Dallas remodeling costs in 2026 range from $2,500 for interior painting to $350,000+ for a full home addition, with kitchens running $25,000–$65,000 and bathrooms $10,000–$40,000. Where your project lands in that range depends on your home’s age, your neighborhood, and how much of the structure gets touched.
Quick Cost Snapshot (2026)
| Project Type | Typical Cost Range | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Interior Painting | $2,500–$8,000 | 3–7 days |
| Kitchen Remodel | $25,000–$65,000 | 3–12 weeks |
| Bathroom Remodel | $10,000–$40,000 | 3–6 weeks |
| Flooring (whole home) | $8,000–$25,000 | 1–3 weeks |
| Home Addition | $55,000–$350,000+ | 10–28 weeks |
| Whole Home Renovation | $100,000–$300,000+ | 4–9 months |
These figures reflect the DFW market specifically, not national averages — a national “kitchen remodel cost” figure from a site that doesn’t specialize in Texas pricing will usually undercount Dallas numbers by 15–20%, mostly because it misses local permit and labor-market pressure.
What Drives Cost Up
Highland Park and Preston Hollow Pricing
Projects in these areas run 15–25% higher than the Dallas average. Part of that is finish expectations — buyers and appraisers in these neighborhoods expect real hardwood and higher-end fixtures. Part of it is the Town of Highland Park Building Department’s separate permit process, which adds review time and, often, engineering requirements the City of Dallas process doesn’t require.
Pre-1980 Electrical and Plumbing
East Dallas, Lakewood, and Oak Cliff homes built before 1980 often have undersized panels, aluminum branch wiring, and galvanized plumbing. Any remodel that opens those walls usually needs an electrical or plumbing upgrade the homeowner didn’t originally budget for — add 15–20% to your kitchen or bathroom number if your home fits this profile.
Post-Tension Slab Work
Most Dallas homes built after 1980 sit on a post-tension slab. Any bathroom or addition project that requires cutting into the slab needs a specialist, which adds $2,000–$5,000 to the project.
Structural Changes
Removing a load-bearing wall requires an engineer-stamped plan before the City of Dallas Development Services Department will approve the permit. That’s a separate cost — usually $2,000–$5,000 — on top of the remodel itself.
What Keeps Cost Down
Keeping the existing layout. Moving plumbing or electrical to a new location inside the same room is one of the biggest cost drivers in any remodel. Keeping fixtures roughly where they already are avoids that expense entirely.
Mid-range finishes over custom. Stock cabinetry with a semi-custom finish look can run half the cost of fully custom cabinetry, with a much smaller visual difference than most homeowners expect.
Doing structural and cosmetic work together. If you already know you’ll need electrical or plumbing upgrades eventually, doing that work during a planned remodel avoids paying for a second demolition and second permit later.
Neighborhood Pricing Differences
| Area | Pricing vs. Dallas Average | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Highland Park / University Park | +15–25% | HOA architectural review, Town of Highland Park permits, higher-end finish expectations |
| Preston Hollow | +10–20% | Larger homes, HOA sections, high-end finish expectations |
| Lakewood / M Streets | +5–15% | Pre-1960 construction, structural surprises common once walls open |
| East Dallas | Average, plus surprise costs | Pre-1980 wiring and plumbing frequently add unbudgeted work |
| Oak Cliff | Wide range | Condition varies significantly property to property |
| Oak Lawn / Uptown | Average, longer timeline | HOA work-hour restrictions (often 9–5 weekdays only) slow crew progress |
| Frisco / Plano / McKinney | Average, longer wait | High demand means top contractors book 6–8 weeks out before work even starts |
Permit Costs by Authority
Most residential permits inside Dallas city limits start at $167 per trade through the City of Dallas Development Services Department. A kitchen remodel involving both electrical and plumbing typically runs $668–$994 in total permit fees. Highland Park and University Park properties go through the Town of Highland Park Building Department instead, which runs a separate review process and often takes longer.
Structural work — anything touching a load-bearing wall — needs engineer-stamped plans before the city will approve the permit. That adds $2,000–$5,000 upfront, on top of the base permit fee.
How to Evaluate Bids
A bid that’s dramatically lower than the others usually means one of three things: the contractor is planning to skip permits, they’re using lower-grade materials than the scope implies, or they’ve underbid to win the job and will make it up in change orders once work starts. Ask every contractor to itemize labor, materials, and permit costs separately — a single lump-sum number with no breakdown makes it impossible to compare bids honestly.
Get at least three bids before deciding. If one bid is more than 20% below the other two, that’s a specific reason to ask what’s different about their scope, not a reason to assume you found a deal.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are Dallas remodeling costs higher than national averages?
DFW labor rates have climbed with the region’s construction boom, and Dallas-specific factors — post-tension slabs, expansive clay soil, and permit requirements through the City of Dallas Development Services Department — add costs a generic national estimate doesn’t account for.
How much does a kitchen remodel cost in Dallas in 2026?
Most Dallas kitchen remodels run $25,000–$65,000, depending on layout changes, cabinet grade, and whether electrical or plumbing needs updating. Highland Park and Preston Hollow projects typically land 15–25% above that range.
Do I need a permit for a bathroom remodel in Dallas?
Yes, if the project touches plumbing, electrical, or structure — which most bathroom remodels do. Expect to file with the City of Dallas Development Services Department and budget $167 per trade permit as a starting point.
What’s the biggest hidden cost in Dallas remodeling projects?
Pre-1980 electrical and plumbing systems. Homes in East Dallas, Lakewood, and Oak Cliff built before 1980 frequently need upgrades once a contractor opens the walls, even when the original scope didn’t call for it.
Is it cheaper to renovate the whole house at once or room by room?
Whole-home renovation typically runs 10–15% cheaper per square foot than the same scope split into separate room projects, mainly because permits, mobilization, and material matching happen once instead of several times. See our full comparison in Whole Home Renovation vs. Room-by-Room.
Every number here reflects the current DFW market. A contractor in our network can give you a project-specific quote once they’ve seen your home’s actual condition. Get a free, no-obligation quote before you start comparing bids.
