Five principles for any small budget
Before any specific budget plan, internalize these five rules. They're the difference between a $15,000 remodel that looks $50,000 and a $15,000 remodel that looks like you spent $15,000:
- Don't move plumbing or gas. The single biggest cost driver in a kitchen remodel is moving the sink, dishwasher, or gas range. Leaving them where they are saves $2,000–$8,000.
- Refresh, don't replace, when you can. Painting cabinets vs. replacing them is the classic example: 90% of the visual impact at 15% of the cost.
- Prioritize what's eye-level. Buyers and visitors notice cabinets, counters, backsplash, and lighting in that order. Spend the budget where eyes land.
- Mix tiers strategically. Budget cabinets paired with mid-tier countertops look better than mid-tier cabinets with budget countertops. Counters are 50 sq ft of high-visibility surface — splurge here.
- DIY the labor-light, high-impact tasks. Painting, hardware swaps, fixture replacements, and assembly can save $2,000–$5,000 and require modest skill.
The $5,000 plan: cosmetic refresh
At $5,000, you're not remodeling — you're refreshing. The goal is to make a tired kitchen look intentional and current. This budget assumes 70% DIY labor.
What you can do
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Paint cabinets (DIY, with quality paint and sprayer rental) | $350 |
| New cabinet hardware (pulls + knobs, ~30 pieces) | $300 |
| Peel-and-stick or affordable tile backsplash (DIY) | $400 |
| New faucet (mid-tier, e.g., Moen or Delta) | $250 |
| New under-cabinet LED strip lighting (DIY) | $200 |
| Replace one or two appliances if necessary (used or open-box) | $1,500 |
| Wall paint & trim refresh | $300 |
| New pendant light over island/sink (DIY install) | $200 |
| Decorative items (bar stools, runner, accessories) | $700 |
| Contingency (15%) | $700 |
| Total | $4,900 |
The before/after impact of this scope is dramatic. The 2-3 weekend project transforms a kitchen from dated to current without touching the layout, cabinets, or counters. This is the highest ROI plan in this guide for owners staying 1–2 years before selling.
The $10,000 plan: meaningful upgrade
At $10,000, you can keep the cosmetic refresh and add new countertops, which is the single most-noticed upgrade in any kitchen.
What you can do
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Paint cabinets (professional sprayer) | $1,500 |
| New cabinet hardware | $300 |
| Quartz countertops (~40 sq ft, entry-level) | $2,800 |
| New stainless undermount sink | $300 |
| New mid-tier faucet | $300 |
| Real ceramic or porcelain tile backsplash (DIY install) | $700 |
| Replace dishwasher or microwave (mid-tier) | $700 |
| Under-cabinet LED + 2 new pendants | $500 |
| Wall paint, trim, baseboards | $400 |
| Plumbing reconnect for new sink & faucet (licensed plumber) | $400 |
| Decorative items, bar stools | $700 |
| Contingency (15%) | $1,300 |
| Total | $9,900 |
This budget transforms the kitchen visually and functionally. The new counters and tile backsplash give it a "real remodel" appearance, while painted cabinets and new hardware modernize the rest. Often the difference between a kitchen that feels "okay" and one that feels "we just got this place."
The $15,000 plan: near-full update
At $15,000, you can do everything in the $10k plan plus a full appliance upgrade and either better cabinets or a better backsplash.
What you can do
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Cabinet refacing (new doors + drawer fronts on existing boxes) | $4,500 |
| New cabinet hardware | $300 |
| Mid-tier quartz countertops (~40 sq ft) | $3,200 |
| New stainless sink + faucet | $700 |
| Designer-grade tile backsplash (professional install) | $1,200 |
| Mid-tier stainless appliance package (range, dishwasher, microwave, fridge — open-box or floor models) | $3,500 |
| Lighting (under-cabinet LED + 3 pendants + 4 recessed) | $700 |
| Wall paint, trim | $400 |
| Plumbing & electrical labor | $700 |
| Decorative items | $500 |
| Contingency (10%) | $1,500 |
| Total | $17,200 |
At this tier, the kitchen reads as a real recent remodel. Cabinet refacing — replacing the doors and drawer fronts while keeping the existing boxes — looks indistinguishable from new cabinets when done well, at half the cost.
