Kitchen Renovation Cost in Connecticut (2026)
Updated July 2026 · 1,500 sq ft reference home
A standard, mid-grade kitchen renovation in Connecticut runs about $3,825 to $13,900 in 2026 for a typical 1,500 sq ft, 3-bed/2-bath house, with kitchen appliance package typically the largest line at $3,800. The range covers 4 line items priced from compiled eastern-Connecticut cost estimates, adjusted to Connecticut construction-trade wages (BLS OEWS).
What's in the number
Line items for a standard, mid-grade kitchen scope in the reference home.
| # | Line item | Budget | Typical | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kitchen appliance package | $2,000 | $3,800 | $7,900 |
| 2 | Kitchen flooring (vinyl/LVP/tile) | $825 | $1,650 | $3,000 |
| 3 | Kitchen lighting (fixtures) | $450 | $900 | $1,800 |
| 4 | Kitchen painting (walls/ceiling) | $550 | $850 | $1,200 |
What drives the range
Kitchen work is one of the biggest pieces of a full rehab here — roughly 15% of a whole-house budget. The high end runs about 3.6× the budget end: finish level and how much you replace (versus repair) move this category more than square footage does. Labor is roughly half the cost, so Connecticut wage levels are baked into every line.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a kitchen renovation cost in Connecticut?
About $3,825–$13,900 in 2026 for a standard, mid-grade job in a typical 1,500 sq ft, 3/2 house, with a most-likely figure near $7,200. Light refresh work runs below the range; full gut-and-replace runs above it.
What does the $7,200 typical figure include?
The itemized scope for this category — kitchen appliance package, kitchen flooring (vinyl/lvp/tile), kitchen lighting (fixtures), kitchen painting (walls/ceiling) — materials plus labor, at mid-grade finishes.
How big a share of a full rehab is the kitchen?
Roughly 15% of a whole-house budget: a full Connecticut rehab of the same reference home runs about $27,202–$86,075.
How are these Connecticut kitchen costs calculated?
They start from compiled eastern-Connecticut cost estimates for a defined 1,500 sq ft reference home, then adjust each line to Connecticut using BLS OEWS construction-trade wages. They are planning estimates, not a quote — confirm with local contractors before you commit.
About these costs: ranges are compiled construction-cost estimates for a defined 1,500 sq ft eastern-Connecticut reference home, adjusted to each state using Bureau of Labor Statistics construction-trade wage data (BLS OEWS, May 2025). They are planning estimates, not a quote, and do not claim per-metro material precision. Last updated July 2026.
RehabRange is built by Mitchell Haughton, a practicing eastern-Connecticut real estate investor — these are the same cost estimates behind his own property walkthroughs. How we build these numbers