Fin Home Contracting · Garland, TX

Garland Home Remodeling

We're the general contractor Garland 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 Garland

Garland homeowners usually call us when the house is still solid but clearly stuck in an earlier version of itself. In neighborhoods like Firewheel, Club Hill, and Duck Creek, we see homes with workable layouts, dated surfaces, and years of small fixes that never added up to a real remodel. That is where a general contractor matters. We are not selling your project to outside crews after the contract is signed.

Home remodeling in Garland starts at $25k. That gives you the lower end of a meaningful refresh — around $25,000–38,000 for flooring, interior finishes, lighting, trim, and focused updates in kitchens, bathrooms, and main living areas. We back that up with a written, itemized quote so there is no guessing about what is included.

Many Garland homes were built between the 1960s and 1990s, and that means demo can reveal older electrical equipment, original plumbing, and subfloor repairs that need to be handled before finish work goes in. We inspect for those issues during the walkthrough rather than treating them like surprises later.

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

Responds within 24 business hours

Neighborhoods we've worked in

Firewheel · Club Hill · Springpark · Coomer Creek · Camelot · Brentwood Place · Orchard Hills · Meadowcreek · Rosehill · Duck Creek

150+

Home remodels across DFW – including Garland.

$25k

Starting price for a meaningful Garland home refresh.

24 hrs

Response time from a Garland-based project manager.

15+

Years serving the Garland residential market.

What's Unique About Garland

Garland has a mix of established neighborhoods and newer builds, which means every remodel approach is different depending on the age and layout of the home. We scope each project to the specific property, not a generic template.

NEIGHBORHOODS WE KNOW

Common Home Remodeling Patterns Across Garland

In older Garland neighborhoods near downtown, Travis College Hill, and the streets around Garland Road and Walnut Street, whole-home remodeling often starts with homes that have been modified in stages. The original floor plans may be compact, with smaller kitchens, narrow halls, and modest bathrooms, while later owners may have enclosed a porch, added a room, or changed flooring without tying everything together. These remodels usually focus on restoring order to the house. That can include opening the kitchen, replacing mixed flooring, improving natural light, updating old electrical or plumbing, and making additions feel intentional instead of tacked on. The goal is often to keep the established neighborhood feel while making the home function for modern daily life.

In north Garland and areas near Firewheel, Springpark, and the Richardson edge, many homes were built from the 1970s through the early 2000s with larger footprints and more suburban layouts. These houses often have formal dining rooms, sunken or separated living spaces, dated fireplaces, heavy trim, and kitchens that are near the center of the house but not fully connected to it. Home remodeling here often includes wall openings, floor leveling or transition cleanup, new lighting, fireplace redesigns, and first-floor finish consistency. The square footage is usually not the problem; the problem is that the home feels chopped into zones that do not match how people gather now.

Near Lake Ray Hubbard, Crystal Lake, and the eastern side of Garland, remodeling often brings outdoor living and exterior exposure into the conversation. Homes may have patios, sloped lots, lake-influenced humidity, or views that were not fully considered when the original layout was built. Remodel scopes can include larger windows, patio doors, exterior material updates, durable flooring, and better transitions from the kitchen or living room to the backyard. In these homes, the main living area often becomes the priority because the remodel needs to support entertaining, weekend use, and stronger connections to the outdoor spaces that make the property valuable.

Garland has a wide range of price points and housing ages, so the smartest remodels are usually practical rather than trendy. Many homes need a whole-house consistency pass: interior doors, baseboards, flooring, paint, lighting temperature, cabinet finishes, and bathroom materials all need to feel like they belong together. Previous partial updates are common, and they can make a home feel older even when some surfaces are new. A strong Garland remodel identifies what should stay, what has to be corrected behind the walls, and where the layout can be improved without overbuilding for the neighborhood. That balance matters because the right scope can make an established Garland home feel current without losing the value of its location and lot.

WHAT TO EXPECT TO PAY

Home Remodeling Pricing in Garland

These are real ranges drawn from projects we've completed in Garland. 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 Garland 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 Garland homeowners. Room-by-room upgrades with full finish replacement.
$ 45,000–70,000 Typical Garland 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 Garland 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

The biggest cost swings in Garland remodels usually come from scope expansion at $25,000–$100,000, foundation repair at $8,000–$25,000, and HVAC, electrical, or plumbing updates that often add $10,000–$35,000. We surface those drivers during the estimate so the quote reflects the house, not a generic template.

