Fin Home Contracting · Denton, TX

Denton Home Remodeling

We're the general contractor Denton homeowners call when they want a home remodel done right — local crews, transparent pricing, and a process built around the way this city actually works.

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TX Residential Contractor

WHY FIN HOME

Why Hire Fin Home for Home Remodeling in Denton

Denton homeowners usually call us when they are ready to stop doing the house one patch at a time. In neighborhoods like Southridge, Oakmont, and North Lakes, we see the same pattern: good square footage, dated finishes, and a layout that needs better use of the space. That is where a real remodel makes sense. We manage the project directly rather than handing it off through a marketing company or franchise chain.

Home remodeling in Denton starts at $25k. That is enough for a meaningful refresh in the $25,000–38,000 range — flooring, paint, trim, lighting, fixture updates, and selected kitchen or bathroom improvements that materially change the house without overselling the scope. You will receive a written, itemized quote before any work begins.

Many Denton homes were built in the decades where aging electrical, older plumbing, and subfloor repairs are common once demo starts, especially in more established parts of the city. We inspect for that during the estimate walkthrough so the remodel plan accounts for what is likely behind the walls and under the floors.

A local project manager will get back to you within 24 business hours.

Responds within 24 business hours

Neighborhoods we've worked in

Southridge · Oakmont · North Lakes · Unicorn Lake · Denia · Hickory Creek · Cooper Creek · Wheeler Ridge · Nottingham Woods · Sundown Ranch

150+

Home remodels across DFW – including Denton.

$25k

Starting price for a meaningful Denton home refresh.

24 hrs

Response time from a Denton-based project manager.

15+

Years serving the Denton residential market.

What's Unique About Denton

Denton has 69 local historic landmarks plus a major courthouse square historic district, which can introduce added design-review considerations. We identify those issues early so the project is designed around them instead of running into delays later.

NEIGHBORHOODS WE KNOW

Common Home Remodeling Patterns Across Denton

In central Denton, especially around older neighborhoods near the Square, Idiot’s Hill, and the streets surrounding the university areas, whole-home remodeling often starts with houses that have character but uneven updates. Many homes have older room layouts, small kitchens, compact bathrooms, pier-and-beam conditions, or additions that were built decades after the original structure. The work usually begins with sorting out how the home should function before choosing finishes. That can mean opening the kitchen, improving the laundry location, updating mechanical systems, replacing inconsistent flooring, and making old additions feel like part of the house. In these homes, the goal is not to erase age; it is to make the home easier to live in without losing the character that made the neighborhood desirable.

In established north and west Denton neighborhoods, many homes were built from the 1970s through the 1990s with practical footprints but dated interiors. Areas near Nottingham Woods, Southridge, and the west side of town often have homes with good lots, mature trees, and enough square footage, but the first floor may still be divided by formal rooms, closed kitchens, and narrow hallways. Remodel scopes commonly include removing partial walls, updating fireplaces, replacing carpet and tile with continuous flooring, and changing lighting layouts so the home feels less dim. These homes often improve dramatically when the main living areas are treated as one connected space rather than individual rooms with separate finish decisions.

In newer Denton subdivisions and growth areas toward Robson Ranch, Loop 288, and the north side of the city, the issue is more often builder-grade repetition than age. The homes may not be old, but they can have standard cabinets, basic lighting, underused front rooms, and outdoor spaces that do not connect well to daily life. Whole-home remodeling in these houses often includes built-ins, office conversions, patio door upgrades, flooring replacement, cabinet refacing or replacement, and finish changes that make the home feel less like the model-plan version of itself. Owners often want the house to stay practical but feel more tailored to their routines.

Denton remodels also have to account for the city’s mix of student-adjacent properties, owner-occupied family homes, and older houses with long histories. A home that has been a rental or passed through several owners may have layers of patchwork: mismatched trim, inconsistent doors, old repairs, and mechanical shortcuts that only become visible once demolition begins. A strong whole-home remodel in Denton usually brings those layers into one plan. The best results come from establishing consistent floors, lighting, trim, and room purpose throughout the house, then making selective architectural changes where they will actually improve daily use rather than changing the home just for the sake of making it look new.

