Fin Home Contracting · Flower Mound, TX

Flower Mound Home Remodeling

We're the general contractor Flower Mound 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.

5-STAR RATED

Google · Houzz

2025 Best of Houzz Service 2024 Best of Houzz Service 2023 Best of Houzz Service 2022 Best of Houzz Service 2021 Best of Houzz Service

LICENSED & INSURED

TX Residential Contractor

WHY FIN HOME

Why Hire Fin Home for Home Remodeling in Flower Mound

Flower Mound remodels tend to be larger decisions because the houses themselves are larger decisions. In neighborhoods like Bridlewood, Wellington, and Canyon Falls, homeowners are usually not trying to patch one room — they are trying to make the house feel more intentional, more functional, and less tied to the original builder package. That takes real planning and job management. We are not a lead service sending your project out for bids.

Home remodeling in Flower Mound starts at $40k. That is the point where a meaningful project begins here — typically $40,000–60,000 for coordinated updates across major living areas, stronger finish selections, and targeted changes that actually alter how the home works. Every proposal is written and itemized so the budget is attached to real scope.

In parts of Flower Mound, projects located in historic or design districts can require added approvals before a permit is issued. That is the kind of detail that matters early, because it affects timing and how the remodel is sequenced. We account for those approval layers up front instead of discovering them after drawings and materials are already moving.

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

Responds within 24 business hours

Neighborhoods we've worked in

Bridlewood · Wellington · Canyon Falls · Flower Mound Farms · Timber Creek · Lake Forest · Creekwood · River Walk · The Peninsula · Tour 18

150+

Home remodels across DFW – including Flower Mound.

$40k

Starting price for a meaningful Flower Mound home refresh.

24 hrs

Response time from a Flower Mound-based project manager.

15+

Years serving the Flower Mound residential market.

What's Unique About Flower Mound

Growth pressure in Flower Mound is real — the town reported an estimated 2025 population of 82,197. That kind of expansion affects scheduling, trade demand, and project timing, so we build realistic lead times into the plan.

NEIGHBORHOODS WE KNOW

Common Home Remodeling Patterns Across Flower Mound

In established Flower Mound neighborhoods near Wellington, Timber Creek, and Morriss Road, whole-home remodeling often starts with 1980s, 1990s, and early-2000s houses that have strong square footage but dated organization. These homes commonly have formal dining rooms, front living rooms, two-story entries, closed or semi-closed kitchens, and heavy finish packages that make the main level feel older than the neighborhood itself. The remodel usually focuses on making the first floor work as one connected living area. Wall openings, flooring replacement, stair rail updates, fireplace redesigns, and new lighting plans are common because the existing footprint is usually good; it just needs to be redirected toward how families actually use the home.

Around Bridlewood, Glenwick, and larger-lot areas on the west and north sides of town, many homes have more custom variation. Some have large primary suites, game rooms, studies, and outdoor living areas, but the finish consistency may be weak because previous owners updated one part of the home at a time. These remodels often involve tying the house back together: replacing mismatched flooring, updating trim and doors, reworking built-ins, improving kitchen-to-living sightlines, and making the primary suite feel current without creating a disconnect from the rest of the interior. Exterior updates can also enter the scope when brick, siding, windows, or entry details no longer match the level of the remodeled inside.

Near Grapevine Lake, Tour 18, and the more wooded or estate-style pockets of Flower Mound, home remodeling often has to account for slopes, views, outdoor living, and mature landscaping. The homes may have excellent settings but layouts that do not take advantage of them. Projects frequently include larger windows, improved patio doors, covered outdoor transitions, kitchen expansion, and living room changes that orient the house toward the yard or view instead of keeping the best parts of the property outside the daily living space. Durability also matters because lake-adjacent and heavily treed properties can create more exterior maintenance pressure over time.

Flower Mound homeowners often remodel because they like the town, schools, lots, and neighborhood stability, but the home itself has fallen behind. That leads to scopes that are more comprehensive than a simple finish update. Once floors, walls, and lighting are addressed, homeowners often decide to update secondary bathrooms, laundry rooms, offices, and exterior details so the whole house feels consistent. The strongest Flower Mound remodels keep the scale and presence of the original home while removing the builder-era choices that make it feel dated. The result is usually not about adding excessive square footage; it is about making an already substantial home feel brighter, cleaner, and more intentional.

