Should I Remodel or Move? How to Decide in Today’s Housing Market

9 hours ago 2

Key Takeaways:

  • Many homeowners are choosing to renovate instead of move: Elevated home prices, higher mortgage rates, and moving costs are making renovation a practical alternative.
  • Remodeling isn’t always cheaper than moving: Major renovations can rival the cost of selling and buying another home.
  • Moving vs renovating depends on your situation: Take into account your home’s current limitations, then your budget, timeline, and local market conditions.

For many homeowners across the country, deciding whether to remodel or move has become more complicated in today’s housing market. Home prices remain elevated, mortgage rates are still above 6%, and there are roughly 47% more home sellers than buyers nationwide. According to a recent Redfin survey, 43% of homeowners chose to renovate in the last year, and two-thirds of renovators did so as a deliberate alternative to buying.

“Many Americans are choosing to stay put and make the home they already have work for them,” confirms Chen Zhao, Redfin’s head of economics research. “That could mean improving outdated spaces, adding space for a growing family, or reconfiguring the existing space so it works for everyone.”

But how do you know whether moving or renovating is the right call? Here’s how to compare the costs, tradeoffs, and market factors that can help you decide.

Should you remodel or move? A quick answer

Remodeling is often cheaper than moving if you’re dealing with smaller updates, but major renovations can cost as much as, or more than, buying another home. Which is the cheaper option will depend on your renovation plans, local home prices, mortgage rates, current home equity, and moving costs.

Remodeling might be better if…Think about moving if…
You like your neighborhood You want to be in a different location 
Your home’s problems are fixable Your home can’t meet your needs, even with upgrades
You want to keep your current mortgage rate Buying another home works for your budget 
The updates make sense for your neighborhood.The remodel would price your home above the neighborhood. 
You can deal with constructionYou don’t want to live through a remodel

How to decide whether to remodel or move

Both remodeling and moving have their pros, cons, and costs. Redfin found that most recent renovators spent less than $20,000 on their home projects, suggesting many homeowners are choosing targeted upgrades instead of full-scale remodels to help their current home work for them. And with roughly 80% of homeowners holding a mortgage rate below current levels, moving can also mean trading your familiar monthly payment for a more expensive one. 

But renovation isn’t automatically the safer or cheaper path. A kitchen remodel can easily run $15,000–$50,000+, depending on the scope. Add a bedroom, and you could be looking at tens of thousands more. Factor in permit delays, surprise repairs, and rising material costs, and the price tag starts to rival a down payment on a new home. 

“Higher costs typically come from structural alterations, engineering plans, and major renovation work,” warns Yonatan Asulin, founder of ASL Remodeling. “Finished materials can add tens of thousands more depending on selections.”

So which option is right for you? It comes down to what problems you’re trying to solve, the real costs, your local housing market and monthly payments, and your timeline.

What problem are you trying to solve? 

Remodeling can often fix:

  • Outdated kitchens or bathrooms
  • Poor storage
  • Worn flooring
  • Bad lighting
  • Unfinished basements
  • Cosmetic updates
  • Some layout issues

Moving may be better for:

  • A bad commute
  • The wrong school district
  • Too little land
  • Street noise
  • No room to expand
  • A neighborhood that no longer fits
  • Major structural limitations

If the things on your list mostly fall under “can’t be renovated,” moving is likely the right answer regardless of cost. If they’re mostly fixable, keep reading. 

What would remodeling actually cost?

Remodeling doesn’t have to mean gutting the whole house. Plenty of homeowners choose smaller updates that make the home feel more livable without taking on a major construction project.

But costs can rise fast once you get into structural work, additions, or digging into walls.

“High-cost items like moving mechanical systems or installing custom cabinetry can significantly impact budgets,” says Sara Hillery of Sara Hillery Interior Design. “Even simple facelifts can add up, and electrical work is often underestimated, especially in older homes without modern lighting.”

National remodeling costs vary widely based on project scope, labor costs, and material selections, but the table below provides a general benchmark.

Common remodeling projects and cost

ProjectAverage Cost Range
Interior painting$960–$3,100 
Laminate flooring install$1,471–$4,657 
Bathroom remodel$2,500–$30,000 
Kitchen cosmetic update$14,591–$41,542 
Full kitchen gut and remodel$65,000–$130,000+
Bedroom addition$20,000–$130,000+
Deck or patio$4,000–$24,000

All cost data comes from Angi

When budgeting for a remodel, don’t forget to factor in things like labor rates, materials, permits, design plans, temporary housing or storage, financing costs, and a 15%–20% contingency for surprises.

“Think of your initial budget less as a firm number and more as a comfort zone that reflects what you want to achieve, and what you’re willing to invest,” recommends kitchen designer Adam Johnston at UB Kitchens. “The most successful projects are those where homeowners set clear priorities and make thoughtful tradeoffs.” 

What would moving actually cost? 

