Remodeling - Cost vs Value
When it comes to home renovations, the key today is choosing projects that pack potential payoffs: bringing your house up to date or lowering energy bills for you and the next owner.
Major renovations won’t pay you back the way they used to, according to
Remodeling magazine’s 2008-09 Cost vs. Value Report (the ’09-’10 version comes out in November). Adding a bathroom or family room, for example, might return just two-thirds of its cost when you sell. But the following changes can make your house more livable for your family, and boost its value when it’s time to sell.
1. Floors Replacing dated, scuffed floors can give your house a new sheen and make small spaces seem larger. Figure on a payback as high as 75 percent. If you’ll do this job yourself, prepare for one long weekend of pain, says Jerry Jurewicz, vice president of operations of Home Owners Bargain Outlet, an Illinois chain of discount building-materials retailers. Once you’ve cleared out the furniture, you’ll need to pry off the bottom molding, rip out the old flooring and install the new stuff.
Genuine hardwood flooring costs about $2.50 to $3 a square foot, and another $3 a square foot for a pro to install it. That’s about $1,100 for a 12- by 15-foot living room. Add a couple hundred dollars for the underlying subfloor and the cost of pizza to bribe the neighbor’s kids to help move the furniture, and you might pull it off for about $1,500. If your hardwood floors are just scuffed, or you’d like a different stain, professional refinishing costs about $2 a square foot. Total: about $400 to $500 for that same space.
Do-it-yourselfers might consider installing a “floating floor” of wood or laminate. Unlike hardwood flooring, you don’t have to nail it down: After you put down a thin liner, the pieces snap together. Laminate is the toughest-wearing flooring, so it’s ideal for playrooms and kitchens. It costs $1.25 to $2 a square foot at big-box retailers.
If you’d rather put in tile, ceramic goes for as little as 50 cents a square foot. With patience and the right rental tools, you can install it yourself. Don’t bother with vinyl tile, says Jurewicz. It costs about the same as ceramic, wears poorly, and looks dated.
2. Kitchen Instead of spending a bundle gutting this essential room, think smaller. Counters, sinks, plumbing and lighting fixtures and appliances can change their look and cost far less than a major re-do. From an investment standpoint, the kitchen may be the best place to sink your money: Kitchen facelifts pay back about 80 percent of their cost.
Granite is the standard high-end finish for kitchen counters, but high-end synthetic stone materials look just as good, wear better, and cost about the same. Installing a granite or solid-surface counter, along with a stainless-steel sink and faucet, will probably run $5,000 to $8,000.
Your contractor might suggest that, while you’re replacing the counter, get a new backsplash, too. Save your money. Backsplashes don’t get the wear and tear counters do and can add $2,000 or more to the cost of your modest upgrade.
3. Bathrooms You can expect to recapture about 75 percent of the cost of a minor bathroom remodel. Most bathtubs already have showers built in, so the plumbing infrastructure is likely there. Replace a dated, little-used tub with a spacious shower and multiple showerheads. When you’re ready to sell, “a big shower counts as a full bath,” says Barry Goggin, president of Barry Goggin Construction, a Long Island contractor. Similarly, adding a decent-sized shower to a half-bath makes it a whole bath - and much more marketable.
You can get a big “rainfall” showerhead for about $200, or spring for a fancier handheld and other gadgets for $500 and up. Don’t bother building a niche into the shower wall to hold shampoo bottles and such (typical cost: about $300).
4. Closets Few things make a home more unlivable than chintzy closet space. And roomy, organized closets are a big draw for prospective buyers, though it’s impossible to put an exact payback percentage on them. Fitting a walk-in master closet with drawers, shelves, shoe racks, hooks and poles can cost $500 to $2,500 or more, depending on the quality of the materials and the complexity of the design. Wood is the most expensive material, but typically delivers the best return on investment.
This is a job where it’s easy to overspend. So decide exactly what you want and need before you either buy the supplies or bring in a professional closet organizer, who will charge $50 to $150 an hour. Make sure you square reality with the many options: Will you really sort your socks into separate drawer dividers?
5. Energy Upgrades Last year, Amy and Dave Stanislawski spent $4,000 to install solar heating panels in their Brookfield, Wis., house. Sun-warmed radiant heat kept their floors warm even in the frigid Wisconsin winter, and their monthly utility bills dropped by half. The couple figures it will take about five years to recoup the cost of the solar system, which was partly paid for by federal energy conservation tax credits.
Real estate agents say energy-saving amenities make a house more attractive to buyers. New windows, for example, return 77 percent of the project cost, according to Remodeling’s Cost vs. Value Report. But there’s another good reason to upgrade now: Like the Stanislawskis, you can let Uncle Sam help shoulder the cost of projects to make your house more energy efficient and more attractive to prospective buyers.
You can claim
federal tax credits equal to up to 30 percent of the cost of certain home improvements completed by Dec. 31, 2010. Maximum credit: $1,500. Projects include: upgrades to insulation, windows, doors, skylights, central air conditioning, heat pumps, furnaces and water heaters. There’s no dollar limit for the 30 percent credits to put in a solar water heater or solar panels, although the payback may take longer. Later this fall, state governments will offer $50 to $250 rebates for upgrading to Energy Star-qualified appliances, including refrigerators, washing machines and dishwashers.
You may need to wait years to recoup some energy conservation moves. So if you’re more worried about money than your carbon footprint, run the numbers to ensure you’ll be there by the time the cost gets covered. When you’re ready to sell, spell out your energy improvements for prospective buyers. Create a worksheet showing what you spent, plus the before-and-after utility bills.
If you’re not sure where to start, get an energy audit; local utilities often offer them for free or nearly so. The floor-to-roof energy X-ray will diagnose the most expensive problems and determine the most cost-effective upgrades.
Replacing floor and wall insulation usually delivers the fastest payback for the lowest price. Putting in new attic insulation (it breaks down after a couple of decades) can pay for itself in just a year. Blowing in insulation in a previously uninsulated area will pay for itself in about six years, says Matthew Leonard, a vice president with PEA Builders, a Muskego, Wis., contractor specializing in energy-saving projects. One caveat: Don’t just toss new insulation on top of old. You’ll have to remove or work around existing vapor barriers before layering on new insulation.
The Department of Energy Web site has a helpful formula to let you pencil out the payback for insulating your home. If that’s too much math, try its
ZIP-code based calculator to figure out how much insulation you need where you live.
Bear in mind that the price of some work needed to install energy-conservation products may not be eligible for tax credits. For example, you might have to upgrade plumbing to accommodate a more efficient water heater. Be sure your contractor breaks out your costs so you’ll know what qualifies and what doesn’t.
Remember to keep receipts and careful records for all your energy-saving expenses. This will keep you square with the IRS and let you prove to potential buyers that you have lowered their future energy bills.