Why Garland Pricing Works This Way

What Shapes Home Remodeling Costs in Garland

For homes around Travis College Hill, Duck Creek, Orchard Hills, and older central Garland neighborhoods, remodel pricing is often shaped by what the house has been through since it was built. Postwar cottages, ranch houses, and long-owned homes from the 1940s through 1970s with practical layouts but aging systems and several generations of finish updates may have solid locations and useful footprints, but the cost changes when the remodel uncovers older systems, past additions, or room divisions that fight the new plan. Old plumbing, panel upgrades, subfloor or slab issues, ceiling texture removal, and the cost of aligning floors, trim, and lighting after years of piecemeal repairs have to be handled before finish selections mean much. Removing a wall, shifting a laundry room, or widening a kitchen opening can be a reasonable decision, but the price depends on what is carrying the load, where plumbing and ductwork run, and how much repair is needed after demolition.

The newer side of Garland shows up around Firewheel, Club Hill, North Garland, and neighborhoods near Rowlett and Sachse. In those 1980s through early 2000s larger brick homes with vaulted living rooms, formal dining, isolated kitchens, and builder finishes that often drive a multi-room scope once remodeling starts, homeowners are often paying for scale and consistency rather than rescue work. Wall openings, fireplace updates, flooring replacement, window and door changes, and making the main living areas feel intentional rather than partially refreshed can turn into a whole-home finish package because one updated space makes adjacent rooms look untouched. The cost is shaped by how many surfaces are being unified: floors, baseboards, casings, doors, lighting, stair parts, cabinets, countertops, paint, and sometimes windows. The bigger the connected space, the more the project depends on disciplined sequencing and accurate material quantities.

Costs also move when the project reaches Lake Ray Hubbard-adjacent pockets and older commercial-to-residential corridors. Exterior exposure, drainage, additions, garage conversions, and whether the remodel involves only finishes or also roof, siding, HVAC, and layout corrections make the remodel more complicated than a room-by-room interior update. Exterior changes, roof tie-ins, larger windows, patio connections, and additions require more coordination than cosmetic work because water management and structure become part of the scope. If the home stays occupied, temporary barriers, work zones, furniture protection, and staged access add labor that a vacant remodel would not need. That is why two homes with similar square footage can price differently when one is a finish refresh and the other changes how the house is built.

Garland Cost Guide

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

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

One reliable sign in Garland is when the home has good square footage but still feels inefficient. That is common in Duck Creek, Club Hill, Firewheel, South Garland, and older neighborhoods near Downtown Garland, where the house may be a 1950s or 1960s ranch home, 1970s or 1980s subdivision home, or later home near Firewheel and may still reflect the assumptions of that period. The symptoms are usually practical: closed kitchens, low ceilings, long hallways, converted garages, small baths, front rooms without a purpose, and laundry areas that do not match modern routines. When these issues show up, the homeowner often tries to solve them with furniture, storage bins, or a single-room update. That only goes so far. If the structure of the house keeps pushing daily life into awkward patterns, the remodel needs to address circulation, storage, room purpose, and sightlines together.

Finish age is another clue, but it matters most when it lines up with deeper fatigue. In Garland, warning signs include worn flooring, dated paneling, mismatched tile, older doors, tired trim, popcorn ceilings, and cabinets or built-ins that have reached the end of their useful life. A dated light fixture by itself is not a remodel trigger. A dated light fixture beside failing flooring, tired trim, old cabinets, and a previous owner’s half-finished update is different. At that point, the home begins to feel like a set of compromises. The same applies to systems. Once you are looking at electrical panel capacity, plumbing age, HVAC distribution, window replacement, insulation, and exterior drainage that should be evaluated before cosmetic upgrades, the question becomes whether the home should simply be repaired or reworked while access is available. Opening a wall for one problem while ignoring the rest of the plan can create unnecessary cost later.

The decision becomes clearer when the location is still worth holding. For many Garland homeowners, the real reason to remodel is Garland’s established neighborhoods can be a strong reason to improve the house instead of moving, but the remodel needs to solve real function. The house may be in the right neighborhood, on the right lot, or close to the right schools and roads, but it no longer supports work-from-home space, family storage, aging parents, guests, pets, and a need for durable materials that can handle daily use. Exterior conditions can push the decision further, especially when patios, carports, additions, and back rooms that could work better if the interior was reorganized are involved. A home is ready for remodeling when the owner is not just tired of the way it looks, but tired of working around the same limits every day. The best projects start when those limits are visible enough to define, but before years of piecemeal fixes make the scope messier than it needed to be.