Moving can feel like the simpler solution, but selling your current home and buying another comes with its own set of costs that add up. A reasonable estimate is usually about 10-15% of your home’s sale price once agent fees, closing costs, moving expenses, and pre-sale repairs are factored in.

You might also end up with a higher mortgage payment, property taxes, HOA fees, and other costs that can come with setting up a new home. If your current home would sell well and you have strong equity, moving might be the right choice. But if higher housing costs would push your budget, remodeling might be the more affordable option.

What would happen to your monthly payment?

Even if you can afford the down payment on another home, your monthly payment might change a lot if you swap your current mortgage for a new one. That is especially true if you bought or refinanced when rates were lower. Rates have stayed above 6% for nearly four years, and more homeowners now have a rate above 6% than below 3%—so if you locked in a sub-5% rate a few years ago, that could drastically affect your bottom line.

You can use a mortgage calculator to see what your new payment could look like on a different home with today’s rates, then compare that to the monthly cost of financing a renovation with a home equity loan or home equity line of credit (HELOC). 

What is happening in your local housing market?

If there are few homes for sale in your target area, remodeling could be the more practical choice. If your current home could sell well and there are homes available that are a better fit, moving might be worth it.

In some areas across the country, inventory has improved, and buyers have more negotiating power. Sellers may need to price more conservatively or offer concessions, especially with an estimated 47% more sellers than buyers in the current national market. In a competitive market, like the Bay Area, buyers may have fewer choices and less room to negotiate. 

Understanding current market conditions can drastically affect whether staying in place or starting fresh is the answer. 

Before deciding whether to remodel or move, ask:

  • Are there homes available that actually meet your needs?
  • Can you afford your target neighborhood at today’s rates?
  • Would your current home sell quickly, or would you need to price aggressively?
  • Are buyers in your area asking for concessions?
  • Would your remodel fit nearby home values?
  • Is your market favoring buyers, sellers, or somewhere in between?

A local Redfin agent can give you the most accurate read on what’s actually happening with prices, days on market, and competition in your specific neighborhood. 

How long do you plan to stay?

Your timeline can be one of the biggest factors in deciding whether to remodel or move.

If you plan to stay in your home for several more years, renovating may make more sense. You’ll have more time to enjoy the improvements, spread out the cost, and potentially build equity.

If you’re already thinking about moving in the next year or two, a big renovation could be harder to justify. Large projects can be expensive, disruptive, and may not pay off if you won’t be around long enough to benefit from them.

If you do plan to sell soon, smaller improvements like paint, landscaping, and minor kitchen or bathroom updates can often provide a better return on investment than a major remodel.

When remodeling makes more sense

  • You love your location. School district, commute, neighborhood, proximity to family—those things matter more than most people give them credit for. If the only thing you don’t love is the house itself, intentional upgrades might solve the problem.
  • The renovation costs less than moving. When the transaction costs of buying and selling exceed what it would cost to renovate, staying where you are is often the smarter financial move.
  • Your home has good bones. A structurally sound home that’s simply dated, or just needs cosmetic updates, is a strong renovation candidate. The cost to modernize is often less than the cost to buy and sell.
  • You want to build equity strategically. Smart upgrades can add value and improve livability. Kitchens and bathrooms consistently offer strong returns, and so do garage door replacements and curb appeal improvements.
  • You’re not ready to take on a new mortgage. Even if the lock-in effect has faded somewhat, your current rate and payment may still be significantly better than what you’d get today. Renovation financing through a HELOC or home equity loan might cost less over time than resorting to a new purchase loan.

When moving makes more sense

  • The problem isn’t fixable with a renovation. If the dissatisfaction is with your location, lot size, school district, or neighborhood, renovating can’t fix those things—and spending $50,000 on a kitchen won’t make you like your commute.
  • You’d be over-improving. Every neighborhood has a value ceiling, or the most buyers will pay regardless of how nice a home is. If your renovation would push your home above comparable sales in the area, you likely won’t recoup it.
  • Your home has fundamental layout or size issues. Sometimes a house is just too small or configured in a way that no renovation can fix. Adding square footage is expensive and isn’t always possible given lot size or local zoning, and it could cost more than the time or long-term value is worth.
  • You have significant equity and a solid plan. If you’ve built up years of equity, are moving to a more affordable area, or are downsizing, the financial case for moving can actually work in your favor, especially if you’re not trading one high-rate loan for another.

Should you remodel or move? The final verdict

Deciding whether to remodel or move usually comes down to what you’re trying to fix, and what it would cost to fix it. 

If you love your neighborhood, have a mortgage rate that would be hard to replace, and your home’s issues are mostly cosmetic or functional, renovating could be the better strategy.

But if your current home no longer fits your lifestyle, location needs, or long-term plans, a remodel might only delay the inevitable. 

Before making a decision, compare the full cost of renovating with the true cost of selling, buying, and taking on a new monthly payment. The right answer depends on your finances, your local housing market, and whether your current home can realistically meet your long-term needs.

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