WHAT TO EXPECT TO PAY

Home Remodeling Pricing in Denton

These are real ranges drawn from projects we've completed in Denton. Material costs, permit fees, and labor are reflected here.

Essential

Cosmetic refresh for homes with a solid existing layout. No major structural changes.
$ 25,000–38,000 Typical Denton range
  • Stock or semi-custom material selections
  • Flooring, paint, and trim updates
  • Cabinet, countertop, or fixture replacement
  • Lighting and hardware upgrades
  • Minor carpentry and finish work

Mid-Range

The most common scope for Denton homeowners. Room-by-room upgrades with full finish replacement.
$ 45,000–70,000 Typical Denton range
  • Semi-custom cabinets or built-ins
  • Flooring replacement across key living areas
  • Countertop, tile, and fixture upgrades
  • Permit-required electrical and plumbing updates
  • Interior painting, trim, and finish carpentry
  • Partial layout adjustments where feasible

Popular

Full Renovation

Layout changes, premium materials, and large-scale interior transformation.
$ 80,000–140,000+ Typical Denton range
  • Custom cabinetry and built-ins
  • Wall removal or structural reconfiguration
  • Premium flooring, tile, and surface finishes
  • Kitchen, bathroom, and living area renovation
  • High-end lighting, plumbing, and fixture packages
  • Whole-home electrical, plumbing, and HVAC updates

WHAT DRIVES COST UP

Home remodeling pricing in Denton moves most with kitchen and bathroom count, which adds $20,000–$60,000 per full space, structural scope at a $25,000–$100,000 swing, and HVAC, electrical, or plumbing updates at $10,000–$35,000. Historic review on some properties can also affect design choices and total cost. We surface those issues up front.

Why Denton Pricing Works This Way

What Shapes Home Remodeling Costs in Denton

In Downtown Denton, Oak-Hickory historic areas, Idiot’s Hill, and neighborhoods near UNT and TWU, the largest cost drivers are usually hidden in the original layout and the work done before the current owner arrived. Homes from the early 1900s through the 1960s, especially craftsman homes, cottages, older rentals, and mid-century houses with character but often limited storage, compact kitchens, and layered repairs, often need more than new surfaces if the goal is a cohesive home remodel. Pier-and-beam correction, knob-and-tube or older electrical concerns, plumbing replacement, window work, and preserving exterior character while changing how the inside functions can turn a simple-looking plan into a multi-trade project. The budget changes quickly when walls are opened, when old mechanical runs do not support the new plan, or when flooring heights do not line up from room to room. In these areas, the estimate has to account for investigation, correction, and finish work together because separating them creates surprises later.

In Southridge, Forrestridge, North Lakes, and the newer north and south Denton subdivisions, the homes tend to create a different kind of pricing problem. Many ranch and traditional homes from the 1970s through the early 2000s that usually have enough space but not enough openness, light, or finish consistency were built with enough space on paper, but the plan often includes formal rooms, builder-grade details, and transitions that no longer match how the house is used. Removing walls between living and kitchen areas, replacing mismatched floors, updating fireplaces and stair rails, and correcting older remodels that solved one room while ignoring the rest of the house are not small design preferences when they happen across a full first floor; they change demolition, framing, electrical, flooring, cabinetry, trim, paint, and scheduling. A remodel that touches 1,500 to 3,000 square feet has a very different cost curve than a single-room update, even if the home itself is newer and structurally sound.

For Denton, another major price factor is the way projects behave around Robson Ranch, rural edges, and properties toward Krum or Argyle. Aging-in-place changes, guest-suite work, additions, exterior maintenance, and phasing construction so occupied homes can function while major rooms are being rebuilt can add design work, review steps, material coordination, and protection requirements before the finish package is even priced. If the remodel includes an addition, larger openings, exterior doors, or roof changes, the cost is no longer driven only by flooring, paint, and fixtures. It includes structure, weatherproofing, HVAC balance, insulation, and how the new work connects to the existing home. Occupied construction adds another layer because the sequence has to protect daily life while still giving crews enough room to work efficiently.

Denton Cost Guide

How Much Does It Cost to Remodel a Home in Denton?

Get a detailed breakdown of home remodeling costs in Denton including price per square foot, labor vs materials, and real budget ranges for 2026. Browse online or download the full guide.

