand before choosing a remodeling partner.
Many homeowners assume every contractor is pricing the exact same project.
In reality, two or three contractors can walk through the same home, listen to the same goals, and leave with very different assumptions about what is included.
One proposal may include:
Another proposal may include only the basic construction work.
On paper, both may be called a “kitchen remodel.”
In practice, they may be very different projects.
That’s why it’s important to look beyond the final number and understand what each contractor is actually including.
Early estimates are often built around allowances. These allowances are educated guesses for products that have not been fully selected yet.
For example:
|
Item |
Proposal A |
Proposal B |
Proposal C |
|
Cabinets |
$18,000 |
$28,000 |
$40,000 |
|
Countertops |
$3,000 |
$6,000 |
$9,000 |
|
Plumbing Fixtures |
$1,500 |
$3,000 |
$5,000 |
None of these contractors are necessarily wrong.
Each may be trying to price what they believe the homeowner wants. The challenge is that products can vary dramatically in quality, durability, warranty coverage, and installation requirements.
Many homeowners hear “solid wood cabinets” and assume all cabinets are similar.
In reality, cabinets may use particle board construction, plywood construction, laminated finger-jointed materials, different drawer systems, and different hardware packages.
Some cabinets may come from liquidators with limited support. Others may come directly from manufacturers with warranties ranging from one year to several decades.
All of them may be marketed as “solid wood cabinets.”
Two quartz countertops can look nearly identical in a showroom.
However, they may come from different manufacturers, have different durability standards, different warranty coverage, and different fabrication requirements.
The quality of the installation team also matters. A beautiful product can still be disappointing if it is measured, fabricated, or installed poorly.
Fixtures are another area where pricing can vary dramatically.
Two faucets may appear nearly identical online or in a showroom. One may use plastic internal components with limited replacement-part availability. Another may use solid brass construction with serviceable parts available for decades.
The difference in cost can be significant, but so can the difference in longevity.
The challenge with low allowances is that they often lead to one of two outcomes: homeowners either spend more than expected once selections are finalized, or they choose lower-quality products to stay within budget.
That’s one reason we spend significant time during Project Development helping homeowners make decisions before construction begins.
The more decisions made upfront, the fewer surprises later.
At McLennan Contracting, we don’t jump directly from an initial consultation to construction.
Instead, we guide homeowners through a Project Development phase that includes design, planning, budgeting, and scope refinement.
Why?
Because remodeling existing homes is complex.
Behind the walls of a home built 20, 40, or 100 years ago, there are often surprises waiting to be discovered. When projects are not thoroughly planned, those surprises tend to show up during construction.
That can lead to:
Comprehensive planning is not free, but it helps create a more predictable remodeling experience.
One helpful question to ask any contractor is:
“How much did your average client spend on change orders last year?”
Change orders are not always avoidable. Sometimes hidden conditions are discovered once walls, floors, or ceilings are opened. But a thoughtful planning process can reduce the number of decisions, surprises, and cost changes that happen after construction begins.
When homeowners compare proposals, they often focus on the visible parts of the project:
Those things matter, of course.
But a successful remodel also depends heavily on the team and systems behind the work.
Depending on the company, your investment may include:
These resources increase overhead, but they also help projects run more smoothly.
They affect how clearly you understand the schedule, who answers your questions, how clean the jobsite is kept, how issues are handled, and how confident you feel throughout the project.
That may not show up as a line item in a proposal, but it has a major impact on your remodeling experience.
Before choosing a contractor based on price alone, ask questions that reveal how the project will actually be handled.
These answers often reveal more than the price itself.
They reveal the organization, communication, and accountability of the team that will be working in your home.
At the end of the day, remodeling is not just about purchasing construction.
You are investing in:
Different companies provide different levels of those services.
That is one of the biggest reasons prices vary.
A lower proposal may be perfectly appropriate for some homeowners and some projects. But before assuming it is the better value, it is important to understand what is included, what is assumed, and what may be decided later.
If one contractor quotes $95,000, another quotes $120,000, and another quotes $145,000, it does not automatically mean one is overpriced or another is cutting corners.
More often, it means you are comparing different assumptions, different planning processes, different products, and different levels of service.
The goal is not simply to find the lowest number.
The goal is to understand what you are getting for your investment and choose the remodeling partner whose process, communication, and approach best align with your family’s goals.
At McLennan Contracting, we believe homeowners deserve clear information before making a major investment. That is why we prioritize planning, transparency, and education throughout every stage of the remodeling journey.
Because when expectations are clear from the beginning, homeowners are far more likely to enjoy both the remodeling process and the finished result.