With home remodeling projects on the upswing and supply chain issues, homeowners are seeing prices go up for updating kitchens, bathrooms and beyond.
The hard truth is those costs might be higher in Minnesota than the national average, according to the Minnesota chapter of the National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI).
Some Minnesota NARI members are critical of widely published national estimates — such as a $25,000 price tag for an average kitchen — that they say don't take into account regional differences.
Beatrice Owen, executive director of NARI-MN, said several factors — including aging homes and extreme weather — play a role in driving up costs in the North.
"Minnesota has an older housing stock with [about] 65% of homes over 50 years old. What does that mean? We typically don't have as much insulation as we probably should have," she said. "With the cold weather, as we've witnessed in the last couple of weeks, we have some variability that other locales don't necessarily have. We have really dry weather, then we have really moist weather."
Having to make sure electrical and plumbing systems are up to code and, in some cases, taking on lead paint abatement also can add to the costs of remodeling.
"In Minnesota, the rules and regulations are a little more stringent than other locales around the country," said Owen, who added that homeowners benefit from those rules and regulations, "but with that comes costs, as well."
Cities and counties in Minnesota also might require permits for different stages of a home remodeling that other parts of the country typically do not, added Bjorn Freudenthal of New Spaces in Edina.