HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
10 Big-Impact, Low-Cost
Remodeling Projects
Working with sellers who have some—but not
unlimited—cash for upgrades? Here are budget-minded
enhancements you can suggest to make their home stand
out.
1. Tidy up kitchen cabinets. "Potential buyers do open
kitchen cabinets and look inside," says Morrissey. "Home
owners can add rollout organizing trays so when buyers
peek in, they feel like there’s lots of room for their
stuff."
2. Add or replace tile. "By re-tiling very
inexpensively, you make a room look way cleaner that it
was," says Javier Zuluaga, owner of
Home Repairs and Remodeling LLC in Tempe, Ariz. "Every
city has stores that offer $1 to $2 tile, so home owners
have to pay only for the low-cost tile and labor to
replace a dated backsplash or add a new one. We also use
inexpensive tile to upgrade bathrooms."
3. Add a breakfast bar. When a wall
separates a kitchen from a family room, suggest cutting
out an opening to create a breakfast bar. "In one home,
there was a cutout in the wall between the kitchen and
living room," explains Matthew Quinn, a sales associate
at Quinn’s Realty & Estate Services in Falls Church,
Va., who handles estate and real estate sales for family
members whose loved ones have passed away. "We left the
structure of the cutout, added an oversized granite
breakfast bar, and put chairs in front of it. That cost
about $600."

4. Install granite tile instead of
a slab. "Everybody is hot for granite kitchen
countertops, but that can be a $5,000 upgrade," says
John Wilder, a general contractor and owner of Fence and
Deck Doctor in New Castle, Ind. "Instead, home owners
can put in 12-inch granite tiles for about $300 in
materials and get very high impact for little money."
5. Freshen up a bathroom without retiling. "With a dated
bathroom, I recommend putting in a new medicine cabinet
for $100 to $150, light fixtures for about $100, a
faucet for $50 to $75, and a vanity for $200 to $300,"
says Wilder. "And instead of replacing the tile, the
existing grout can be lightly scraped and re-grouted,
which leaves a haze that can be buffed out and will ma ke
the tile look brand new. Also install glass shower
doors. A French door adds a lot of panache and elegance
for $250, and people will notice the door, not the tile.
With all that, you’ve done a bathroom remodel for $1,000
to $2,000."
6. Freshen up the basement. "If home owners have cement
block or poured concrete walls in the basement, suggest
they have a contractor fill in cracks with hydraulic
cement and then paint with waterproofing paint,"
recommends Wilder. "They can then add a top coat to add
color. They can also paint the basement floor with a
good floor paint, which spiffs it up. The basement may
not be finished, but it’s no longer a damp dungeon."
7. Add a room. Look for large spaces that can be
enclosed to create a new bedroom for just the price of
creating a wall. "One time, we closed off a half-wall to
an office and added a door to the other side of the
room, thus creating another bedroom," says Quinn. "That
$400 procedure, which took a contractor one day, netted
about $40,000 in the sales price." Zuluaga has also
added bedrooms inexpensively. “In a two-bedroom house,
there was an archway that led to a third room that was
used as a den," he explains. "It had a dry bar where
there would have been a closet, so we took out the dry
bar and created a closet so the owners had a third
bedroom."

8. Spruce up cabinet fronts. Suggest
home owners update tired-looking kitchen cabinets.
Reconditioning is the least expensive move for under
$1,000. "If the wood is starting to look shabby from use
or contaminants in the air, we take out the nicks and
scratches, recondition it with oil, and put new hardware
on," explains Heidi Morrissey, vice president of
marketing and sales at Kitchen Tune-Up in Aberdeen, S.D.
For $1,500 to $4,000, owners can replace the cabinet
doors and drawer fronts, and for $4,000 to $12,000, they
can have all the cabinets refaced drawer fronts, and for
$4,000 to $12,000, they can have all the cabinets
refaced. "With refacing, owners can change the color of
the cabinets by replacing the door and having a new skin
put on the boxes," says Morrissey. "If they have oak
cabinets today, they can have cherry the next day."
9. Replace light fixtures. "In a foyer and in bathrooms
and kitchens," says Wilder, "replacing overhead light
fixtures provides a lot of pop for a little money." If
the kitchen has track li ghting,
Zuluaga suggests the home owner spend $450 to $600 to
have an electrician replace it with recessed canned
lights on a dimmer switch to add ambience. For about
$700, Zuluaga also suggests installing pendant lights
over a kitchen island or peninsula.
10. Tech-up the garage. "Sometimes we replace the garage
door opener with a remote touchpad entry system," says
Zuluaga. "That costs about $425 and makes it look like a
high-end system."
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