WHEN TO REMODEL

Signs Your Denton Home Is Ready for a Remodel

In Denton, the first sign that a home is ready for a remodel is often the feeling that the house has been updated without ever being solved. In Southridge, Idiot’s Hill, neighborhoods near the Square, university-adjacent streets, Robson Ranch, and newer north or south Denton subdivisions, that can happen in older cottages, mid-century houses, 1970s and 1980s family homes, and newer production homes: one owner changes flooring, another replaces a bathroom, another encloses a patio, and the result still does not function as a complete plan. Look for small kitchens, poor closet space, isolated living rooms, garages that became storage by default, and secondary bedrooms that do not work well for offices or guests. Those issues usually affect more than one room, which is why a single surface upgrade can feel disappointing after the money is spent. If the home’s daily traffic keeps exposing the same friction, the remodel needs to be planned around use, not just appearance.

The next warning sign is when materials and systems begin aging at the same time. In Denton, that may look like old flooring, dated bathrooms, mismatched trim, worn doors, popcorn texture, budget remodels, and lighting that makes even a solid house feel tired. When these are paired with aging windows, older electrical layouts, HVAC distribution problems, plumbing fixture age, attic insulation, and deferred maintenance that becomes harder to separate from design work, the home is moving out of the simple refresh category. This does not mean every wall has to move. It means the scope should be considered as a whole so that flooring transitions, trim, lighting, windows, plumbing, and electrical work are not handled in conflicting phases. A patched-together remodel can make a home feel newer in spots but older overall, especially when the main rooms still fail to support the way the household actually lives.

The strongest remodel candidates are homes with a clear reason to stay. In Denton, that reason is often the fact that Denton homes can have strong neighborhood appeal, but buyers and long-term owners still notice when the interior does not match the location. When the property is worth keeping but the interior no longer supports working from home, hosting family, music or hobby space, aging in place, and turning underused rooms into flexible square footage, the remodel becomes a way to protect the value of the home and improve daily use at the same time. Pay attention to exterior friction too: porches, side yards, patios, sheds, and detached garages that could support better everyday living with a more intentional plan can be a sign that the home is not taking advantage of its lot. Once the same problems show up in layout, finish condition, systems, and lifestyle fit, waiting usually does not make the project simpler. It only adds more small repairs before the real work begins.

LOCAL PROJECT PLANNING

What to Plan For Before a Home Remodel in Denton

A home remodel in Denton should start with a hard look at scope, structure, and sequencing, not a mood board. Across Southridge, Idiot's Hill, the historic neighborhoods near downtown, homes around UNT and TWU, and newer areas toward Rayzor Ranch, Denton remodeling often means balancing older-house character with modern room use, especially in homes that have already been changed by students, renters, owners, or piecemeal repairs. That kind of housing stock can support a strong remodel, but only if the project is defined clearly before construction starts. Homeowners should decide whether they are remodeling one connected zone, the entire first floor, the whole house, or a set of rooms that only appear separate on paper. Once walls, floors, stairs, cabinets, windows, or ceilings are touched, the project starts affecting surrounding rooms. Clarify whether the goal is a full interior reset, an addition, a kitchen and bath package, a rental-to-owner upgrade, or a layout change that opens living space without erasing the house's character. These can all be reasonable goals, but they require different budgets, different lead times, and different levels of disruption. The planning phase is where the remodel should be narrowed from a wish list into a construction scope with drawings, finish boundaries, allowance ranges, and a realistic order of operations.

The next planning item is the condition of the house behind the finishes. In Denton, the expensive surprises tend to come from foundation type, old plumbing, electrical capacity, attic access, window condition, uneven floors, narrow stairs, and mismatched trim or ceiling texture from earlier work. Before construction begins, it is worth reviewing the electrical panel, visible plumbing, attic access, foundation movement, window condition, insulation, and any signs that earlier owners already altered the home. A wall removal should not be priced as a simple opening until someone has confirmed whether it is load-bearing and what beam, post, and ceiling repair will be required. Flooring should not be ordered without thinking through slab cracks, transitions, stair nosing, baseboards, door undercuts, and whether adjoining rooms need to be included to avoid a patched look. The same logic applies to paint and trim. If the remodel touches only half of an open area, the untouched half may become the part that makes the project feel incomplete. Planning for that honestly up front is cheaper than pretending finish transitions will disappear on their own.

