RenoCostCalc

Whole-House Renovation Cost in Texas (2026)

A whole-house renovation in Texas typically runs $39,600–$105,600 in 2026 for a mid-size, mid-range job. Texas renovation prices sit about 12% below the national average, so local costs run 12% below what you'd pay nationally.

Whole-House Renovation cost in Texas by size and quality

These ranges take the national whole-house renovation baseline of $45,000–$120,000 and apply Texas's cost index of 0.88× — meaning local labor and materials run about 12% below the national average. Pick the row and column that match your project.

Size / scope BudgetMid-rangeHigh-end
Small compact / partial $21,600 – $57,700 $27,700 – $73,900 $47,100 – $125,700
Medium average scope $30,900 – $82,400 $39,600 – $105,600 $67,300 – $179,500
Large big / whole space $47,900 – $127,700 $61,400 – $163,700 $104,300 – $278,300

Highlighted cell = a typical mid-size, mid-range whole-house renovation in TX. National baseline ranges adjusted by Texas's 0.88× cost index. Your actual cost varies with scope, finishes, and contractor.

What the 0.88× cost index means: if a whole-house renovation averages $45,000–$120,000 nationally, the same job in Texas averages $39,600–$105,600 — about 12% below the national average — before your specific size and finish choices.

Texas whole-house renovation calculator

Pre-adjusted for Texas (0.88× national). Results below are Texas-specific.

Size / scope

Quality level

Planning a whole-house renovation in Texas? A whole-house renovation ranges from a cosmetic refresh of every room to a full gut down to the studs with new systems. The single biggest cost driver is how deep you go — updating finishes versus replacing wiring, plumbing, HVAC, and layout. This calculator gives you a broad planning range for renovating an entire home.

Texas cost factors

Texas keeps renovation costs low with non-union labor, no state income tax, and fast permitting, though coastal wind codes and booming metros add regional pressure.

What drives whole-house renovation cost

  • Scope — cosmetic refresh vs. full gut-to-the-studs with new mechanical, electrical, and plumbing
  • Home size — total square footage sets the baseline for every trade and material
  • Kitchens and bathrooms — the most expensive rooms, and a whole-house reno usually touches all of them
  • Structural or layout changes, updating systems to code, and any hidden issues found once walls open

Whole-House Renovation cost in Texas — frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to gut and renovate a whole house?

A full gut renovation — new electrical, plumbing, HVAC, insulation, drywall, kitchen, baths, and finishes — sits at the high end of this range and can exceed it on larger or higher-end homes. Set size to Large and quality to High-end to model a deep gut.

Is it cheaper to renovate or tear down and rebuild?

Renovating is usually cheaper if the foundation and structure are sound. A tear-down and rebuild can make more sense when the home has major structural, foundation, or code problems, or when you want a fundamentally different layout. Compare a full-gut estimate against local new-build costs.

Should I renovate room by room or all at once?

Doing it all at once is usually more cost-efficient — shared permits, one mobilization of crews, and no repeated demolition — but requires more cash up front and often moving out. Phasing spreads the cost but you pay setup and cleanup multiple times.

How much does a whole-house renovation cost in Texas?

In Texas, a typical whole-house renovation runs about $39,600–$105,600 for a mid-size, mid-range project in 2026. That reflects Texas's cost index of 0.88× — roughly 12% below the national average — applied to national baselines. Texas keeps renovation costs low with non-union labor, no state income tax, and fast permitting, though coastal wind codes and booming metros add regional pressure. Use the calculator above to adjust for your size and finish level.

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