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How Much Does a Kitchen Renovation Cost in New Zealand?

Introduction

When clients ask us how much a kitchen renovation costs in New Zealand, our honest answer is: it depends on scope more than square metres. We regularly see two kitchens of similar size end up with very different budgets because one keeps the existing layout and services, while the other adds structural work, upgraded appliances, custom joinery, and new plumbing or electrical runs.

In practical terms, a kitchen renovation in New Zealand often starts around the mid-teens for a basic refresh, moves into the NZ$25,000 to NZ$50,000 range for a more complete mid-range renovation, and can exceed NZ$50,000 for premium finishes or complex layout changes. Those ranges align with wider market commentary on Auckland renovations, while official guidance from New Zealand building authorities also shows that plumbing, structural alterations, and contract requirements can materially affect cost planning.

When we help homeowners plan a new kitchen, we usually focus on five budget questions first: are we changing the layout, are we moving plumbing, are we upgrading electrical capacity, what finish level is expected, and do we need design or consent input before work begins? If those questions are answered early, cost accuracy improves dramatically.

If you are still shaping the brief, our kitchen renovations service page and our design package page are the best starting points for understanding how scope and design decisions influence the final budget.

Typical kitchen renovation cost ranges in New Zealand

We usually frame kitchen budgets in tiers rather than promising a single national average. That gives homeowners a more realistic planning tool.

Kitchen renovation levelTypical budget range (NZD)What is usually includedCommon cost risks
Basic refresh$15,000-$25,000Cabinet replacement or refacing, laminate benchtop, standard hardware, limited appliance changes, minimal layout changeOld wiring, damaged substrates, floor or paint work omitted from initial scope
Mid-range full renovation$25,000-$50,000New cabinetry, improved storage, upgraded benchtop, tiling or splashback, appliance integration, lighting upgrades, moderate plumbing or electrical adjustmentsService relocation, custom sizing, premium hardware, lead times
High-spec or complex renovation$50,000+Custom joinery, stone or porcelain surfaces, high-end appliances, layout reconfiguration, structural work, premium finishes, project managementConsent costs, structural discoveries, bespoke manufacturing, imported materials

These are planning ranges, not fixed quotations. In our experience, the moment a project includes wall removal, bracing, extensive rewiring, significant plumbing relocation, or highly customised finishes, budgets can move up quickly.

Public renovation guides discussing Auckland projects have placed standard kitchen renovations in roughly the NZ$20,000 to NZ$50,000 band, which broadly matches what many homeowners see in the market. Community discussions on Reddit also reflect a wide spread, from lower-cost cabinet-and-benchtop projects to full renovations around NZ$30,000 and above once labour, stone tops, and building changes are included.

What drives the cost of a kitchen renovation?

1. Layout changes

The most important budget lever is whether we keep the kitchen in the same footprint. A like-for-like replacement is usually far more cost-effective than relocating the sink, cooktop, waste lines, or major appliances. Once plumbing or electrical routes move, the renovation often becomes more trade-heavy and less predictable.

2. Cabinetry type

Cabinetry is often one of the biggest line items. Melamine and standard modular options generally cost less than custom-painted, thermoformed, or lacquered joinery. In homes with unusual wall dimensions, bulkheads, or heritage details, custom joinery can improve the result but also raises cost.

3. Benchtop material

Laminate is usually the most budget-friendly. Engineered stone, porcelain, and natural stone sit higher. In real projects, homeowners often underestimate how much the benchtop selection can shift the overall number, especially once templating, fabrication, cut-outs, splashbacks, and edge details are added.

4. Appliances and integration

Appliance budgets vary enormously. Reusing existing appliances may protect budget, but integrated appliances, induction upgrades, higher-capacity extraction, or premium brands can add thousands very quickly.

5. Electrical and lighting work

Modern kitchens typically need more than simple replacement of fittings. We often see requests for extra power points, under-cabinet lighting, LED feature lighting, appliance-dedicated circuits, and switchboard upgrades. These are worthwhile improvements, but they need to be budgeted from the start.

6. Site condition and hidden issues

Older New Zealand homes can reveal uneven walls, moisture damage, outdated wiring, non-compliant previous work, or floor issues after demolition. This is one reason we usually recommend carrying a contingency rather than spending the entire budget on visible finishes.

Indicative cost breakdown by component

Although every kitchen is different, we find it helpful to explain where the budget usually goes.

ComponentRelative cost impactNotes from our project experience
Design and planningLow to mediumGood planning often prevents expensive changes during installation
Demolition and strip-outLow to mediumCosts rise if asbestos, repairs, or restricted access are involved
Cabinetry and hardwareHighUsually one of the largest budget categories
BenchtopsMedium to highMaterial choice has a major effect on total cost
AppliancesMedium to highBrand, integration, and ventilation needs matter
Plumbing and electricalMedium to highRelocation of services is a major cost trigger
Splashbacks, flooring, paintingMediumOften underestimated in first-pass budgets
Project management and installationMediumImportant for sequencing, quality control, and reducing rework
ContingencyEssentialWe generally advise a reserve for hidden conditions or scope changes

One practical lesson we have learned is that homeowners often compare only cabinetry quotes, when the actual delivered kitchen cost depends on the full package: design, demolition, services, finishes, appliance install, and final defects resolution.