The $20,000 plan: full small-kitchen remodel
At $20,000, you can do a complete kitchen remodel of a small kitchen (~90–120 sq ft) including new cabinets, provided you choose IKEA SEKTION or stock cabinets and keep the layout.
What you can do
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| IKEA SEKTION cabinets (~18 linear ft, mid-tier doors) | $5,000 |
| Cabinet assembly & install (semi-DIY w/ paid help) | $1,500 |
| Mid-tier quartz countertops (~40 sq ft) | $3,500 |
| Stainless undermount sink + designer faucet | $800 |
| Designer tile backsplash (professional install) | $1,200 |
| Mid-tier stainless appliance package | $4,000 |
| Lighting upgrade (under-cabinet, recessed, pendants) | $900 |
| New flooring — luxury vinyl plank, DIY install | $700 |
| Plumbing & electrical labor | $1,000 |
| Demo & haul-away | $400 |
| Wall paint, trim, baseboards | $400 |
| Contingency (10%) | $2,000 |
| Total | $21,400 |
This plan delivers a complete kitchen rebuild for a small kitchen. The trade-offs: IKEA cabinets (which are excellent at this price point but limited in sizing options), no layout changes, modest appliance brands, and the homeowner doing assembly and some install labor.
Where to splurge on a budget
When dollars are tight, a few categories deserve disproportionate attention because the visual return is so high:
- Countertops. 50 sq ft of constantly visible surface. Worth every dollar of upgrade from laminate to quartz, even on a tight budget.
- The faucet. $250 vs $100 is barely a budget difference, but the better faucet feels noticeably nicer to use every day for the next decade.
- One statement light fixture. A $300 pendant looks substantially more "designed" than a $50 builder-grade pendant. Pick one fixture to splurge on.
- Cabinet hardware. Pulls and knobs are visible from every angle. Spending $300 instead of $100 yields a noticeably more refined look.
- Paint quality. Sherwin-Williams Emerald or Benjamin Moore Advance for cabinet paint costs roughly $80/gallon vs $40 for builder-grade — and the difference in finish durability is enormous.
What to skip on a budget
- Premium appliance brands. Wolf, Sub-Zero, and Miele are wonderful in a $200,000 kitchen. In a $20,000 kitchen they consume the entire budget. Mid-tier (Bosch, KitchenAid, GE Profile) looks fine and lasts.
- Marble countertops. Even Carrara marble is hard to justify at this budget, and the maintenance burden hits harder when other parts of the kitchen are budget-tier.
- Custom cabinetry. Don't even price it.
- Gas range conversions. Adding a gas line where there isn't one runs $1,500–$3,500 and consumes a huge fraction of the budget.
- Wine fridges, beverage drawers, second sinks, pot fillers. Lovely add-ons that always cost more to install than the unit itself.
- Open shelving with custom brackets. Looks like Pinterest. Costs more than upper cabinets. Limits storage.
DIY tasks worth tackling yourself
The labor savings from selective DIY can be the difference between a $15,000 and $25,000 project. The right DIY tasks are ones where mistakes are cheap to fix and the skill ceiling is low:
- Painting cabinets and walls. Easy to learn, low cost of mistakes, $1,500–$2,500 in labor savings on a typical kitchen. Plan to spend two weekends on cabinets alone.
- Installing cabinet hardware. Even a beginner can do this in a couple of hours with a template jig.
- Installing tile backsplash. Steeper learning curve but extensive YouTube content available; saves $400–$1,200 in labor.
- Swapping a faucet. Two-wrench job, takes an hour, saves $150–$300 in plumber labor.
- Installing under-cabinet LED strip lighting. Plug-in or hardwired versions both DIY-able; saves $250–$400.
- Installing IKEA SEKTION cabinets. Time-consuming (30–60 hours for a full kitchen) but saves $1,500–$3,500 in install labor.
- Floating-floor luxury vinyl plank. Click-together LVP is one of the easiest DIY flooring options; saves $1.50–$3 per sq ft in install labor.
What you should not DIY: anything involving gas lines, anything requiring a permit, electrical work behind walls, plumbing rough-in, or anything you'd describe as "I think I can probably figure it out." The cost of a bad outcome on those tasks is many times the labor savings.
Estimate your specific project
Use our calculator to see what your specific kitchen size, city, and finish tier will run.
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