How much does a kitchen remodel cost in York County, PA?
The honest answer is "it depends." But after a couple hundred kitchens in Central PA, the ranges are predictable, the cost drivers are predictable, and the surprises are mostly avoidable. Here's what most homeowners actually spend and how to budget for the kitchen you actually want.
Most homeowners come to us with a number in their head. That number usually comes from one of two places: a friend's project from five years ago, or a national average from a Google search. Both are wrong, in opposite directions.
The friend's project is outdated. Material costs and labor have climbed steadily through 2024 and 2025. The national average is averaged across markets where labor and materials cost less than they do here, and across project scopes that range from a coat of paint to a full structural reimagining.
What follows are the actual ranges we see in York County in 2026, the five things that drive cost more than anything else, and a simple framework for setting a budget that holds up.
The honest ranges for York County kitchens (2026)
| Scope | Typical investment |
|---|---|
| Light refresh Paint, new hardware, new counters, new fixtures. Existing cabinetry stays. No layout changes. |
$35K-$50K |
| Full remodel, existing footprint New cabinetry, new appliances, new lighting, new finishes. Walls stay where they are. |
$60K-$95K |
| Full remodel with layout changes Wall removal, structural changes, new electrical and plumbing routing, custom millwork. |
$95K-$160K |
| Whole-kitchen-and-then-some Includes adjacent dining room or family room opened into the kitchen, structural beam work. |
$160K+ |
Most of the kitchens we build at Moreira fall in the middle two ranges. The light refresh is genuinely useful for a homeowner who likes their existing kitchen's bones, and the whole-floor reimagining tends to be its own conversation. The middle ground is where the design-build value shows up most clearly.
Five things that drive the cost more than anything else
1. Cabinetry (50-60% of the budget on most kitchens)
Cabinets are the single biggest line item, and the gap between the bottom and the top of the cabinetry market is wider than any other category. Stock cabinets from a big-box store come in at around $5,000 to $12,000 for a typical kitchen. Mid-tier semi-custom runs $20,000 to $40,000. Fully custom built-in-shop runs $45,000 to $90,000 or more.
The decision usually isn't about price alone. It's about how long the cabinetry needs to last and how much it needs to fit the exact shape of your kitchen. Custom is worth the premium for kitchens where you want every inch optimized, where the layout is unusual, or where you want hardware, hinges, and drawer mechanisms that hold up for 25 years instead of 8.
2. Layout changes
Moving a wall is rarely just "moving a wall." It's an electrician re-routing circuits, a plumber re-routing supply and waste lines, an HVAC contractor adjusting ducts, a structural engineer if the wall is load-bearing, a permit, and a header beam if you're opening a sightline. A single layout change can add $8,000 to $25,000 to the project depending on what's behind that wall.
That doesn't mean don't do it. The layout change is often the single biggest improvement to how a kitchen lives. It just means: know the cost going in.
3. Counter material
Counter material is one of the few line items where the choice is almost entirely visible. A typical 60 square feet of counter (a typical L-shape kitchen with a small island) runs:
- Laminate: $1,500 to $2,500
- Quartz: $4,500 to $9,000
- Granite: $4,000 to $8,000
- Quartzite: $6,000 to $12,000
- Soapstone: $7,000 to $14,000
- Marble (Carrara): $7,500 to $15,000
- Marble (Calacatta or Statuario): $12,000 to $30,000+
For most projects, quartz hits the right balance of cost, durability, and aesthetic flexibility. Marble is a personal-preference decision, not a value one.
4. Appliance package
The appliance package is the line item where homeowners most often surprise themselves. A standard package of stainless French-door fridge, dishwasher, range, and microwave runs $4,500 to $8,000. A professional or panel-ready built-in package (think Sub-Zero, Wolf, Miele, paneled to match cabinetry) runs $25,000 to $60,000+.
Worth the premium? Sometimes. The professional packages cook better, last longer, and look like part of the kitchen rather than added to it. They also rarely add resale value in proportion to their cost in our market unless you're at the top end. We talk through this with every client.
5. The trades you can't see
The thousand small line items that don't make it into the Pinterest board: electrical (rewiring an old kitchen to code is $4,000 to $10,000), plumbing (relocating a sink, ice maker line, gas line: $1,500 to $6,000), HVAC (a properly sized range hood that vents outside: $1,500 to $4,000), drywall and paint ($3,000 to $7,000), flooring ($4,000 to $12,000), permits and inspections ($800 to $2,500).
None of these are sexy. All of them are required. They add up to 15 to 25 percent of the typical project.
What is usually NOT included in a quoted number
When you receive a kitchen quote, check whether it includes:
- Permits and inspection fees
- Structural engineering reviews if walls are coming out
- Designer fees, if working with an outside designer
- The flooring under the cabinets (some contractors quote just the visible flooring)
- Painting walls and ceiling after construction
- The "while we're in there" items the contractor identifies during demo (rotted subfloor, knob-and-tube wiring, undersized supply lines)
The "while we're in there" items are the single most common source of overruns. A contractor who doesn't open the conversation about contingency before signing is a contractor who'll have an awkward one during demolition.
A simple framework for setting your budget
Most homeowners start a budget conversation backwards. They start with a number and try to fit a scope into it. The better approach starts with what your home is worth, then works toward what makes financial sense.
- Start with your home's current value. Use a recent appraisal, a Zestimate, or a comp from a neighbor's sale.
- Plan to invest 10 to 15 percent of home value in the kitchen for a full remodel. For a $500,000 home, that's $50,000 to $75,000. For a $800,000 home, that's $80,000 to $120,000. This is the range where the renovation tends to add back in resale what it cost to build.
- Add a 15 percent contingency on top. Not because you'll definitely spend it, but because the homeowner who has it sleeps better than the one who doesn't.
- If your scope wants more than this number supports, choose: scale the scope down, or accept the budget. The path that doesn't work is wanting the scope without funding it. That's where projects stall mid-build.
The mistake most homeowners make
They start with a number, not with a clear scope.
The number anchors the conversation. The contractor reverse-engineers a scope to fit the number, the homeowner agrees, the project starts, and somewhere in week three of demo, the scope reveals itself and the number stops being real.
The better way: spend an hour clarifying what you actually want changed about the kitchen. Be specific. "I want the wall between the kitchen and dining room gone." "I want a 9-foot island." "I want a 36-inch range, not 30." "I want enough cabinet storage that we never have to put dishes in the garage." Then ask a contractor what that scope realistically costs in your market.
If the number is uncomfortable, you have real information to negotiate with. The 9-foot island becomes 7-foot. The professional range becomes a 30-inch high-end residential range. The wall removal stays because it matters most. Decisions like those are the work of a good contractor conversation.
What to do next
If you're starting to think about your kitchen, the best first step is not a number. It's a conversation about scope. We do free in-home consultations specifically for this. We walk the space, ask the questions most contractors skip, and tell you honestly what's possible in your kitchen and budget.
No pitch. No commitment. If the right answer is to work with someone else, we'll tell you that too.
Schedule a free kitchen consultation
30 minutes on-site. Honest conversation about scope, budget, and what's worth doing. Currently booking projects for summer 2026.
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