WHAT TO EXPECT TO PAY

Home Remodeling Pricing in Flower Mound

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

Essential

Cosmetic refresh for homes with a solid existing layout. No major structural changes.
$ 40,000–60,000 Typical Flower Mound 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 Flower Mound homeowners. Room-by-room upgrades with full finish replacement.
$ 75,000–120,000 Typical Flower Mound 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.
$ 150,000–300,000+ Typical Flower Mound 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

Flower Mound vs Nearby Cities

  • Flower Mound $75,000–120,000

WHAT DRIVES COST UP

Whole-home remodeling costs in Flower Mound move fastest with scope expansion at $25,000–$100,000, finish tier with a 30–80% total swing, and load-bearing wall removal plus engineering at $5,000–$20,000. We flag those before contract signing so the project budget is built around real choices.

Why Flower Mound Pricing Works This Way

What Shapes Home Remodeling Costs in Flower Mound

In the established parts of Flower Mound, especially Old Flower Mound, the acreage pockets near Cross Timbers, and neighborhoods close to Lake Grapevine, cost is usually controlled by the original construction era. Ranch homes, custom houses, and homes on larger lots from the 1970s through the early 1990s where the building may have good bones but older mechanical systems and compartmentalized interiors often need careful estimating because the visible rooms do not tell the whole story. Wall removal, ceiling beam work, window updates, exterior repairs, and correcting older additions or enclosed patios before new finishes are installed can become real budget items before cabinetry, flooring, or paint are finalized. When a remodel includes room reconfiguration instead of simple replacement, the contractor has to price framing, structural support, mechanical rerouting, drywall repair, and finish blending. Older homes can remodel beautifully, but the cost is tied to solving the house first and decorating it second.

In Wellington, Bridlewood, Tour 18, and Lakeside DFW, the issue is less about age and more about breadth. Larger homes from the 1990s through 2010s with high square footage, formal dining rooms, two-story living spaces, and builder-era finishes that can make a partial remodel look unfinished can carry a remodel across a large footprint once the owner decides the old builder package no longer works. Flooring continuity, staircase and railing updates, kitchen expansion, lighting replacement, and bringing multiple rooms up to one consistent finish level add cost because they rarely stay isolated. Changing the kitchen floor may expose the need to carry the same flooring through halls and living rooms; updating the stair rail can make old trim look wrong; opening a wall can trigger lighting, HVAC, and finish changes across the space. The larger the connected area, the more important it is to price the remodel as one coordinated scope.

The cost range widens further around lake-adjacent homes, estate lots, and HOA-heavy subdivisions. Exterior elevation changes, roofline tie-ins, large window or door replacements, occupied-home phasing, and whether the remodel must support daily family life, entertaining, or both affect not only materials but also access, sequencing, weather protection, and the number of trades required. Window replacement, door changes, additions, exterior updates, and roofing tie-ins create exterior-envelope work that has to be planned differently than interior surfaces. An occupied remodel can also add meaningful time because the work must be phased, protected, cleaned, and kept safe. The estimate should make these divisions clear: finish work, structural changes, mechanical updates, exterior work, and construction logistics.

Flower Mound Cost Guide

How Much Does It Cost to Remodel a Home in Flower Mound?

Get a detailed breakdown of home remodeling costs in Flower Mound 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 Flower Mound Home Is Ready for a Remodel

For Flower Mound, the clearest remodel signal is overlap. One issue may be maintenance, but several related issues usually point to a house that needs a broader plan. Across Bridlewood, Wellington, Lakeside, Timber Creek-area neighborhoods, and homes closer to Grapevine Lake, homes from the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, along with later master-planned subdivision homes, often show this through two-story entries with little everyday function, formal rooms that sit empty, kitchens that are near the living room but not truly connected, large baths with inefficient layouts, and upstairs spaces that do not match family routines. When the flow is wrong, other problems feel worse. Storage fills up faster, guests crowd the same pinch points, private rooms become noisy, and good square footage does not feel useful. That is when a remodel should be considered. The goal is not to make the house look new for its own sake. The goal is to remove the friction that repeats every morning, evening, weekend, and holiday.

The second layer is condition. In Flower Mound, signs like dark tile, aging carpet, builder-grade stair rails, dated fireplaces, old cabinet profiles, mismatched flooring, and lighting packages that instantly place the home in its construction era tell you the house may have passed the point where isolated cosmetic work gives a strong return. If the home also needs window performance, HVAC zoning, insulation, electrical needs for offices and media rooms, plumbing fixture age, and exterior doors that leak comfort, it becomes even more important to think in phases or plan a larger scope. Hidden work and finish work are connected. Moving a wall, replacing windows, improving lighting, correcting floor transitions, or reworking plumbing can all affect the final appearance. Doing those items separately over several years can leave the home feeling uneven and cost more than a coordinated remodel.