The final planning layer is approval and disruption management. In Denton, homeowners should allow time for city permitting, possible historic review depending on property and exterior scope, and inspection sequencing for electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and structural changes before assuming crews can start. A remodel that touches framing, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, exterior openings, or added square footage needs more coordination than a finish refresh, and inspections can affect when walls are closed, cabinets are set, and floors are finished. Material planning matters just as much. Windows, cabinets, custom doors, specialty flooring, and plumbing fixtures should be selected early enough that the construction schedule is not waiting on one missing part. Older Denton lots can limit where dumpsters, lumber, cabinets, and appliances go, so the access plan, parking plan, and temporary living setup should be solved before the first demo day. For an occupied home, the plan should also identify which bathroom stays usable, how dust will be contained, whether a temporary kitchen is needed, where valuables will be stored, and when noisy work is acceptable. A remodel feels much less chaotic when the family knows which spaces are unavailable for each phase instead of discovering it morning by morning.

HOW IT WORKS

Our Denton Process

Every step is handled locally in Denton — no handoffs to a national office, no subcontracted project management.

01

Free On-Site Estimate

We measure your kitchen, review layout, appliances, and existing plumbing and electrical, and walk through your goals. You’ll get a clear written estimate with scope and pricing within 48 hours.

02

Design & Material Selection

We finalize your layout and confirm cabinet and appliance placement. Then you select cabinets, countertops, backsplash, and fixtures with clear pricing before we move forward.

03

Permitting

We submit to Denton Building Safety and track status through final approval. Once approved, we schedule all required inspections so you do not have to coordinate anything with the city.

04

Construction & Inspections

Demo, rough-in, inspections, cabinet install, finishes, and final walkthrough. We coordinate plumbing and electrical inspections and keep the schedule moving to avoid delays.

Denton Permit Office

All residential permits in Denton are processed through Denton Building Safety at 401 N. Elm St., Denton, TX 76201. We handle submission on your behalf and keep each phase moving through the required inspection sequence. Denton ties permits to staged inspections scheduled through Denton Building Safety. →

COMMON QUESTIONS

Denton Home Remodeling FAQs

Questions specific to Denton — permits, warranties, and pricing.

Remodel timelines in Denton vary by scope. A bathroom remodel usually takes 3–8 weeks, a kitchen remodel takes 6–12 weeks, and a whole-home remodel can run 3–9 months from demo to final walkthrough.

Projects tied to historic landmarks or the courthouse district can add 2–6 weeks of approval time before work starts. We check jurisdiction up front so the timeline is based on the actual review path.
In Denton, a $45,000–$70,000 home remodel budget is usually driven by whether the homeowner wants more work in the bathroom, more cabinetry in the kitchen, or broader cosmetic updates across several rooms. Most projects at this range include a bathroom remodel plus a kitchen refresh or a multi-room cosmetic update with new flooring, paint, lighting, fixtures, cabinet upgrades in select spots, minor electrical and plumbing work, and new doors or trim where needed.

What this range does not typically cover: structural changes, additions, HVAC replacement, or a full kitchen and full bathroom together. Those usually require stepping up to $80,000–$140,000+.
Yes — almost every kitchen, bathroom, or home remodel in Denton requires a permit, since electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work all trigger one.

We pull permits through Denton Building Safety and schedule inspections. If the home falls under historic landmark or district review, we account for that upfront before work begins.

Going direct to subs can save 8–12% on labor in some cases — but that’s before you factor in your time coordinating schedules, re-inspecting failed rough-ins, and managing material deliveries. Most homeowners who’ve done it both ways tell us the “savings” evaporated by week three.

As a general contractor, we carry full liability and workers’ comp insurance, and our subcontractors are bonded. If something goes wrong, there’s one call to make — not six.

Yes. Every Fin Home Custom Contracting project comes with a comprehensive warranty: 1 year on all work, 2 years on major systems, and 10 years on structural components. We also remain available after move-in to answer questions and provide support, so you can feel confident in your investment.

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