LOCAL PROJECT PLANNING

What to Plan For Before a Home Remodel in Garland

Before a home remodel in Garland, the first decision is not tile, paint, or cabinet style. It is what the project actually includes. In Firewheel, Duck Creek, Club Hill, Eastern Hills, and older neighborhoods near downtown Garland, the difference between a smart remodel and a drifting one is usually scope control. Garland homes often have good bones and established lots, but many were built or remodeled in eras when smaller rooms, lower lighting levels, and isolated kitchens were normal. A homeowner may start by wanting a fresher main living area, but the real work can quickly expand into planning whether the work includes opening walls, updating multiple baths, replacing flooring throughout, modernizing windows and doors, correcting past DIY work, or improving the home's exterior connection. That does not mean the larger scope is wrong. It means the included rooms, excluded rooms, finish boundaries, and mechanical assumptions need to be written down before demolition. A useful planning test is simple: if flooring changes in one room, where does it stop? If a wall comes out, what happens to lighting and HVAC? If the kitchen or primary suite is upgraded, will adjacent rooms suddenly look unfinished? Those decisions should be made before crews are scheduled, because changing them midstream can add weeks and several thousand dollars in trade remobilization, material reorders, and finish matching.

The house also needs a practical pre-construction check. For Garland homeowners, the issues that change a remodel are often aging electrical panels, older plumbing, slab movement, low insulation, worn windows, ceiling texture mismatches, and inconsistent trim from previous room-by-room updates. 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.

Permits, approvals, and living logistics should be planned before deposits are tied up in materials. For Garland, that usually means thinking through city permits, inspections for trade work, and HOA or neighborhood review in newer or planned areas when exterior changes are part of the project. Even when the permit path is straightforward, plans and selections need enough detail for trades to price and schedule accurately. Cabinets, windows, specialty doors, flooring, tile, and some fixtures can carry lead times of 4-12 weeks depending on product choice, so a homeowner who wants construction to move cleanly should finalize the major decisions before demolition begins. Garland projects benefit from a clear access plan because many lots have mature landscaping, narrower driveways, and limited staging space for cabinets, flooring, dumpsters, and appliances. If the remodel affects the kitchen, a temporary food setup may be needed for 4-10 weeks. If bedrooms or baths are involved, the household may need a phased plan or a short-term move-out during the dustiest stretch. The best remodel plan answers the uncomfortable questions early: what happens if hidden damage is found, where will materials sit, which rooms must stay functional, what decisions are locked, and what budget range is reserved for the unknowns.

HOW IT WORKS

Our Garland Process

Every step is handled locally in Garland — 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 Garland Building Inspection 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.

Garland Permit Office

All residential permits in Garland are processed through Garland Building Inspection at 800 Main Street, 1st Floor, Garland, TX 75040. We submit on your behalf, track status, and coordinate inspections through final approval. Garland Building Inspection serves as the main homeowner contact for residential permits, inspections, building codes, and fees. →

COMMON QUESTIONS

Garland Home Remodeling FAQs

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

Remodel timelines in Garland 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.

Material lead times and permit processing can shift the exact dates, so we give you a project-specific schedule in the estimate rather than a generic one.
A $45,000–$70,000 home remodel in Garland is usually a full mid-range update focused on function and appearance rather than layout change. Most projects at this level include a bathroom remodel plus a kitchen refresh or a multi-room cosmetic update with new flooring, interior paint, updated fixtures and lighting, selective cabinet improvements, minor plumbing and electrical work, and new doors or trim where the existing house shows wear.

Layout reconfigurations, additions, HVAC replacement, or taking on a full kitchen and full bathroom together typically push the project past this budget into the $80,000–$140,000+ range.
Permits are usually required for remodels in Garland that involve electrical, plumbing, or mechanical work. Purely cosmetic changes may not need one, but most kitchen, bathroom, and home remodeling projects do.

We handle permit filing through Garland Building Inspection and coordinate the inspection schedule for the homeowner.

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 Garland 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.