The practical question is whether the property is worth improving. In Flower Mound, many homeowners say yes because Flower Mound buyers often expect well-kept homes to feel current, not just large. The pressure usually comes from daily life: remote work, teenagers, guests, fitness space, hobby rooms, and the need for storage that does not consume bedrooms or formal areas. The outside of the home can add another clue when covered patios, pool areas, lake-influenced outdoor living, and yards that should connect better to the main living zone are involved. If the house has the right location, lot, or bones but still forces the owner to compromise on privacy, storage, comfort, or gathering space, the signs are already there. A remodel is justified when the problems are repeated, connected, and unlikely to be fixed by replacing one fixture or repainting one room.

LOCAL PROJECT PLANNING

What to Plan For Before a Home Remodel in Flower Mound

A home remodel in Flower Mound should start with a hard look at scope, structure, and sequencing, not a mood board. Across Bridlewood, Wellington, Lakeside, Flower Mound proper, older estate lots, and neighborhoods near Lake Grapevine, many Flower Mound homes have generous square footage, but the original room plan may include formal spaces, large but inefficient primary baths, or kitchens that do not connect cleanly to outdoor living. 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. Define whether the project is a first-floor modernization, a kitchen and living rework, a whole-home finish update, a bath-and-closet remodel, or an addition that changes the roof and exterior. 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 house also needs a practical pre-construction check. For Flower Mound homeowners, the issues that change a remodel are often HOA review, load-bearing walls, long spans, window replacement details, drainage at sloped lots, second-floor plumbing, HVAC zoning, and the cost of maintaining finish quality across a larger home. A contractor should know before demo whether a wall is carrying a load, whether the floor is level enough for continuous new flooring, whether old plumbing or wiring is likely to be exposed, and whether the HVAC system can support a changed layout or added square footage. This is where remodels either stay controlled or start creeping. If a project includes new windows, exterior doors, beams, additions, or room conversions, the plan should also account for water management, roof tie-ins, insulation, and how the exterior envelope will be sealed after the new work is complete. Interior finish planning matters too: baseboard profiles, casing, ceiling texture, door style, stair parts, hardware, and paint transitions should be selected as a system so the finished home does not look like three separate projects done in three different years.

The final planning layer is approval and disruption management. In Flower Mound, homeowners should allow time for town permitting, neighborhood architectural review, and approvals for visible exterior changes such as windows, doors, paint, patio covers, or roofline adjustments 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. Families often stay in the home during Flower Mound remodels, so planning needs to cover school schedules, garage storage, temporary kitchen access, pet containment, dust barriers, and the sequence of trade work. 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 Flower Mound Process

Every step is handled locally in Flower Mound — 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 Flower Mound Building Inspections 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.

Flower Mound Permit Office

All residential permits in Flower Mound are processed through Flower Mound Building Inspections at 2121 Cross Timbers Rd., Flower Mound, TX 75028. We submit on your behalf, track status, and coordinate required inspections through final approval. We handle the process directly through Flower Mound Building Inspections. →

COMMON QUESTIONS

Flower Mound Home Remodeling FAQs

Questions specific to Flower Mound — permits, warranties, and pricing.

Remodel timelines in Flower Mound 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 in historic or design-review districts can add 2–6 weeks of approval time before construction starts. We flag that early so the schedule reflects the real approval path.
A $55,000–$85,000 home remodel in Flower Mound is usually a full mid-range cosmetic overhaul rather than a one-room update. That usually means two to three main living spaces redone together, new flooring across the main areas, interior paint, lighting and fixture replacement throughout, minor cabinet work, updated trim and millwork, and either one full bathroom remodel or a partial kitchen scope.

Layout reconfigurations, full HVAC or electrical rewiring, additions, or combining a full kitchen with a full bathroom typically push the project past this budget into the $100,000–$180,000+ range.
Permits are required for nearly every remodel in Flower Mound involving electrical, plumbing, or mechanical work. Cosmetic-only updates typically do not require one, but most kitchen, bathroom, and home remodels do.

We pull permits through Flower Mound Building Inspections and schedule inspections. If the property also needs historic or design district approval, we catch that before construction starts.

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.

Ready to Remodel Your Flower Mound Home?

Get a written estimate from a local project manager — within 48 hours, on-site.

Download the DFW Kitchen Remodeling Cost Guide

Your information is 100% secure.

Download the DFW Bathroom Remodeling Cost Guide

Your information is 100% secure.

Download the DFW Home Remodeling Cost Guide

Your information is 100% secure.

Download the DFW Home Building Cost Guide

Your information is 100% secure.

Your Instant Estimate Is Ready. Who Should We Send It To?

Your Instant Estimate Is Ready. Who Should We Send It To?

Download the DFW Remodeling and Home Building Cost Guide

Your information is 100% secure.