If your kitchen renovation is part of a wider internal upgrade, it can be worth reviewing it alongside broader interior renovations so dependent works such as flooring, lighting, and repainting are costed together rather than treated as late extras.

When consent or compliance can affect your budget

Not every kitchen renovation needs building consent, but some do. In New Zealand, consent questions often arise where work includes structural changes, plumbing or drainage work that affects structural performance, or broader alterations beyond a simple replacement. Official guidance also notes that even where a consent is not required, the work still needs to comply with the Building Code.

That matters for budgeting because layout changes can create additional design, documentation, council, engineering, or inspection costs. For example, published Auckland Council fee information shows that some consent-related charges, levies, and plumbing-related fixed fees can apply depending on the nature and value of the work. New Zealand consumer protection rules also require particular pre-contract information for residential building work likely to cost NZ$30,000 or more including GST.

In our workflow, we try to identify these issues before pricing is finalised. It is much better to know early whether a kitchen concept triggers extra documentation than to discover that halfway through procurement.

Common budget traps we see in real projects

Underestimating non-cabinet costs

Many clients start with the joinery quote because it is the easiest number to obtain. But kitchens are systems, not just cabinets. Flooring repairs, wall straightening, plastering, painting, extraction upgrades, appliance delivery constraints, and disposal costs can all sit outside the first quote if the scope is not clearly consolidated.

Changing selections late

Late changes to cabinetry finish, benchtop material, handle specification, splashback type, or appliance dimensions can create both direct cost increases and indirect delays. In our experience, detailed selections made earlier almost always protect budget better than making fast decisions after demolition starts.

Forgetting temporary living costs

During a major kitchen renovation, you may need a temporary cooking setup, takeaway budget, or scheduling adjustments if the home is occupied. This is not always included in the construction budget, but it is still part of the real renovation cost.

Skipping contingency

Community renovation discussions consistently point to the same issue: once walls open up, surprises happen. We treat that as normal project reality, not an exception. A contingency buffer is often the difference between a controlled project and a stressful one.

What online discussions tell us about real-world tradeoffs

Practitioner and homeowner discussions are useful for understanding lived experience, even though they are not authoritative pricing benchmarks. Across New Zealand-focused Reddit threads, we see recurring themes: stone benchtops can materially increase the budget, layout changes quickly open up additional work, and many homeowners discover that a “simple kitchen” turns into flooring, lining, lighting, or wall repair work once the old kitchen is removed.

We also see a common tension between modular affordability and custom fit. Some homeowners prefer lower-cost cabinet systems for rentals or basic refreshes, while others are willing to invest more in custom joinery, better hardware, and longer-term usability. In our experience, neither path is automatically right; the best value comes from matching the specification to the property, how long you plan to stay, and the performance you expect from the kitchen.

How we typically help control kitchen renovation costs

  • We define the renovation scope early so there is less ambiguity between design intent and build cost.

  • We separate must-haves from nice-to-haves before selections begin.

  • We check whether keeping services in place will meaningfully improve value.

  • We align appliance sizes with joinery planning before manufacturing.

  • We recommend budgeting for the whole room, including plastering, painting, flooring transitions, and final finishing.

  • We advise carrying a contingency for hidden conditions, especially in older homes.

Where clients are coordinating multiple wet areas or staged upgrades, we also encourage planning kitchens alongside related spaces such as bathroom renovations to reduce duplicated trade visits, improve sequencing, and create more realistic whole-home budgeting.

Practical takeaway

If you want a practical starting point, we suggest thinking about your kitchen budget in three layers:

  1. Core build cost: cabinetry, benchtops, appliances, plumbing, electrical, installation.

  2. Room completion cost: plastering, painting, flooring, splashback, lighting, rubbish removal, final touch-ups.

  3. Risk and compliance cost: contingency, design development, possible consent input, and hidden-condition allowance.

For many New Zealand homeowners, that means a realistic full kitchen renovation budget often lands higher than the first cabinetry estimate suggests. If the goal is a durable, well-functioning kitchen rather than a superficial refresh, thorough planning usually saves more money than trying to trim every line item after the build starts.

When we guide clients through kitchen planning, our main recommendation is simple: decide early whether this is a cosmetic update or a true redesign. That single decision usually determines whether the project stays in the lower end of the budget range or moves into a much more complex investment.

If you are evaluating options beyond the kitchen itself, our renovations page can help you think about how the kitchen fits into a broader home improvement plan.

References

Author / Editorial Team

This article was produced by our internal Cspace Renovation editorial and operations team in collaboration with specialists involved in renovation planning, design coordination, pricing, and project delivery. We write from the perspective of a New Zealand renovation team that works across residential interiors, kitchens, bathrooms, and broader design-build upgrades. Our editorial process combines practical project experience, review of current New Zealand building and consumer guidance, and observation of real homeowner concerns that regularly surface during renovation planning. We use that combined lens to create guidance that is useful, realistic, and grounded in how renovation decisions are made in practice.

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